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Adrenal Cell Extracts & Cortisol in Adrenal Fatigue

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Probably the most reliable way of rebuilding the adrenals from adrenal fatigue is the use of extracts from liquid or powdered porcine adrenal glands. The first recorded use of an adrenal extract was in 1898 when Sir William Osler administered a crude preparation of adrenal cells to a person with Addison's disease. Since 1918, when they became commercially available, adrenal cell extracts have been a valuable and powerful form of therapy and have been used by thousands of medical doctors in the treatment of non-Addison's type of adrenal fatigue.

Adrenal cell extracts, also known as adrenal cortical extracts, are the liquid or powder extracts of the adrenal cortex. Their action is to support, fortify and restore normal adrenal function, thereby enhancing adrenal activity and speeding recovery. Adrenal cell extracts are not replacement hormones - in fact, the best type of extract to use has been processed to remove the adrenal hormones. What they provide are the essential constituents for adrenal repair, including the adrenal cell contents, such as nucleic acids (adrenal cell RNA and DNA) and concentrated nutrients, in the form and proportion used by the adrenals to properly function and recover from stress.

Various types of adrenal cortical extracts have been used orally and as injectables since the end of World War I and have rarely produced unwanted side effects. They have been, and continue to be, a fundamental part of the treatment protocol for adrenal fatigue used effectively for over 80 years, and provide significant value for alleviating all levels of adrenal fatigue.

Today, by combining our knowledge of adrenal cortical extracts with lifestyle modifications, dietary supplements and herbal formulas, we can stabilize people with adrenal fatigue and accelerate their recovery more efficiently than ever before.

Coritsol vs Adrenal Cell Extracts

It is important to understand the difference between adrenal cell extracts and natural or synthetic cortisol and cortisol-type steroids such as cortisone, prednisone, prednisolone and many other forms of adrenal steroid hormones. Adrenal cell extracts that have been processed to remove adrenal hormones nourish and help rebuild adrenal cells. As these cells recover, they can once again produce the proper amount of the various hormones needed for the many functions performed by the adrenal glands. By this means, they tend to normalize adrenal function. In contrast, corticosteroids, whether natural or synthetic, tend to reduce or shut down the activity of the adrenal glands. This happens because the brain senses the presence of these cortisol substitutes and, in response, withholds the signal of adrenalcorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) it would otherwise send to the adrenal glands to make more adrenal hormones. Thus, corticosteroids suppress the functions of the adrenal glands, over-riding the normal feedback loops that regulate and balance adrenal hormones. In spite of the fact that this action can produce dramatic initial improvements in symptoms, these symptomatic improvements come with a heavy price.

Because corticosteroids mask the symptoms of adrenal fatigue and, when used in excess, depress immune function, the person taking them is at greater risk from stress and infection. Such therapy can become more hazardous than the original disease. Corticosteroids may have quick and dramatic symptomatic results, but unless they are used in their natural form and in physiologic doses that mimic the natural secretion of cortisol, they make the adrenals weaker rather than stronger.

It is difficult to get off a corticosteroid drug once on one for a while. People get caught in the "catch-22" that if they stop taking the corticosteroids, they crash and their symptoms return worse than ever because adrenal activity is suppressed. So they keep taking them, but the longer they take them, the harder it is for the adrenals to regain proper function.

It is important to remember that corticosteroids suppress adrenal function in proportion to the dosage. For this reason, it is important that steroid treatment should be withdrawn slowly, never abruptly.

Conversely, adrenal cell extracts adrenal function and, when taken over time, naturally strengthen the capacity of the adrenals for healthy function. Once the adrenal glands are responding sufficiently, a gradual step-down program can be initiated to reduce and even eliminate the need for adrenal cell extracts. In recovering from adrenal fatigue and stress, it is important to allow adequate time for the optimal adrenal function to become fully established before beginning a reduction schedule.

Comments

Thanks for such a thorough explanation!
Posted @ Thursday, October 15, 2009 3:48 PM by Sapphyre
I 100% agree! After reading in forums all over the internet it seems like doctors are administering corticosteroids much too liberally. People need to become educated as to the affects of corticosteroids and know that their are much more natural alternatives that don't provide the addiction/crash/dependence on such treatments. 
 
