

Thyroid Answers Podcast
Dr Eric Balcavage
Thyroid Answers podcast is focused on providing answers to the most common question people who have a thyroid problems and thyroid symptoms need and want answers to.
The podcast is hosted by Dr Eric Balcavage and Dr Erica Riggleman. Both are doctors of functional medicine, chiropractors and certified nutrition specialists. Their practices focus on helping people with thyroid conditions improve their symptoms and regain their health using functional medicine.
The podcast is hosted by Dr Eric Balcavage and Dr Erica Riggleman. Both are doctors of functional medicine, chiropractors and certified nutrition specialists. Their practices focus on helping people with thyroid conditions improve their symptoms and regain their health using functional medicine.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 31, 2026 • 47min
Episode 224: Iron Deficiency or Defense? Understanding Low Iron and Ferritin
Iron: Deficiency or Defense? Understanding Low Iron and Ferritin Many people are told they are iron deficient simply because their iron or ferritin levels appear low on a blood test. But iron physiology is far more complex than most people realize. In this episode of the Thyroid Answers Podcast, Dr. Eric Balcavage breaks down one of the most misunderstood areas of lab testing: iron status. Fatigue, hair loss, cold intolerance, brain fog, slow metabolism, and even thyroid symptoms are often blamed on iron deficiency. When labs show low iron or low ferritin, the common response is iron supplements or iron infusions. But low iron in the blood does not always mean the body is truly deficient. In many cases, the body is intentionally regulating iron as part of an inflammatory response. Dr. Balcavage explains the difference between true iron deficiency and anemia of inflammation, why ferritin is often misunderstood, and how markers like soluble transferrin receptor can help clarify whether the body truly needs iron or is simply regulating it differently. Understanding these patterns can help prevent unnecessary iron supplementation and help identify the real reason symptoms may be occurring. In This Episode You'll Learn • Why many people are incorrectly told they are iron-deficient • The difference between true iron deficiency and anemia of inflammation • What ferritin actually represents and why it is often misunderstood • What iron, TIBC, iron saturation, and ferritin really measure • How iron levels relate to red blood cell markers like hemoglobin, MCV, and RDW • The role of soluble transferrin receptor in identifying true iron deficiency • Why iron supplementation sometimes helps—and sometimes makes people feel worse • Why iron labs must be interpreted as patterns rather than isolated numbers Key Concepts Discussed Iron metabolism Ferritin interpretation Soluble transferrin receptor Iron deficiency vs anemia of inflammation Iron regulation and inflammation Red blood cell indices and iron physiology Fatigue and low iron labs Thyroid symptoms and iron metabolism Who This Episode Is For This episode may be helpful if you: • Have been told your ferritin is low • Have been diagnosed with iron deficiency • Are taking iron supplements but still feel fatigued • Have symptoms like fatigue, hair loss, cold intolerance, or brain fog • Want to better understand how iron is regulated in the body About Dr. Eric Balcavage Dr. Eric Balcavage is the co-author of The Thyroid Debacle and the creator of State Based Medicine™, The Adaptive Thyroid Model™, and The Strategic Thyroid Solution™. Through his clinical work, research, and teaching, Dr. Balcavage focuses on helping both patients and practitioners understand the deeper physiology behind chronic symptoms, thyroid dysfunction, and metabolic adaptation so they can move beyond symptom management and toward true recovery. Resources Learn more about Dr. Eric Balcavage: www.drericbalcavage.com

Mar 24, 2026 • 23min
Episode 223: Why Thyroid "Optimization" Often Makes People Worse
Why does adding T3 change one person's life, temporarily help another, and make a third feel worse almost immediately? In this episode, we explore the real reason thyroid optimization doesn't work the same for everyone. The issue isn't the tool. It's the state. Health is capacity. Optimization strategies require capacity. And when capacity isn't present, adding demand can amplify strain instead of restoring resilience. In this episode, you'll learn: The difference between physiologic optimization and optimization strategies Why reduced T3 may represent adaptive physiology in certain states How the body shifts between resilience, chronic strain, and overload Why the same thyroid strategy produces three different outcomes Why chasing lab numbers without identifying state often leads to volatility If you've tried adjusting thyroid medication, optimizing free T3, or narrowing lab ranges and still feel unstable, this episode will help you understand why. If you'd like help identifying the state your body is operating in and determining whether stabilization, load reduction, or optimization is appropriate, you can schedule a discovery call using this link: https://l.bttr.to/LGjGk

