Thyroid-Focused Naturopath on the Sunshine Coast
Supporting Complex Thyroid Presentations Across Queensland & Australia
Sue Kira is a thyroid-focused naturopath with over 33 years of clinical experience and more than 25,000 client consultations. Based on the Sunshine Coast and working with clients Australia-wide via telehealth, Sue supports individuals experiencing complex thyroid presentations, including Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, hypothyroidism, persistent fatigue despite “normal” thyroid tests, and autoimmune-related symptoms.
Many of the people who seek Sue’s support have already been told their thyroid levels are “within range,” yet they continue to struggle with exhaustion, brain fog, weight changes, anxiety, low mood, temperature sensitivity, or a general sense that something still isn’t right. Others may be taking thyroid medication but do not feel fully restored. Sue’s work focuses on understanding why.
Rather than viewing thyroid results in isolation, Sue takes a structured, methodical approach that considers the broader picture — immune function, nutrient status, stress physiology, gut health, inflammatory drivers, and the complex interactions that influence thyroid hormone production, conversion, and cellular response. With decades of clinical experience, she has seen firsthand how often subtle imbalances are overlooked when testing is limited or interpreted without sufficient context.
As a thyroid-focused naturopath on the Sunshine Coast, Sue is known for her careful interpretation of advanced testing and her ability to explain complex findings in a way that feels clear and empowering. Her clinical framework — Test → Clear → Nourish → Thrive — guides each thyroid case, ensuring that underlying contributors are investigated thoroughly and addressed systematically.
Whether working with clients locally in Queensland or via Australia-wide telehealth, Sue provides thoughtful, individualised care for those seeking deeper clarity around their thyroid health. Her goal is not simply to chase numbers, but to understand patterns, restore balance, and help her clients move toward sustainable vitality.
For those who feel unheard, dismissed, or told “everything is normal” while their body says otherwise, this is where deeper answers begin.
Why So Many People Still Feel Unwell Despite “Normal” Thyroid Tests
One of the most common patterns seen in thyroid-focused practice is this: blood tests are reported as normal, yet symptoms persist.
Many people are tested using Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH) alone. While TSH can be a useful marker, it does not tell the whole story. It does not reveal how well thyroid hormones are converting, how effectively they are entering cells, whether autoimmune antibodies are present, or whether nutrient deficiencies are impairing thyroid function.
A person may technically fall within laboratory reference ranges and still experience:
Persistent fatigue
Brain fog or poor concentration
Anxiety or low mood
Unexplained weight changes
Cold intolerance
Hair thinning
Irregular cycles
Poor stress resilience
Laboratory ranges are designed to detect overt disease. They are not always designed to detect early imbalance or suboptimal function. There is a significant difference between “not diseased” and “functioning optimally.”
In addition, thyroid hormones do not operate independently. Iron levels influence thyroid hormone production. Zinc and selenium support conversion and immune balance. Vitamin B12 impacts energy and neurological clarity. Chronic stress can alter thyroid signalling. Gut health can influence autoimmune activity. Inflammatory load can disrupt hormone sensitivity at a cellular level.
When these broader contributors are not assessed, people may be left feeling as though their symptoms lack explanation.
In autoimmune thyroid conditions such as Hashimoto’s, antibodies may be elevated years before TSH becomes abnormal. If antibodies are not tested, an important piece of the puzzle may be missed. Similarly, individuals taking thyroid medication may have “normal” TSH levels while still experiencing unresolved symptoms due to conversion issues, nutrient insufficiencies, stress physiology, or immune drivers that remain unaddressed.
This is why a thyroid-focused naturopathic approach looks beyond a single marker. It examines patterns, interactions, and context. It asks not only “Are the numbers within range?” but also “Does this make sense for this person’s lived experience?”
Feeling unwell with normal tests is not uncommon. It is a signal that deeper assessment may be required.
Common Thyroid Patterns I See in Clinic
Over more than three decades in practice, certain thyroid patterns appear again and again. While every person is unique, many presentations follow recognisable themes — particularly in women navigating mid-life hormonal changes, long-term stress, or autoimmune shifts.
Below are some of the most common thyroid-related presentations seen in clinic.