Very nice article.
Posted @ Friday, October 16, 2009 3:38 PM by adrenal fatigue guy
Where can high quality adrenal cell extracts be found
Posted @ Friday, October 16, 2009 6:43 PM by April McCray
Very nice article, as I'm sure you know Doctor, pig organs are very similar to ours so using extracts from them seems like a natural choice.
Posted @ Friday, October 16, 2009 7:47 PM by Jill
This is very informative but I am unsure about bovine vs porcine.In Dr. Wilsons book he suggests bovine but this arcticle he suggests porcine extract. I want to talk to my Doctor about switching from hydrocortisone to an adrenal cell extract. Which one is best? Thanks 
 
Ron
Posted @ Friday, October 16, 2009 9:04 PM by Ron
Hi there, 
This article is interesting and I have been taking pregnenolone as my dr advised me this would be faster and a better way to treat the adrenals but reading this I'm wondering if thats true or if I should be taking glandulars  
thanks  
Pipx
Posted @ Friday, October 16, 2009 10:31 PM by pip
Hi, I am in a mess, I was on 125mcg T4 and 10mcg T3 when I was told I was suffering with adrenal exhaustion and needed to go on cortisol, that was 2 years ago and I refused, however I was put on 60mg pregnenolone and 15mg DHEA this did nothing, I then started on a bovine extract of 150mg, still did not notice anything. Then I had an accident hit my head badly and ended up in hospital. This was when I knew I needed cortisol, so I started to take it at little at a time, after 1 week I went into toxicosis shock and had to stop all but 10mcg of my thyroid medication, it took 3 4 weeks for the terrible shaking and racing heart to stop, then my stomach became inflammed from the steroids so I had to stop. At the moment I am on Dr Wilsons Adrenal Rebuilder 4 a day but I am still housebound and unable to introduce my thyroid as it starts the shakes. I am so so cold. 
Regards 
Janice
Posted @ Saturday, October 17, 2009 6:55 AM by Janice George
I was diagnosed with adrenal fatigue last year. I started taking Dr. Wilson's Super Adrenal Stress, Adrenal C and the Adrenal Rebuilder. I only took 1 bottle of the Adreanl Rebuilder as I do not eat pork products. I however decided to take at least 1 bottle to help my adrenals. I felt so much better by the time I was finished with that 1 bottle. I too, would prefer to take bovine instead of porcine. Is that available? This is a personal and religious choice.
Posted @ Saturday, October 17, 2009 10:00 AM by Vivian M
I totally agree with Dr. Wilson based on my bitter experiences. I bought adrenal extracts with hormone and took it about one months and I suffered from insomnia. I think that adrenal hormone caused it. Since I have found out that I can order Dr. Wilson's formula without hormone at Futureformulations.com, I placed my order about a week ago, which has not arrived yet. I wished I knew this kind of information a couple months ago. 
 
 
 
Anyway, thank you very much Dr. Wilson. 
 
 
 
I am very sure that I will get back my body with full vitality pretty soon with your formula. 
 
 
 
Best regards, 
 
 
 
Hiroshi Morita 
 
Tokyo Japan
Posted @ Monday, October 19, 2009 3:53 AM by Hiroshi Morita
I just want to say to everyone reading that adrenal extracts really do work. I had a severe HTP axis problem - high night cortisol, zero morning cortisol, low during the day, i.e. very messed up function! This was diagnosed about a year after I was put on thyroid hormones for Hashimoto's hypothyroidism, which only made me worse. 
 
 
 
If only my doctors had thought to check my adrenal function before putting me on thyroid hormones, it would have spared me a lot of real misery. Why do they not do this, when adrenal fatigue is right there on the list of warnings?  
 
 
 
Anyway, I was reluctant to start cortisol because for every person I 'met' on the net who tried it, I'd say much more than half of them had real trouble with it sooner or later. 
 