Mar 17, 2026 • 57min
Episode 222: WHY DOING THE RIGHT THINGS DOESN'T WORK
If you've been doing everything you were told should help — taking supplements, exercising, optimizing labs, pushing harder — and instead you feel worse, this episode explains why. Human physiology does not operate in one constant mode. It shifts between different states depending on load, stress, and available capacity. Most recovery and optimization strategies assume the body is in a resilient, regenerative state. But many people with chronic symptoms are not. They're operating in chronic strain or overload, where the body is prioritizing stability and defense, not repair and regeneration. In this episode, Dr. Eric Balcavage explains: Why doing more often leads to less tolerance, more reactivity, and slower recovery How physiologic states (resilient, chronic strain, overload) change what your body can handle Why well-intentioned strategies like supplements, hormones, detoxes, and intense exercise can backfire The difference between feeling better and actually recovering What actually has to change for recovery to begin This is not a motivation talk or a protocol episode. It's a clear explanation of what's happening in your body — and why recovery requires changing the state, not just adding more strategies.

Mar 10, 2026 • 1h 5min
Episode 221: Why Low Free T3 Often Doesn't Need to Be "Fixed"
The conversation around T3 is one of the most confusing — and divisive — topics in thyroid care. Conventional medicine often ignores T3 entirely. Integrative and functional medicine frequently treats free T3 as the number that must be optimized at all costs. Patients are left stuck in the middle, unsure who to trust, what their labs actually mean, and whether a "low" free T3 is something that needs to be fixed. In this episode of Thyroid Answers, Dr. Eric Balcavage breaks down what free T3 really represents, where T3 actually comes from, and why lower free T3 is often an adaptive, protective response, not a sign of failure or deficiency. You'll learn: Where T3 actually comes from — and why most of it isn't made by the thyroid The difference between thyroid homeostasis and thyroid allostasis Why the body intentionally reduces T4-to-T3 conversion under strain How free T3 and total T3 tell different stories — and why both matter Why raising free T3 can feel better short-term but worsen physiology long-term When lower free T3 is actually the body's solution, not the problem How to ask better questions instead of chasing numbers This episode is not about protocols or "optimizing labs." It's about understanding state, adaptation, and recovery — so you stop fighting your physiology and start working with it.

Mar 3, 2026 • 57min
Episode 220: Why Doing More Is Making You Worse — And Why Recovery Usually Starts With Less
Why Doing More Is Making You Worse — And Why Recovery Usually Starts With Less If you've been dealing with persistent thyroid symptoms and feel like you're doing everything right — supplements, medications, protocols, lifestyle changes — but still aren't getting better, this episode is for you. In this episode of Thyroid Answers, Dr. Eric Balcavage explores why "doing more" so often feels like the right answer — and why that approach frequently leads to more strain, not recovery. We unpack how escalation happens, why added support can quietly increase physiologic cost, and how compensation can look like progress while actually pushing recovery further away. You'll learn why supplements, thyroid medications, hormones, antimicrobials, and mold protocols can all follow the same pattern when applied to a system already under load. Most importantly, we shift the conversation away from fixing symptoms and toward understanding physiologic state — including what recovery actually looks like, how to reduce load, and how to respond differently to what your body is telling you. This episode is not about doing nothing. It's about doing something different. In this episode, you'll learn: • Why more effort often creates more strain • How compensation masquerades as healing • Why thyroid medication and supplements can stop working over time • What "reducing load" actually means • How to tell what state your body is in • What to focus on when you stop chasing symptoms • What early recovery really looks like — and why people miss it Next steps: If you're interested in a different model of functional medicine care focused on recovery rather than escalation, you can request a discovery call through my website. If you want to start reducing your load on your own, message "Blueprint" on Instagram or email info@DrEricBalcavage.com to get access to the Thyroid Recovery Blueprint, which walks through the key fitness factors that influence recovery and helps you identify where load is accumulating in your system.

Feb 24, 2026 • 40min
Episode 219: T3-Based Thyroid Medication — Mistakes, Misunderstandings, and Miscommunication
T3-based thyroid medications, including desiccated thyroid extract and combination T4/T3 therapy, are some of the most misunderstood and controversial tools in thyroid care. Some patients feel dramatically better. Others feel briefly improved, then crash. Labs often look "optimized," yet long-term recovery stalls. So what's actually happening? In this episode of Thyroid Answers, Dr. Eric Balcavage breaks down the most common mistakes, misunderstandings, and miscommunication surrounding T3-based thyroid therapy — and explains why outcomes vary so widely between patients. You'll learn: Why so many people end up on T3 or desiccated thyroid in the first place The real physiologic arguments clinicians use to justify T3 therapy What a healthy human thyroid gland actually produces — and why that matters Where most of the body's T3 really comes from Why "poor conversion" is often an adaptive response, not a defect Why lowering reverse T3 doesn't necessarily mean recovery Why T3 helps some people and destabilizes others The difference between managing symptoms and restoring physiology This episode reframes T3 therapy through the lens of physiologic state, not just lab values — and explains why adding more thyroid hormone can sometimes push the body further away from recovery. If you've ever wondered whether T3 is helping you, hurting you, or simply masking deeper issues, this conversation will give you a clearer framework for understanding what's really going on.

