fbpx
Your Guide To Doctors, Health Information, and Better Health!
Your Health Magazine Logo
The following article was published in Your Health Magazine. Our mission is to empower people to live healthier.
Thomas K. Lo, MA, DC
It Is Your Body, Take Care of It
Advanced Chiropractic & Nutritional Healing Center
. http://www.doctorlo.com/

It Is Your Body, Take Care of It

It is your body, take care of it.

Your body does many things without you constantly telling it to do so. Many of these commands are carried out by the endocrine system.

Our hormones are the messengers. Different hormones carry different messages all over the body.

The endocrine system consists of different glands. Glands produce and release things, both inside and outside the body. Each gland in the endocrine system has a different job. The “master” is the pituitary gland. It is the size of a pea and has several jobs. It helps to control nervous function, controls the rest of the endocrine system and controls a few things directly having to do with childbirth and milk production.

Then you have the thyroid, which regulates the metabolism of every single cell in your body. It determines how well your entire body breaks down and uses what you put in it. It is butterfly shaped and located at the lower part of your throat just north of where your collar bones attach.

Next is the parathyroid. You have four of them. They are the size of a grain of rice and they are located behind the thyroid. Their only job is to regulate calcium levels in your body. Other than their location, they don’t have much to do with the thyroid.

Then there are the adrenal glands. They are located on top of your kidneys, which are located just under the last few ribs in your back, or just slightly below in some people. They control adrenaline, but they also produce other hormones necessary for fluid and electrolyte (salt) balance in the body, as well as making sex hormones.

Now we get into the pancreas. Though it is true that the pancreas produces insulin, which helps to regulate blood sugar levels, it also helps to regulate salt balances as well as regulating water absorption and secretion into the intestines. And one other little known fact: over 90% of pancreatic cells are devoted to the production of digestive enzymes. That’s right, your pancreas is responsible for a lot of your digestion.

The thymus is located in the upper middle part of your chest. Its job is to produce a hormone called thymosin, which plays an important role in your body’s immune system.

In order for all of these things to function properly and for you to have healthy endocrine function, you must have proper nutrition.

www.yourhealthmagazine.net
MD (301) 805-6805 | VA (703) 288-3130