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Anonymous

What I have learned is that many doctors don't know much about Thyroid condition and what tests to do. Besides TSH as you said T3 & T4 levels should be tested. What many don't do is to test Free T3 which is very important because total T3 & T4 does not show the amount of it is being used by your body to say it in easy terms.
I have learned the hard way that it is hard to find doctors that understand this and also listen and dose according to symptoms. Many patients are told they are at the correct level of Thyroid replacement meds but their symptoms continue. It is not 1 dose fits all issue and without the right doctor that doses based on symptoms you can deal with years of being misdiagnosed and given additional meds for depression, joint pain, chronic fatigue, headaches, weight issues, etc.

I am still looking for the right doctor that will get me to be the old me again. I have an appt with an thyroidologist that I found through this website and have high hopes. At least I am educated now and know and understand everything much better.

For anyone dealing with hypothyroidism, I strongly suggest getting books on it and self educate. My first book was Living well with Hypothyroidism by Mary Shomon. From there on I have read many more books and found several great websites to help me. But that book explained the basics to me.

Good luck to all in your search to better health!

Anonymous

Thanks for the great information. I'm going to recommend his to all of my friends.

Anonymous

I have have been hypothyroid since going through menopause. I am now 71 years old. I have been stable all these years on .112 mcg synthroid. Just this week I had a thyroid test which showed tsh 3rd gen @ 0.235 uIU/mL @Free T-4 @ 2.29 ng/dL. I need to know for sure if this indicates that I need my synthroid dose upped to 150 MCG???

My doc (Internist) has made a few errors with me lately, causing me to loose some trust in him.

Please help!!

Thank you.

Janice

Anonymous

How have you been feeling physically? When looking at your labs, it is important to review how your labs are compared to previous labs and also looking at the range of your labs for normal results (normally on the right hand side of your results). if your TSH is 0.235 and the range says normal is 1.0-3.0 your TSH is low with means you need to come down on your synthroid. If you TSH range is 0.135-0.300 on your labs you are right in the middle where you should be.

But again the main thing to go by (and hard for doctors to follow) is by how you feel, not just what your bloodwork says. What are your symptoms?

I joined a very knowledgeable group on Yahoo. Even though they favor Armour, they still can help you interpret your labs and steer you in the right direction.

http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/NaturalThyroidHormones/

Anonymous

I am 71 years old, women and my TSH is 9.9 and I have no symptoms at all. I am healthy happy person.
My doctor wants me to have all these tests, and I will not have them. About 3 or 4 years ago, he told me again about my THS tests, so I went to the medicine shop and bought natural, stuff for the Thyroid.
After about 2 months, my throat felt like it was pulling in front, so I stop and it took me 2 or 3 months
to withdraw from them, it only told me that I mite not have Thyroid problems. I only take natural vitamins for my health. Thank you, Barbara

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