Feb 17, 2026 • 21min
Episode 218: Why T3 Works for Some People — and Hurts Others
Why does T3 feel life-changing for some people — and destabilizing for others? In this episode of Thyroid Answers, Dr. Eric Balcavage explains why the answer isn't about the medication itself, but about the physiologic state of the person receiving it. You'll learn why T3 can support recovery in some cases and create symptom volatility in others, and why labeling T3 as "good" or "bad" misses the real issue entirely. This episode introduces a clear, state-based framework: Resiliency — regeneration and adaptive capacity Chronic strain — long-term repair and compensation Overload — defensive, survival-focused physiology Dr. Balcavage explains how T3 interacts differently in each state, why adding T3 can suppress TSH and reduce T4 reserves, and why labs can look better even as physiology becomes less stable. Topics Covered T3 medication benefits and risks Physiologic state and thyroid response Why T3 works for some but not others TSH suppression and T4 reserve depletion Adaptive vs forced thyroid output Why thyroid research produces mixed results This episode is essential for anyone taking T3, considering T3, or trying to understand why thyroid medication responses vary so dramatically.

Feb 10, 2026 • 34min
Episode 217: Why Reduced T4-to-T3 Conversion Is Not the Problem!
One of the most common explanations patients hear when they don't feel well on thyroid medication is this: "You're not converting T4 to T3." In this episode of Thyroid Answers, Dr. Eric Balcavage explains why reduced T4-to-T3 conversion is usually not the problem—and why treating it as a defect often leads to aggressive thyroid medication strategies that stabilize labs but destabilize physiology. You'll learn: What T4-to-T3 "conversion" actually is—and why it's regulated, not broken Why clinicians often label symptoms as "poor conversion" How stress, inflammation, infection, sleep disruption, under-fueling, illness, excess T4, and even aging can intentionally reduce T3 production Why adding T3 often backfires and creates symptom volatility How to interpret thyroid labs in context instead of chasing "optimal" numbers Ande More ... This episode reframes reduced conversion as an adaptive signal, not a failure—and explains why true thyroid recovery depends on changing the conditions the body is responding to, not forcing output with medication.

Feb 3, 2026 • 35min
Reverse T3, T3 Uptake, and Thyroid Antibodies - What They Mean, What They Don't
Why do so many people still feel hypothyroid when their labs look "normal"? In this episode of Thyroid Answers, Dr. Eric Balcavage completes the thyroid lab conversation by addressing three of the most misunderstood tests in thyroid care: reverse T3, T3 uptake, and thyroid antibodies. You'll learn: What reverse T3 actually represents—and why it rises or falls Why high reverse T3 does not mean blocked T3 receptors How T3 medication lowers reverse T3 by suppressing T4, not by improving physiology What the T3 uptake test measures and why it still matters Why free T4 and free T3 can be misleading without total hormone levels How binding proteins, estrogen, liver function, inflammation, and medications affect interpretation What thyroid antibodies do—and do not—tell us about thyroid damage and disease activity This episode is essential listening if you've been told your thyroid is "optimized," yet symptoms persist—or if you're trying to understand why thyroid medications work for some people and cause instability for others. This discussion sets the stage for the February series on thyroid medication physiology, including T4-only therapy, T3 therapy, combination therapy, and desiccated thyroid.

Jan 27, 2026 • 57min
Episode 215: Total T3 And Free T3 - What They Mean, What They Don't, and Why Treating T3 often backfires
T3 is the most talked-about thyroid hormone — and the most misunderstood. In this episode of the Thyroid Answers Podcast, Dr. Eric Balcavage breaks down Total T3 and Free T3 using a clear, Q&A-style format to address the most common questions, mistakes, and treatment traps patients and clinicians fall into. You'll learn: What T3 actually represents — and what it does not The difference between Total T3 and Free T3 (and why you need both) Why low T3 is often an adaptive response, not a deficiency Why adding T3 medication can help short-term but worsen physiology long-term Why "chasing Free T3" is one of the biggest mistakes in functional medicine How stress, inflammation, illness, dieting, and medications alter T3 levels Why labs can improve while patients feel worse How to interpret T3 correctly within the full thyroid panel This episode is essential listening if: You've been told your T3 is "low-normal" but still feel terrible You feel better on T3 medication at first — then worse Your labs look good, but your symptoms don't match You want to understand thyroid physiology beyond numbers and ranges 🎁 Free Resource: If you want a clear, practical guide to understanding thyroid labs, comment LABS and I'll send you my Thyroid Labs Decoded eBook.