Diagnosed Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Many clients arrive with a diagnosis of Hashimoto’s, an autoimmune condition in which the immune system targets thyroid tissue. They may have elevated thyroid peroxidase (TPO) antibodies or thyroglobulin (TG) antibodies and are often told the condition is simply something to “monitor.”
Common experiences include fluctuating energy, periods of hyper- and hypo-thyroid symptoms, increased sensitivity to stress, and gradual worsening fatigue. In these cases, a thyroid-focused approach explores immune triggers, inflammatory load, gut-immune interactions, nutrient cofactors, and stress physiology — not just thyroid hormone levels alone.
Hypothyroidism with Ongoing Symptoms
Some individuals are taking thyroid medication and technically fall within laboratory reference ranges, yet still experience fatigue, brain fog, weight gain, dry skin, hair thinning, or low mood.
In these presentations, it is important to consider hormone conversion, cellular responsiveness, iron status, zinc and selenium levels, vitamin B12, vitamin D, and cortisol rhythm. Thyroid medication may correct one part of the equation, but not always the whole picture.
Subclinical or Borderline Thyroid Imbalance
Another common pattern involves individuals whose results sit within “normal” ranges but trend toward the edges — particularly when symptoms clearly suggest thyroid involvement.
These individuals may experience:
Gradual loss of energy
Increased anxiety or low mood
Cold sensitivity
Cycle irregularities
Reduced stress tolerance
Cognitive dullness
In these cases, early intervention and careful monitoring can help prevent further progression while supporting overall endocrine balance.
Persistent Fatigue with Suspected Thyroid Involvement
Fatigue is one of the most frequent reasons people seek thyroid assessment. However, thyroid function does not operate in isolation. Energy production is influenced by mitochondrial function, nutrient status, iron stores, sleep quality, stress load, blood sugar regulation, and immune activity.
When fatigue persists despite “normal” thyroid markers, a broader functional lens is often required. The thyroid may be part of the picture — but rarely the only part.
Perimenopausal Thyroid Shifts
During perimenopause, hormonal fluctuations can alter thyroid sensitivity and stress resilience. Women who previously felt stable may begin noticing fatigue, anxiety, disrupted sleep, weight changes, or mood shifts that resemble thyroid dysfunction.
Understanding the interplay between estrogen fluctuations, adrenal stress patterns, and thyroid hormone activity is particularly important during this stage of life.
While these patterns are common, no two cases are identical. A thyroid-focused naturopathic approach considers not only laboratory values, but the context of a person’s symptoms, history, stress load, and overall health landscape.
Recognising patterns is where experience matters. Addressing them methodically is where progress begins.
Thyroid Conditions I Commonly Work With
Thyroid health exists along a spectrum. Some individuals present with clear laboratory abnormalities and a formal diagnosis. Others experience subtle but persistent symptoms long before blood markers fall outside reference ranges.
Below are the thyroid conditions and patterns most commonly supported in clinic.
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s is an autoimmune condition in which the immune system targets thyroid tissue, often resulting in gradual thyroid under-function over time. It is one of the most common causes of hypothyroidism, particularly in women.
While thyroid hormone replacement may become necessary in some cases, autoimmune activity itself is often not addressed beyond monitoring antibodies.
A broader thyroid-focused approach considers:
Thyroid peroxidase (TPO) antibodies
Thyroglobulin (TG) antibodies
Inflammatory drivers
Gut-immune interactions
Stress load
Nutrient cofactors such as selenium, zinc, iron and vitamin D
Autoimmune thyroid patterns are rarely random. They often develop in the context of chronic stress, gut permeability, viral triggers, inflammatory load, or long-standing nutrient depletion. Understanding these contributors can help create a more comprehensive strategy.
Hypothyroidism
Hypothyroidism refers to reduced thyroid hormone production or activity. Classic symptoms may include:
Persistent fatigue
Weight gain or difficulty losing weight
Cold intolerance
Constipation
Hair thinning
Dry skin
Low mood
In conventional assessment, TSH is often the primary screening tool. However, full evaluation may also include Free T4, Free T3, reverse T3 (when indicated), and antibody screening.
Even when thyroid medication is prescribed, some individuals continue to experience symptoms. In these situations, factors such as hormone conversion efficiency, nutrient status, iron levels, stress physiology, and cellular responsiveness may warrant further exploration.
