deniswilson

About Dr. Denis Wilson

Denis Wilson, MD described Wilson 's Temperature Syndrome in 1988 after observing people with symptoms of low thyroid and low body temperature, yet who had normal blood tests. He found that by normalizing their temperatures with T3 (without T4) their symptoms often remained improved even after the treatment was discontinued. He was the first doctor to use sustained-release T3.

And It Works

“And It Works.”

Over the last 8 years, since the first person came to me asking for assistance in working through this protocol, I have been repeatedly impressed that this therapy worked where multiple other attempts, from anti-depressants to standard thyroid replacement therapy, have not. The strongest rationale for doing this can be found in these points:

  1. It is simple. This is not a complex process. It takes a little time to educate the patient in the process of tapering up, identifying the plateau dose, self-monitoring, and then tapering back off. The rest is logical and intuitive.
  2. It is safe. We are using

It Makes Sense

“It Makes Sense.”

I have managed to get into the Doctor’s Manual, and I find the whole concept to be really a wonderful piece of work. It has actually served to clarify some of the deep mystery and dissatisfaction I have always felt about the thyroid system. Dr. Wilson’s discovery of this syndrome will answer a lot of questions for a lot of physicians, I am sure.
Dr. Steven Ayre, MD
Clinical Assistant Professor, Chicago Medical School
Burr Ridge, IL

I have found that there are patients with Wilson’s Temperature Syndrome everywhere. I have found them in my own family practice that I was

Wilson’s Temperature Syndrome Treatment with T3 Now Standard of Care

Read an abstract of an article about the WT3 Protocol in a peer-reviewed medical journal on Pubmed.gov, or you can review the article in its entirety.

The “standard of care” is defined by a specific set of legal criteria. This is a letter with a legal expert’s statement .


Dear Physician,

 

I am a registered pharmacist and a licensed attorney, and I have been practicing FDA and medical licensing law for over 10 years.  I have reviewed the science and the research of the WT3 protocol and discussed the treatment

Infertility

In any infertility textbook it is explained that one of the first, if not the first, condition to be ruled out is hypothyroidism. Low thyroid function is more than enough to explain infertility. Unfortunately, the textbooks also indicate that low thyroid function can be ruled out with thyroid blood tests. However, there are many patients with low thyroid function that have normal thyroid blood tests because they are suffering from Wilson’s Temperature Syndrome (a reversible peripheral conversion problem), not hypothyroidism (thought of as a permanent glandular problem).

For years, some Gynecologists have been giving some of their infertile patients T3, with

Diet and Weight Loss

Everyone knows that a slow metabolism and low thyroid function can lead to weight gain and make weight loss extremely difficult. Practically any time patients go to the doctor complaining of fatigue, easy weight gain, and difficulty losing weight, low thyroid function will be the first thing to cross doctors’ minds. The problem is that doctors have been trained to think they can rule out low thyroid function with thyroid blood tests. But thyroid blood tests can only rule out glandular causes of low thyroid function. They can’t rule out peripheral causes. They can’t rule out Wilson’s Temperature Syndrome. Wilson’s

Euthyroid Sick Syndrome

Euthyroid Sick Syndrome is defined in the online Merck Manual. According to that definition, here is how Euthyroid Sick Syndrome and Wilson’s Temperature Syndrome compare:

Euthyroid Sick Syndrome Wilson’s Thyroid Syndrome
Probably due to decreased T4 to T3 conversion Yes Yes
Thyroid Blood Tests Always Abnormal Typically Normal
Low Thyroid Symptoms None Severe
Persists after non-thyroid stress or illness has passed No Yes
Treated No Yes, reversible

Other than having one thing in common, Euthyroid Sick Syndrome and Wilson’s Temperature Syndrome are almost complete opposites. Euthyroid Sick Syndrome is all about abnormal thyroid blood tests in patients without low thyroid symptoms. The condition is not considered to

Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis

Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis is an auto-immune inflammation of the thyroid gland. This means that the body can sometimes aim an immune attack, similar to the way it might fight germs or cancer, against its own thyroid gland. When that occurs, white blood cells called lymphocytes can infiltrate into the tissue of the thyroid gland. When doctors remove small amounts of thyroid tissue, either with a needle biopsy or during surgery, pathologists are able to see this infiltration, using microscopes. Blood tests can also demonstrate antibodies against the thyroid gland.

Hashimoto’s is more common in

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS). In order for a patient to be correctly diagnosed with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, according to the Center for Disease Control website,

  1. The patient must be clinically evaluated (in person) so that other explanations of the fatigue can be ruled out. There is no test that specifically diagnoses chronic fatigue syndrome. Tests are for confirming or excluding other possible explanations.
  2. The fatigue must be persistent or relapsing for at least 6 months, must have a definite onset (i.e., not lifelong), must not be the result of ongoing exertion or substantially improved by rest, must significantly reduce a

Fibromyalgia

Fibromyalgia Syndrome (FMS) is characterized by pain in the muscles, joints, tendons, and fibrous tissues of the body, especially in localized areas called trigger points. The diagnosis consists of widespread pain lasting for more than 3 months. The pain is widespread as in above and below the waist and on both sides of the body. In addition, patients must classically have 11 out of 18 trigger points.

When pressed with a force of about 2 pounds, the trigger points are painful, not just tender. Also, patients are frequently troubled by other symptoms