Why your body feels intolerant to temperature changes
A sluggish thyroid-adrenal axis leaves your internal thermostat struggling to adapt — and the result is constant discomfort in changing environments.
You step out of a warm room into cool air and your body seems to panic. You overheat in mild sun. You cannot find a comfortable temperature. These are not random sensitivities — they are signs that the endocrine systems responsible for thermoregulation are not communicating properly.
What is actually happening
Thermoregulation depends on the thyroid, which sets baseline metabolic rate and heat production, and the adrenal axis, which modulates short-term adaptation. When either is sluggish — usually from chronic stress, mineral depletion or sub-clinical hypothyroid patterns — the body cannot adjust vascular tone, sweating and metabolic output quickly enough to match the environment. You feel every shift as a shock.
Why it is often missed on standard blood tests
Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) can sit inside the reference range while the active hormones T3 and T4 are low-normal. Adrenal function is rarely tested at all. The result is a population walking around with functional endocrine sluggishness that shows up as temperature intolerance, cold hands and feet, and fatigue — but no diagnosis.
The HolOrg approach
White Musli steroidal saponins support thyroid hormone synthesis and receptor expression, helping the gland communicate its signal clearly. Tulsi Leaf stabilises adrenal cortisol output so the short-term adaptation pathway is not either flat or exaggerated. Together they restore endocrine dialogue, and the body begins to regulate temperature with the ease it was designed for.