Subclinical Thyroid Dysfunction
Subclinical thyroid imbalance occurs when laboratory markers sit within reference ranges but trend toward the edges, often accompanied by symptoms.
This may present as:
TSH creeping upward over time
Low-normal Free T3
Borderline iron stores
Mild but persistent fatigue
Mood instability
Cognitive slowing
Laboratory reference ranges are designed to identify overt disease. They do not always reflect optimal function for every individual. In these cases, pattern recognition and careful monitoring are essential.
Thyroid & Chronic Fatigue Overlap
Chronic fatigue is frequently associated with thyroid dysfunction, but it is rarely caused by thyroid factors alone.
Energy production is influenced by:
Iron sufficiency
B vitamin status
Mitochondrial function
Cortisol rhythm
Inflammatory burden
Sleep quality
Blood sugar regulation
When fatigue persists despite “normal” thyroid markers, a wider systems-based approach is often required. The thyroid may be involved, but it sits within a broader endocrine and metabolic network.
Thyroid Changes During Life Transitions
Life stages such as pregnancy, postpartum recovery, perimenopause, and periods of prolonged stress can influence thyroid activity.
Hormonal fluctuations can alter thyroid hormone sensitivity and immune balance. During perimenopause, for example, changing estrogen levels can impact thyroid binding proteins and stress resilience, sometimes unmasking underlying vulnerabilities.
Understanding these transitions allows for a more contextual interpretation of symptoms and laboratory findings.
Across all of these conditions, one principle remains consistent: thyroid health does not operate in isolation. It is part of an interconnected system involving immune balance, nutrient status, stress physiology, gut function, and hormonal interplay.
Careful interpretation, pattern recognition, and a structured clinical framework are what allow these pieces to come together coherently.
A Methodical Approach to Thyroid Health
Test → Clear → Nourish → Thrive
Thyroid health is rarely restored through guesswork. It requires careful assessment, structured interpretation, and a clear plan.
Over decades of clinical practice, a consistent framework has emerged — one that allows complex thyroid presentations to be approached systematically and thoughtfully.
This framework is simple in structure, yet comprehensive in application:
Test → Clear → Nourish → Thrive
Each stage builds upon the next.
Test: Understand the Full Picture
Thyroid markers do not exist in isolation. A thorough assessment may include:
TSH
Free T4
Free T3
Thyroid antibodies (TPO and TG)
Iron studies (including ferritin)
Vitamin B12
Vitamin D
Zinc
Selenium
Cortisol rhythm (when indicated)
Gut markers where autoimmune patterns are present
Rather than viewing each number independently, patterns are considered. Trends over time matter. The relationship between symptoms and results matters.
A laboratory range may say “normal,” yet the person may still feel depleted. Context is everything.
Testing does not heal. Correct interpretation and personalised strategy do.
Clear: Reduce Interference
Once contributing factors are identified, the next step involves reducing the load that may be interfering with optimal thyroid function.
This may include:
Addressing inflammatory drivers
Supporting gut integrity where autoimmune activity is present
Reducing stress burden
Investigating environmental contributors when relevant
Supporting immune regulation
The goal at this stage is not aggressive intervention, but strategic removal of obstacles that may be disrupting thyroid signalling or immune balance.
When interference is reduced, the body often responds more predictably.
Nourish: Restore What Is Depleted
Thyroid physiology relies on adequate nutrient support. Iron supports thyroid hormone production. Zinc and selenium influence conversion and immune balance. B vitamins assist energy production. Vitamin D plays a regulatory role within the immune system.
Nourishment is personalised, based on testing and symptom presentation. Dietary considerations are also addressed thoughtfully. In autoimmune thyroid patterns, a gluten-free approach is often explored due to the recognised relationship between gluten exposure and autoimmune activity in susceptible individuals.
The aim is not restrictive dieting, but targeted nutritional support that aligns with the individual’s needs.
Thrive: Sustain Stability
Once thyroid function is stabilised and contributing factors addressed, the focus shifts toward long-term resilience.
This includes:
Ongoing monitoring
Stress regulation strategies
Sustainable dietary habits
Nervous system support
Periodic reassessment when required
The goal is not temporary improvement, but sustained vitality.