 
 
Finally I came across Dr Wilson's book and everything changed. I ordered his glandulars. It took a long time, about a year, but my last saliva tests showed perfect function. I felt a difference only after about three or four months - suddenly I started sleeping really well. 
 
 
 
I suspect that the reason I had to give myself lots of time is that I had poor adrenal function for years before my hypothyroidism was finally diagnosed (20+ years? Since I was in my early 20s?). But after reading Dr Wilson's book, I was prepared, with hopefulness, to commit to the protocol for the long term and I'm just so glad it paid off. I will continue to take the glandulars for a while and then gradually wean myself off. 
 
 
 
Good luck everybody. 
 
 
 
Laura 
 
 
 
Posted @ Wednesday, October 21, 2009 6:17 PM by Laura Merton
Hi, has anyone found that being of Dr Wilsons adrenal formulas has caused them to have spots. I have been taking them for 4 weeks now and for the first time in my life I am getting spots over my face. I also find that I shake internally a lot I do not know if this is to do with taking thyroid medication as well as adrenals. Any helpful answers would be really appreciated. 
Regards 
Janice 
England
Posted @ Friday, October 23, 2009 5:36 AM by Janice George
Hi Janice - I really sympathise with you about those internal shocks, because I really suffered badly with them for more than three years, especially when I dropped off to sleep at night - I'd get a horrible shock running through my body (I call them 'the zaps'!) which would wake me up then the whole thing would repeat until the early hours. Sometimes I thought my electrical system was shutting down and I was going to die - horrible. I still have them, but since doing Dr Wilson's protocol, only occasionally and very slightly, never enough to interfere with good sleep. I am also on thyroid medication, and the zaps started about a year after I was diagnosed. I went to several doctors about it all, including two 'top' London endocrinologists and a neurologist; most ignored the issue but two said I had an anxiety disorder and needed antidepressants (which I took to mean: I don't have a clue, but you're probably peri-menopausal so just take some pills and get out of my office).  
 
This whole business is so confusing, isn't it? I have found that I need to be my own doctor, do all my own research, take all the initiatives. Very frustrating at times. But what I've figured out as best I can is that the adrenals are incredibly important to us hypothyroid patients. I think my zaps are endocrine-related - adrenals, thyroid, and probably fluctuating female hormones (I'm now 48) and I strongly suspect that a low Free T3: higher Free T4 ratio played a part in my problems. but they were helped by months of adrenal glandulars, iron (spatone, you can get it in Boots), sublingual B12 and folic acid. Having said that, your acne could point to high testosterone levels and you might want to have that checked. Do you know about NP Tech labs? It costs you, but you can get your adrenals tested (saliva) yourself. 
 
Also all my research finally led me to a really super doctor, Dr Liam Chapman in Hendon, who has helped me feel even better and is a truly caring and thorough doctor 
 
If you need any other information, please contact me directly at lkmerton@gmail.com and I can try to point you towards good websites and other sources of information. 
 
Good luck and all best wishes, Laura 
 
Posted @ Friday, October 23, 2009 11:17 AM by Laura Merton
Hi, 
 
Before purchasing Dr. Wilsons adrenal cortical extracts I had been prescribed Hydrcotisone. Dr. Wilson said in his book that a person could be using both but to eventually taper off of the hydrocortisone and increase the adrenal cell extracts. Has anybody done this yet. I am unsure of how much of each that I can safely use at the same time. If I am using hydrocortisone should I use less than the recommended dosages of adrenal cell extracts. 
 
 
 
Ron
Posted @ Monday, October 26, 2009 5:32 PM by Ron
Has anyone seen in Dr. Wilson't book a mention of thyroid being affected by adrenal fatigue? I am sure I saw it but when I went back to confirm what he said I could'nt find it. I was diagnosed with low thyroid 3 years ago and started taking Armour thyroid just for the purpose of hair regrowth. Dr. said my hair was falling out because of low thyroid. Now 3 years later after seeing no improvement in using Armour I am investigating adrenal fatigue. My adrenals test very low using blood pressure test. I have almost no other symptoms of low adrenals except low energy which I have attributed to back pain from auto accident 10 years ago. I am retired and have no stress, eat a healthy diet and use many nutritional supplements. I do eat too much candy and am trying to cut down on that. I am just starting to be treated by chiroprator for back pain and he said that the treatments could benefit the adrenals, and I suspect that the injury from the accident were what started adrenal fatigue. 
 
