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I'm trying to work out if cortisol production is a core part of my health issues. I'm especially wondering if the logic works to use hydrocortisone temporarily to see how much of my symptoms are resolved when cortisol is increased? I'm not keen on using it longer term and potentially causing further issues, but was wondering if I can simply take it and feel improvements on the day to make a clear connection? Context below:
I had a few cortisol tests last year. Blood levels came up low sometimes and normal at others. Saliva showed it as low until the evening when it's normal (and when I often feel better). I know levels range a lot so testing is problematic. A few things are making me think this could be a key for me:
1. I had a synacthen (synthetic ACTH) test, and felt wonderful after the injection - calm and content, and physically strong. This tells me my adrenals work fine (so any issues are further upstream), but also that the increase in cortisol really helped me.
2. Ever since I had a covid jab four years ago, I often get very dizzy and have cognitive issues. But it doesn't happen every day, and follows a specific pattern. I'm OK when I wake, and then it kicks in a few hours later. I've recently noticed that when I'm in a CFS crash, I don't get the neuroinflammation issues. When I'm in a crash, I tend to wake early with a banging heart. So I'm wondering if I have increased cortisol levels then and it's fixing the day's potential neuroinflammation?
3. My sleep was messed up last year and I was able to fix it using adrenal cortex, Biocare's adreno complex and phosphatidylserine at night, so it's clearly at least part of the picture, but I seem to have maxed out the benefits I can get from that route.
I'm especially thinking of gathering information at the moment (although it would be great to have a medication that could make me feel better on important days), i.e. what can all this tell me about why I'm so ill and how I might fix it?
Any thoughts welcome, thanks
I had a few cortisol tests last year. Blood levels came up low sometimes and normal at others. Saliva showed it as low until the evening when it's normal (and when I often feel better). I know levels range a lot so testing is problematic. A few things are making me think this could be a key for me:
1. I had a synacthen (synthetic ACTH) test, and felt wonderful after the injection - calm and content, and physically strong. This tells me my adrenals work fine (so any issues are further upstream), but also that the increase in cortisol really helped me.
2. Ever since I had a covid jab four years ago, I often get very dizzy and have cognitive issues. But it doesn't happen every day, and follows a specific pattern. I'm OK when I wake, and then it kicks in a few hours later. I've recently noticed that when I'm in a CFS crash, I don't get the neuroinflammation issues. When I'm in a crash, I tend to wake early with a banging heart. So I'm wondering if I have increased cortisol levels then and it's fixing the day's potential neuroinflammation?
3. My sleep was messed up last year and I was able to fix it using adrenal cortex, Biocare's adreno complex and phosphatidylserine at night, so it's clearly at least part of the picture, but I seem to have maxed out the benefits I can get from that route.
I'm especially thinking of gathering information at the moment (although it would be great to have a medication that could make me feel better on important days), i.e. what can all this tell me about why I'm so ill and how I might fix it?
Any thoughts welcome, thanks