Thyroid health is dynamic. Life stages, stress load, infections, and hormonal transitions can all influence thyroid balance over time. A structured framework allows for adaptability while maintaining clarity.
This approach is what allows complex thyroid cases to move from confusion toward coherence.
Rather than reacting to isolated symptoms, the aim is to understand patterns, reduce interference, restore balance, and support long-term stability.
Beyond Basic Thyroid Testing
Why Interpretation Matters
Thyroid testing is widely available. Interpretation, however, varies significantly.
Many people have had thyroid blood tests performed — often more than once — yet still feel uncertain about what their results actually mean. A result may be reported as “within range,” but the lived experience of fatigue, brain fog, anxiety, or low mood remains unchanged.
Laboratory reference ranges are designed to identify overt pathology. They do not necessarily reflect optimal physiological function for every individual. A result sitting at the edge of a range may technically be classified as normal, yet still correlate with symptoms.
This is where context becomes critical.
For example:
A TSH trending upward over time, even within range, may indicate emerging thyroid strain.
A Free T3 sitting at the lower end of normal may contribute to persistent fatigue or cold sensitivity.
Thyroid antibodies may be elevated long before TSH becomes abnormal.
Iron levels within range may still be insufficient to support optimal thyroid hormone production and conversion.
No single marker tells the full story. Patterns matter more than isolated numbers.
Thyroid hormone activity also depends on effective conversion from T4 to T3, adequate cellular responsiveness, sufficient nutrient cofactors, and balanced stress physiology. Chronic stress can alter thyroid signalling. Inflammatory burden can impact receptor sensitivity. Gut health may influence autoimmune activity.
When these factors are not considered together, individuals may be left with partial answers.
A thyroid-focused naturopathic approach looks at:
Trends over time
Relationships between markers
Symptom patterns
Life stage context
Stress load
Nutrient status
Immune activity
Testing itself is only the first step. Thoughtful interpretation and personalised strategy are what translate data into meaningful direction.
With over 33 years of clinical experience, pattern recognition becomes intuitive. When results and symptoms do not align, further questions are asked. When a number appears technically normal yet clinically significant, it is evaluated within the broader context of the person’s health landscape.
The aim is clarity — not complexity for its own sake, but understanding that allows a coherent plan to emerge.
Thyroid health is rarely about a single lab value. It is about how the system functions as a whole.
The Thyroid Does Not Work Alone
Understanding the Wider Connections
The thyroid is often spoken about as though it functions independently. In reality, it operates within a highly interconnected network of systems.
When thyroid symptoms persist, it is rarely because of the thyroid gland alone. It is often the interaction between systems that reveals the full picture.
Thyroid & Immune Balance
In autoimmune thyroid conditions such as Hashimoto’s, immune regulation plays a central role. Elevated antibodies reflect immune activity directed at thyroid tissue. However, antibodies do not arise without context.
Immune activation may be influenced by:
Gut permeability
Chronic inflammatory load
Viral triggers
Long-term stress
Nutrient insufficiencies
Addressing immune balance often involves exploring these contributing factors rather than focusing solely on hormone replacement.
Thyroid & Gut Health
The gut and thyroid share a close relationship. The majority of immune activity resides within the gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT). When gut integrity is compromised, immune activation may increase — potentially influencing autoimmune thyroid patterns.
Additionally, gut health affects nutrient absorption. Iron, zinc, selenium, and B vitamins are all essential for thyroid hormone production and conversion. If digestion and absorption are impaired, thyroid support may be incomplete.
In autoimmune thyroid presentations, a gluten-free dietary approach is often explored due to recognised associations between gluten exposure and immune activation in susceptible individuals.
Thyroid & Stress Physiology
Chronic stress influences thyroid signalling in several ways. Elevated or dysregulated cortisol can impact thyroid hormone conversion and cellular responsiveness. Stress may also alter immune regulation and inflammatory balance.
Many individuals with thyroid symptoms report prolonged periods of stress prior to symptom onset. While stress alone does not cause thyroid dysfunction, it can act as a significant contributing factor.
Supporting nervous system regulation is therefore an important component of comprehensive thyroid care.