Has anyone seen regrowth of thin hair as a benefit of improving adrenal function? It seems logical that since hair loss is often attributed to low thyroid and if adrenal glands control the thyroid then strengthing the adrenals would result in hair regrowth. 
 
And Laura is right, we do have to be our own doctor, and helping one another is crucial to accomplishing that. 
 
Nancy
Posted @ Friday, October 30, 2009 12:44 PM by Nancy
Laura, not being far from North London, UK, myself, would it be okay if I emailed you to find out how you helped yourself so much? I really like the sound of the doctor in Hendon you reommended. 
 
 
 
I've tried to research as much as I can about low thyroid and adrenal function but there seems to be so much conflicting information. On the subject of the use of cortisol, as I understand it, only low doses are recommended, say 5mg, probably 10mg max, of bioidentical cortisol, which are said not to suppress adrenal function. Can anyone say whether they've found these amounts to still be a problem? 
 
 
 
And has anyone found that porcine adrenal glandulars have helped them, whereas bovine sourced ones have not? 
 
 
 
Vivien 
 
 
 
Posted @ Saturday, October 31, 2009 12:11 PM by Vivien
Nancy, I was surprised the first time I read it that Dr Wilson's book doesn't talk about the thyroid that much, as they are true partners, but then again he is an expert at healing the adrenals which are the foundation of thyroid health. As for thinning hair, I think mine is a lot better, yes, but I also take Borage Oil (Starflower Oil) for that. You do know about the Armour reformulation and that some (but certainly not all) people are not doing as well on the new formula? Anyway, based on my own experience, I would just follow along as closely as possible to Dr Wilson's protocols and I'd be surprised if you didn't get good results in all sorts of areas. 
 
 
 
Vivien, yes please feel free to email me directly to lkmerton@gmail.com I was wary about taking any hc at all as so many people I know had trouble - I'm just glad the glandulars worked for me but it certainly did take time, and I'm not going to say that my health is perfect quite yet! 
 
 
 
Laura 
 
 
 
Posted @ Saturday, October 31, 2009 5:18 PM by Laura
Laura, 
 
I found about 2 pages near the end of the book about thyroid. Since blood tests for thyroid are not likely to be accurate if you have adrenal fatigue he gives a list of symptoms to determine if your thyroid is low. I cannot use the ones dealing with stamina, energy as I feel like my loss of energy is mainly a result of back pain from auto accident and according to kinesiology tests shortly after accident caused damage to my adrenals. I have seen alot of lists of indicators of low thyroid and they always include hair loss. Dr. Wilson says nothing about hair loss but his list is the only one that mentions the outside of eyebrows are much thinner and this is my situation as well as loss of eye lashes. I have been able to get 3 months supply of Armour which I believe is the orginal formula, but am weaning myself off of it now that I am concentrating on adrenal restoration. I have ordered Dr. Wilson's adrenal extracts and am back to taking pregnolone prescribed by alternative dr. last year, which for some reason I stopped taking over the summer. Probably because we were traveling in motor home and it was more difficult to stay on a pill popping regimen.  
 
I have heard of borage oil for various health issues but not for hair loss. Is this where you hold the oil in your mouth for several minutes? 
 
I hope I have the same good results from the extracts that you have had. 
 
Nancy...
Posted @ Sunday, November 01, 2009 10:19 AM by Nancy
Hi Nancy, good luck with this. I had heard about pregnenolone therapy as well, but understood that it can raise DHEA which in turn raises testosterone, and higher testosterone can lead to hair loss...? This is all very complicated so don't quote me. The one thing I am sure of however is that playing with hormones is like playing with fire - we do need to be so cautious as our endocrine systems are so finely balanced, and taking one thing throws out the whole synergy for a while. So be careful... and best of all find a really good doctor to guide you through the maze. Dr Liam Chapman in Hendon is excellent. It took me almost 6 years, and being damaged one way or another by several incompetents, to find him. Good luck!  
 
