thyroid
Posted By: kps on 2006-08-15
In Reply to: Thyroid question, please...sm - Wondering
I have had hypothyroidism for the past 10 years and trust me, take the increased dosage. I have had doctors that actually do not believe in hypothyroidism and cut the dose and then I feel horrible for the next eight weeks until it gets back to normal. The little bit extra you would get in the increase in medication is not going to hurt you any. Actually, I found Armour thyroid to be better for me than the Synthroid. Synthroid never seemed to do anything for me. It only has the T4 hormones in it and the Armour has both the T3 and T4. Some doctors say you don't need the T3, but if your body produces it, you need it. I just feel better taking it. Presently, and over the past 10 years, my dose has increased to 120 mcg. It is an autoimmune disease and your levels will never stay the same. They will always fluctuate until your thyroid stops producing the hormones altogether, which is probably where I am at now. If I don't take my meds for say two months (which I have been known to do at times), I end up getting sick with flu-like symptoms...fevers, chills, nausea, vomiting, muscle aches and pains, etc. It takes a long time to get back to normal, so take the small increase. You may have to increase it again later on. There is also a discrepancy in what some doctors actually think is *normal*, too, so be aware that perhaps you DO need more than what you think you do. Do lots of research....I did. My body tells me what I need...not the doctors...if you know what I mean...even if I have to argue with them to get what I need. I will change doctors until I find one who knows what he is doing as far as the thyroid...or go to an endocrinologist. They know more about it. good luck. e-mail me if you have questions.
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thyroid
I had this when I was about 45. Couldn't get out of bed. I RARELY miss work (working at home, I work the rare times I'm ill), but I was starting to miss some work -- I couldn't keep my eyes open. It was my thyroid. Started meds, and in 2 weeks felt better.
Maybe have your thyroid checked? sm
A malfunctioning thyroid can cause those symptoms, I think. I used to work with a gal who was always freezing and slept alot and doc said her TSH was almost zip. He put her on Synthroid and she felt a lot better.
Maybe a thyroid problem?
Have you ever had your thyroid checked? This can be a symptom.
Thyroid question, please...sm
Hi-
Question about results on TSH (me personally, not a patient!) I've been on 1 mg of Synthroid, but just got my TSH results. They are RIGHT on the border of the lowest acceptable range.
My doc doesn't seem to think this warrants adjustment in the dosage, but I thought it should maybe be lowered a bit? Any advice? BTW, this is a fairly new doc to me, and I'm not entirely sure if I totally trust him yet, if you know what I mean.
TIA!
Was she tested for thyroid? sm
Pretty common in cats and I believe that's one of the symptoms. Good luck.
Thyroid Problems in dogs. Yep. sm
I had one dog that was on Synthroid and a relative has one that is diabetic with cataracts, post cataract extractions. Certain breeds are prone to diabetes as a matter of fact. They get most of what we get, including diabetes, thyroid disorder, Crohn's disease, cancer, cardiomyopathy, seizure disorders.
I would suggest that you have your thyroid checked--sm
It is the number one cause of fatigue and most often overlooked by physicians. Have a complete TSH blood test. T3, T4, free T4, and an iodine uptake test.
I read that there is some idea it may be related to THYROID imbalance. Maybe
.
Had thyroid checked many times, totally normal. My mom
had thyroid trouble, used her hands constantly in her job and her hobby and never had problems. Never heard this possible correlation before.
I read it a couple of yrs ago. Also, re thyroid testing------there are important
You can have NORMAL thyroid test results........fine and good. That only shows, however, that your thyroid is functioning.
It does not show you are utilizing the thyroid properly, though.
By that I mean are you absorbing the thyroid correctly.
That testing is more complex and time consuming.
My friend who has MS had quite a time getting her doc to do the testing correctly. As you know, MS makes you super fatigued anyway - and whe the thyroid aspect is off kilter, you are wiped out. Her testing was kind of like a blood glucose testing over several hours. She went in for testing every 30 minutes or so and sat at the lab for the whole time.
So, that may be something the article was alluding to as far as thyroid malfunctioning. You may be MAKING thyroid fine but not absorbing it.
Might also be your thyroid or Lyme disease. Insist on blood work! nm
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