Thyroid & Liver Function
The liver plays a critical role in thyroid hormone conversion, particularly the conversion of T4 to the active T3 hormone. If liver function is compromised — whether due to metabolic strain, inflammation, medication load, or lifestyle factors — thyroid hormone activation may be affected.
Optimal thyroid health depends not only on production, but also on effective conversion and clearance pathways.
Thyroid & Perimenopause
Hormonal transitions such as perimenopause introduce additional complexity. Fluctuating estrogen levels can influence thyroid binding proteins and alter hormone availability. Stress resilience may shift during this stage of life, and previously stable systems may become more sensitive.
Women in perimenopause may experience symptoms that resemble thyroid dysfunction — or may find existing thyroid imbalances become more pronounced.
Understanding these overlapping patterns requires careful assessment rather than assumption.
Across all of these interactions, one principle remains consistent: thyroid health is systemic.
When thyroid concerns are approached in isolation, important contributors may be overlooked. When assessed within the broader context of immune balance, gut integrity, stress physiology, liver function, and life stage transitions, patterns become clearer.
This systems-based perspective allows for more coherent strategy and more sustainable outcomes.
Thyroid Support
Understanding Your Thyroid & Where to Start
The thyroid is a small gland in the neck — but it has a powerful influence over your energy, metabolism, mood, temperature regulation, hormones and overall vitality.
If your thyroid isn’t functioning optimally, you may experience:
Persistent fatigue
Weight changes
Brain fog
Hair thinning
Dry skin
Low mood or anxiety
Sensitivity to cold
Irregular cycles
Many people are told their thyroid tests are “normal” — yet they still don’t feel well. This is where a broader, root-cause approach can be helpful.
Foundational Thyroid Support: Where to Begin
While each person’s situation is unique, there are some important foundations that support healthy thyroid function.
1️⃣ Prioritise Key Nutrients
The thyroid relies on specific nutrients for hormone production and conversion.
Important nutrients include:
Iodine – required for thyroid hormone production
Selenium – supports conversion of T4 to active T3 and immune balance
Zinc – involved in hormone signalling
Iron (ferritin) – essential for thyroid hormone synthesis
Vitamin D – plays a role in immune regulation
Magnesium – supports stress resilience and overall metabolic balance
Before supplementing, testing is recommended to determine what is actually needed.
2️⃣ Support Gut Health
The gut and thyroid are closely connected.
A large portion of thyroid hormone conversion occurs outside the thyroid gland.
Gut inflammation may influence immune activity, particularly in autoimmune thyroid conditions such as Hashimoto’s.
Nutrient absorption begins in the digestive system.
Simple starting points:
Eat whole, minimally processed foods
Include fibre-rich vegetables
Prioritise protein at each meal
Identify and address digestive symptoms early
3️⃣ Manage Stress & Nervous System Load
Chronic stress can influence thyroid hormone conversion and immune function.
Supporting your nervous system may include:
Regular sleep (7–9 hours where possible)
Gentle movement such as walking or strength training
Breathing exercises or meditation
Reducing overcommitment where practical
For many people, addressing stress patterns is a crucial part of improving thyroid-related symptoms.
4️⃣ Review Environmental & Lifestyle Factors
In some individuals, ongoing thyroid symptoms may be influenced by:
Environmental exposures (including mould)
Chronic infections
Nutrient depletion
Long-term stress patterns
Hormonal imbalances
The thyroid rarely operates in isolation — it often reflects deeper system-wide imbalances.
When Symptoms Persist Despite “Normal” Results
If you continue to experience symptoms even when standard blood tests appear within range, a more detailed investigation may be helpful.
This can include:
Full thyroid panel (TSH, Free T3, Free T4, antibodies)
Nutrient testing
Gut health assessment
Immune and inflammatory markers
Exploring the broader picture often provides clarity that basic testing alone does not.
A Thoughtful, Individualised Approach
Thyroid support is not about guessing or applying generic supplement protocols.
It involves:
Careful history-taking
Appropriate testing
Identifying patterns
Addressing underlying drivers
Supporting the body step-by-step
If you are experiencing ongoing thyroid symptoms, a tailored approach may help uncover what is contributing to your situation.