Laura
Posted @ Sunday, November 01, 2009 5:28 PM by Laura Merton
Laura, 
 
You have given me some food for thought about pregnalone. Dr. W. mentions it in book, but he sure did'nt say what you said, only, as far as I remember, that it works slower than extracts. Maybe the Lord caused me to not take it, which as I said, I had no reason to leave it off. AND if it has any connection to raising test. I don't even want it in my house. I experimented with test. about 2 years ago and it sure enough played hell with my hair, took months for that crap to get out of my system. As far as finding a good doc. it would easier to find the fairy godmother. I have little confidence in the current one, as the more I find out about A.F. the more I think I know more than he does, and he is a well respected alternative guy. I called him this week to ask what I should do about AF after my husband gave me Ragland test which uses a blood presssure cuff and found out that my adrenals were in the basement. By the time she talked to doc and called I had started rereading the book from last year. At first she said doc. said I should take another saliva test, $300, plus dr. visit at least $100, I said I don't think so. She called back and said Dr. said to take blood test for thyroid and I told her that I had found out that testing for thyroid while Adrenals were in bad shape was an exercise in futility and that I would wait to take any more tests. I have appmt for Dec. and will probably cancel that as I don't enjoy spending alot of money for nothing, and now that you told me about preg., which he proscribed last Jan. I have less confidence in him than ever. I have never been one to go to drs. and am not getting any better on that score, but the hope of not going bald before I am dead is the only thing that led me to contact him.  
 
Do you drink salt water? I am curious about that recommendation in the book, but have been doing it whenever I think of it, it at least gets me to drink water, which I rarely do, as I am almost never thirsty. I am also also giving up coffee except for one cup in AM and even more dastardly, quitting choc. candy which I am close to addicted to. Last night was quite a test, with all the kids coming for trick or treat and having to have all that candy sitting around. I made it alright til 9:30 when the kids stopped coming and I gave in and ate one small bag of M&Ms. None today and I am surviving alright. I am drinking almond milk instead of coffee after dinner, so having a substitute is big help. 
 
Don't think your Dr. would work for me as I am in Fla. US and I believe you are in the UK? Lucky you for finding a good one that knows that the heck he is doing. 
 
Nancy...
Posted @ Sunday, November 01, 2009 6:49 PM by Nancy
Hi Nancy, me again. I would really worry about representing myself as any kind of expert or even someone to listen to. I snatch bits of information here and there and try to put it together, so all I mean to offer is passing on those snatches! A close friend of mine has high DHEA and high testosterone and started taking pregnenolone, which drove her testosterone too high, which is why I know about this (because DHEA is a pathway to testosterone producation). I suppose my main point is that we play around with hormones at our peril. You never know what you're affecting. Because I have low DHEA and low testosterone, the pregnenolone might be a good idea for me one day if I ever have trouble with the small (and very helpful) amount of DHEA I'm on.  
 
I hope you can eventually find someone you can trust - like I said, it took me 6 years.  
 
I really don't know if thyroid blood tests are meaningless if your adrenals are shot - I'd never heard that, and I know low thyroid is a cause of hair loss. I also think low ferritin can cause it in some people - mineral deficiencies in general would be worth looking into. I wish I could be more helpful! Good luck finding out as much as possible. In any case I often find that doctors are really just there to do what you want, help you with the ideas you yourself find and generate - you have to be the boss - so maybe the current doctor you have is not a dead loss in that respect! all the best, 
 
Laura
Posted @ Sunday, November 01, 2009 9:08 PM by Laura Merton
I'd like to hear more from anyone that has taken or is taking hydrcortisone. I was diagnosed with Adrenal Fatigue 1 year ago, and have been taking Dr. Wilson's Adrenal Rebuilder, amd Multivitamin. I do feel better now than a year ago ( I had crashed badly then-bed ridden ) However, I had saliva testing done in December and found that my cortisol is below the charts in the morning but almost normal by mid afternoon and evening. My doctor has prescribed 10mg.hydrocortisone in A.M. only and I'm worried about how hard it is going to be to get off of it. Can anyone tell me how you do that ?
Posted @ Wednesday, January 20, 2010 7:41 PM by Jeri
Hello: 
 
 
 
Laura, may I email you directly? This is the first time I have ever heard anyone directly connect the electrical zaps to adrenal fatigue and say that they improved with a definite program. I am 50 yo female and fit many of your same history items. I have a few more questions if you would not mind about your experience. 
 
