The thyroid gland produces the hormones that set the metabolic rate of every cell in the body. Thyroid dysfunction — both overt and subclinical — is among the most prevalent endocrine conditions in adults, affecting an estimated 20 million Americans. Yet it is inadequately screened, frequently undertreated, and its optimization receives almost no attention in mainstream longevity discourse despite its fundamental role in metabolism, cardiovascular health, cognitive function, and body composition.
The thyroid gland's hormones — thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3) — are the body's primary metabolic regulators. T3 binds to nuclear thyroid hormone receptors distributed in virtually every cell type and directly regulates the expression of genes controlling oxygen consumption, protein synthesis, carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, cardiac contractility, thermogenesis, and neuronal function. The metabolic rate you have, the body temperature you maintain, the rate at which you burn fat, the efficiency of your heart, and the clarity of your thinking are all substantially determined by your thyroid hormone levels.1
The thyroid gland secretes approximately 80 percent of its output as T4 and 20 percent as T3. T4 is relatively inert (approximately 10 times less potent than T3) and serves primarily as a circulating reservoir that peripheral tissues convert to active T3 via type 1 and type 2 deiodinase enzymes. This peripheral conversion is a significant and often overlooked source of thyroid dysfunction — people with normal T4 production and normal TSH may have suboptimal T3 due to impaired peripheral deiodinase activity.2
Factors that impair T4-to-T3 conversion include: selenium deficiency (deiodinase enzymes are selenoproteins), zinc deficiency, chronic illness or inflammation, very low-calorie dieting, high cortisol (stress), certain medications (amiodarone, beta-blockers, glucocorticoids, lithium), and aging itself (peripheral deiodinase activity declines with age). The result is elevated reverse T3 (rT3, an inactive T3 isomer produced when T4 conversion is shunted away from active T3) and potentially low free T3 — a pattern entirely invisible to TSH-only testing.
Subclinical hypothyroidism (SCH) — defined as elevated TSH (above 4.0-4.5 mIU/L depending on the laboratory) with normal free T4 — affects 4 to 8 percent of adults and up to 20 percent of women over 60. The clinical significance and treatment threshold for SCH is one of the most actively debated topics in endocrinology. The case for treatment: SCH is associated with elevated LDL-C (thyroid hormone regulates LDL receptor expression), elevated cardiovascular risk (particularly when TSH is above 10 mIU/L), cognitive symptoms, fatigue, weight gain, and impaired exercise tolerance. A meta-analysis of 11 cohort studies found that SCH with TSH above 10 mIU/L was associated with significantly elevated cardiovascular mortality.3
Current guidelines recommend treatment for SCH with TSH consistently above 10 mIU/L and individualized decision-making for TSH between 4.5 and 10 mIU/L in adults under 65. For adults over 70, the evidence for treatment benefit in the 4.5-10 mIU/L range is weaker, and some evidence suggests that mildly elevated TSH may actually be protective in very old age — perhaps reflecting a physiologically downregulated metabolic rate that reduces oxidative damage.
Hashimoto's thyroiditis is an autoimmune condition in which TPO (thyroid peroxidase) and thyroglobulin antibodies progressively damage thyroid tissue. It can remain subclinical for years to decades — with elevated TPO antibodies (typically above 35 IU/mL) but normal TSH — during which time thyroid follicular cells are being destroyed by lymphocytic infiltration. By the time TSH rises to the SCH or overt hypothyroidism range, significant thyroid tissue has already been lost. Early identification via TPO antibody testing in adults with symptoms (fatigue, cold intolerance, weight gain, hair loss, brain fog) — even with normal TSH — allows earlier intervention and lifestyle modification that may slow progression.4
Selenium supplementation (200 mcg/day of selenomethionine) has been shown in multiple RCTs to reduce TPO antibody titers in Hashimoto's thyroiditis and may slow disease progression — a clinically meaningful intervention that is low-cost, safe, and accessible. The mechanism: selenium is required for selenoprotein synthesis including the glutathione peroxidases and deiodinases that protect thyroid cells from the oxidative damage generated by thyroid hormone synthesis.
