Anonymous wrote:Find an endo who will treat symptoms and not lab reports. ANd get everything test.
I've had hypothryoidism for 40 yrs, and mine is usually just under 1, where I feel best. Everyone is different. If mine were at your level I'd be sleeping all day every day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:many doctors have ignored TSH under 5. It turns out that miscarriages are more likely if TSH is over 2, which is how I was able to get my hypothyroidism actually addressed.
75mcg of levothyroxine daily keeps my TSH around 1.5, which is where I generally feel ok. Some integrative medicine docs are also willing to do T3 supplementation, as not everyone can efficiently convert T4 to T3, but traditional endocrinologists are less likely to do that.
I'm on it for fertility purposes. No pcp or obgyn I've seen has considered 4+ concerning but reproductive endocrinologist does for fertility purposes. Pcp says I should consider weaning off after I'm done having babies
It’s strange that it is accepted that TSH <2 is optimal for getting and staying pregnant, but outside of that a higher level is ok. If the body can’t do a major function like getting pregnant with a higher TSH, what other body functions are less than optimal at that level?
Exactly!!! It’s insane how hard it is to get a thyroid properly treated. And I guarantee you there are thousands and thousands of women who can’t get pregnant and either give up or spend oodles of money on IVF when what they really need is a properly managed thyroid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My doctor was reluctant to treat when I was at 6. She said below 10 is sub clinical. I fought her with my list of symptoms and she relented but even outside the range she wouldn’t just give the medication. I feel so much better on Levothyroxine.
Yikes! What type of doctor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:many doctors have ignored TSH under 5. It turns out that miscarriages are more likely if TSH is over 2, which is how I was able to get my hypothyroidism actually addressed.
75mcg of levothyroxine daily keeps my TSH around 1.5, which is where I generally feel ok. Some integrative medicine docs are also willing to do T3 supplementation, as not everyone can efficiently convert T4 to T3, but traditional endocrinologists are less likely to do that.
I'm on it for fertility purposes. No pcp or obgyn I've seen has considered 4+ concerning but reproductive endocrinologist does for fertility purposes. Pcp says I should consider weaning off after I'm done having babies
It’s strange that it is accepted that TSH <2 is optimal for getting and staying pregnant, but outside of that a higher level is ok. If the body can’t do a major function like getting pregnant with a higher TSH, what other body functions are less than optimal at that level?
Anonymous wrote:My doctor was reluctant to treat when I was at 6. She said below 10 is sub clinical. I fought her with my list of symptoms and she relented but even outside the range she wouldn’t just give the medication. I feel so much better on Levothyroxine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have had hypothyroidism (Hashimoto's) for 20 year and I would not be able to get out of bed if that was my TSH. Mine is 0.1!
That's crazy. TSH of 1-2 I feel hyper with lots of heart palpitations, insomnia and anxiety. TSH of 3-5 I feel ok. TSH of 7+ I'm tired have no energy. 3.91 is not bad OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:many doctors have ignored TSH under 5. It turns out that miscarriages are more likely if TSH is over 2, which is how I was able to get my hypothyroidism actually addressed.
75mcg of levothyroxine daily keeps my TSH around 1.5, which is where I generally feel ok. Some integrative medicine docs are also willing to do T3 supplementation, as not everyone can efficiently convert T4 to T3, but traditional endocrinologists are less likely to do that.
I'm on it for fertility purposes. No pcp or obgyn I've seen has considered 4+ concerning but reproductive endocrinologist does for fertility purposes. Pcp says I should consider weaning off after I'm done having babies
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:many doctors have ignored TSH under 5. It turns out that miscarriages are more likely if TSH is over 2, which is how I was able to get my hypothyroidism actually addressed.
75mcg of levothyroxine daily keeps my TSH around 1.5, which is where I generally feel ok. Some integrative medicine docs are also willing to do T3 supplementation, as not everyone can efficiently convert T4 to T3, but traditional endocrinologists are less likely to do that.
I'm on it for fertility purposes. No pcp or obgyn I've seen has considered 4+ concerning but reproductive endocrinologist does for fertility purposes. Pcp says I should consider weaning off after I'm done having babies
Anonymous wrote:many doctors have ignored TSH under 5. It turns out that miscarriages are more likely if TSH is over 2, which is how I was able to get my hypothyroidism actually addressed.
75mcg of levothyroxine daily keeps my TSH around 1.5, which is where I generally feel ok. Some integrative medicine docs are also willing to do T3 supplementation, as not everyone can efficiently convert T4 to T3, but traditional endocrinologists are less likely to do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have had hypothyroidism (Hashimoto's) for 20 year and I would not be able to get out of bed if that was my TSH. Mine is 0.1!
Interesting.
The reference range on the lab results is 0.45 to 4.5 and I land at 3.91.
So you think that's high and I should be tired? I mean, I am usually pretty tired and I've increased my B12 which I thought was helping.
I'm noticing that my bun and creatinine ratio while not flagged are a bit skewed to one side, and google tells me that can be for a number of reasons--including hypothyroidism.