Terri
Posted @ Sunday, January 24, 2010 7:19 PM by Terri
hi. I've been on Hydrocortisone for over 2 years now. Taking 17. 5 mg but was up to 30 at one point. Had a total thyroidectomy 6 years ago. I have pretty bad adrenal fatige that the HC does not seem to be taking care of. Can someone please comment on how to switch from HC to adrenal cell rebuilder? thank you!
Posted @ Monday, April 12, 2010 10:46 PM by Lexie Carroll
Dear Dr Wilson 
Can you explain whether all companies remove hormones from ACE? How does this affect users? Do the hormones within ACE act the same as hydrocortisol? I really appreciate your thoughts on this.
Posted @ Monday, April 26, 2010 10:12 PM by Dan
Hi Jeri  
I have been on Hydrocortisone for 7 months now. I started with 10 mg per day split am/afternoon for the first 3 months then went to 5 mg in the morning for 2 months then down to 2.5 mg morning. I take 6 Adrenal Rebuilder, 4 Super Adrenal Stress and 3000mg Vitamine C. I eat a very healthy diet mostly veggies next to no sweets, drink only water.  
I started with severe adrenal fatigue and I have improved a bit now but since I was in such bad condition it will take me a year probably to get well from this.  
 
The Hydrocortisone is only meant to be taken a short time while your adrenals rest so they can repair. I am happy that mine have responded even if it is a little bit.  
 
Adrenal fatigue and thyroid problems go hand in hand usually if you have one the other is also present. I take Armour thyroid for my thyroid problems. It is a natural thyroid not meant to treat the adrenals although it may have some positive action on them. If you have a thyroid problem it is not wise to just go off the thyroid medicine or to take more or less of the medicine with out checking your TSH # which should be between 1-3 NOT the 3-5 measure some labs still use and some uninformed doctors still treat to. They need to look at your Free T4 and T3 numbers to see if you need Thyroid support. 
If you have thyroid numbers higher than 3 then make sure the doctor tests you for Hashimotos Thyroiditis he needs to check your two thyroid antibodies for this. 
Adrenal fatigue could be a symptom of thyroid problems.  
 
I also have systemic fungi which only adds to the mix. I suggest everyone look up Candida fungi and do the simple spit and water test you will find in some websites to test yourselves to see if this is not also making you tired and sick.If after doing this self test you see you don't pass the test then go get the Candida blood test to confirm and then get help immediately. Candida may be the cause of all these problems in the end and more ahead if left untreated. 
 
Good luck to all.
Posted @ Sunday, May 16, 2010 6:54 PM by ksuter
I was diagnosed as having adrenal fatigue 6 months ago. The dr I was seeing put me on a strict regime of vitamins, diet etc. I do not feel better and was wanting to try adrenal cell replacement. I am a vegetarian and do not wnat to take the porcine if the borcine works just as good. Anybody used these? what were the results? I have very low cortisol levels in the am and high at night. thanks any info would be appreciated!
Posted @ Wednesday, May 19, 2010 10:34 AM by Regina
Don't know if I have adrenal fatigue but was hoping someone could help. I don't sleep very well and it seems to be hormone related and effected possibly by carbs/sugars. Not a diabetic as far as blood testing goes. Haven't had glucose tolerance test. Adrenal fatigue sounds like a possiblity.
Posted @ Wednesday, May 26, 2010 8:20 AM by ken
I would suggest doing the saliva testing to confirm adrenal fatigue. You don't need a dr's order for this. check out this website http://www.stopthethyroidmadness.com/adrenal-info/
Posted @ Wednesday, May 26, 2010 11:27 PM by Lexie Carroll
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