Guest guest Posted October 20, 2008 Report Share Posted October 20, 2008 That is rather a tricky one Enkai. The private doctor I went to see - in the hopes that my own GP would not know about it because I knew how he would react - said that although he didn't strictly HAVE to, he would prefer to write to my GP. The only way we got round it was that he would say I consulted him as a nutritionist with regard to the fact I was having a problem losing weight, and as he was also a doctor he had some tests done and it was found that I was not converting to T3, and that in his opinion, a nutritional answer would not solve my weight problem without first addressing my thyroid problem, and that he was therefore prescribing T3 for me. In this way my GP could not object to me seeing another 'doctor' for something he could deal with but for something outside the medical profession - no different than going to see a Weight Watchers expert . Lilian Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2008 Report Share Posted October 20, 2008 Hi Enkai, good question. I'm very lucky because I have found a GP (after many idiots!) who is very understanding and supports me seeing Dr P. He's quite open about the fact that the NHS is messed up and is intrigued to see what happens with me. He prescribed Armour for the first time in his career after seeing me improve after taking it for a couple of months. He is nervous about it but has assured me he wants to do his best for me and said there is no need to fight anymore to get anywhere so I can relax lol. He has even asked to read Dr P book so gave him my copy. I have just started HC per Dr P as my adrenals seem to be worse than we thought and stopped improving after a while on Armour. I will tell my NHS GP that I have started taking it but won't do anything like ask him to prescribe it until we're all sure that HC is going to help. I don't want to ruin my GP's career lol. Even if my GP wasn't understanding I'd still tell him, I'd want everything down in my notes to prove they were wrong to dismiss me lol. Ruth x > > Hi all > > Just wondering for those of you who go to Dr P or who self-treat, did you mention what > you are doing to your GP or not? I'm just wondering if you did tell (for example that you > are taking Armour or HC even though the GP thinks you don't need it), what was the kind > of response you got and did it affect subsequent care you received? > > I have visions of being struck off the list if I go the private route but am not got nowhere > with an NHS endo. > > Thanks > Enkai > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2008 Report Share Posted October 20, 2008 Thanks Lillian and Lostgirl, It seems that keeping the GP informed has worked for both of your. I am in two minds as I can imagine NHS doctors having a fit about things like HC and Armour but I suppose it is best to be honest. Enkai Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2008 Report Share Posted October 20, 2008 Actually, it didn't work for me in the long run Enkai. Now, five years later, I am having problems with the GP, who has now refused to be my doctor if I continue with the T3. Do you have a diagnosis of hypothyroidism, or has the doctor told you that you are OK. A friend of mine was told that she was normal. She went to a private doctor who prescribed Armour and has been taking it for several years now and her GP does not know, and does not even think to test her for it because she never goes to him with thyroid symptoms. It is down on her notes that there is nothing wrong with her thyroid. Unfortunately as I am diabetic I have my blood tested every six months, and as I had been diagnosed hypothyroid some 20 years ago, I cannot do what my friend has done. If I had been told that I was normal, I personally would leave it like that, and then go to the private doctor to make me normal lol and everyone will be happy. Lilian Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2008 Report Share Posted October 20, 2008 Hi Lillian That really sucks. What has happened with your GP? Are you still taking the T3? I'm in the same boat as I also have to go for regular checks for HbA1c etc. If it wasn't for that then I would be much less bothered about whether to tell my GP as the GP would see a lot less of me! Enkai Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 21, 2008 Report Share Posted October 21, 2008 Enkai, I stopped taking the T3 in June when the GP threatened me. I have been finding it impossible to budge either endo or GP. Regardless of presenting them with pages of research and facts, they just do not want to know. I have asked to be referred to another endo, and will be seeing him in November, but I have been told he will be thinking the same way as they do. I am very suspicious as to how he could be so adamant about that. They are completely BTF followers. It is quite a vicious circle. The more powerful the BTF the more scared doctors are of going against them, but by not going against them they are making the BTF even stronger. My problem was that I had been hypothyroid for a long time so they regularly monitored my thyroid from that stand point. However, if we all do not tell our doctors, then how are they going to know how many of us are still ill. But then, do they care. Lilian Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 21, 2008 Report Share Posted October 21, 2008 I have not told my Endo about starting Armour he gave me a 2 month prescription for T4 and T3 and said see you again in 5 months, he kept saying how happy he was that he thought I would get well on the combination therapy and nothing else would work so I didnt bother telling him, I figure I have enough time to see if Armour is working for me by the time I next see him. Michele Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 21, 2008 Report Share Posted October 21, 2008 Hi Michele It's a pity you didn't take up his offer of synthetic T4 and T3 as this really does work well for a number of people. You should perhaps have tried that first, because you would get that free of charge and not had to pay for a prescription - especially as we have to take thyroid hormone replacement for the rest of our lives. If that didn't work, then you could have given Armour a trial. There are very few endocrinologist who will prescribe a combination therapy these days - so you were lucky to get such an offer. How long have you been taking Armour now and how much levothyroxine and liothyronine did your endocrinologist prescribe for you? I think when he said that nothing else would work, he probably meant T4 on its own. Luv - Sheila I have not told my Endo about starting Armour he gave me a 2 month prescription for T4 and T3 and said see you again in 5 months, he kept saying how happy he was that he thought I would get well on the combination therapy and nothing else would work so I didnt bother telling him, I figure I have enough time to see if Armour is working for me by the time I next see him. Michele Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 21, 2008 Report Share Posted October 21, 2008 Sheila I did, I have been taking both T3 and T4 the 2 month prescription he gave me was for the next course I already had been taking it I liked the T3 I felt better on it but I didnt like each increase of T4, he cut the T4 down to 50 and the T3 was 10mcg then the T4 went up to 75 then he wanted to increase it to 100 thats when he gave me another prescrip and I said thanks came home and started the Armour. Do you think I should have carried on with the T4 and T3 then? Michele Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 21, 2008 Report Share Posted October 21, 2008 Lilian I'm sorry you are in such a bad situation with these doctors. I really hope the next endo works out but as you say, if they are all BTF followers then we don't really stand a chance. Was it possible to get a second opinion from someone on Sheila's list or did you GP make you go to this new endo. Your situation has definitely given me pause for thought. I think I would find it almost impossible to lie as I am supposed to be monitored regularly for my TFT. It will look very strange if my TSH is suddenly suppressed! , that's cool that your endo even offered T4 and T3, and I suppose if the Armour doesn't work (though I'm sure it will) you could always just fill the prescription for T4 + T3 and try that instead. At least you have got some options. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 21, 2008 Report Share Posted October 21, 2008 I think the endocrinologist should have explained what he was doing and why he was doing it. If you needed T3, that was probably because you were not converting the inactive hormone T4 into the active hormone T3. I would have thought in that case, he surely would have increased the T3 until you got onto a reasonable dose so you started to feel your symptoms going away, especially as you say you were feeling better on the T3. Did you have a blood test done before your endocrinologist put your dose of T4 up to 75 and then 100mgs. If so, can you get those blood results from your GP together with the reference range for each test and post them here. I assume that you had your Free T3 tested at that time. I don't think, from the sound of it, as if you were given a fair chance using synthetic combination therapy, and it could well have worked. Luv - Sheila Sheila I did, I have been taking both T3 and T4 the 2 month prescription he gave me was for the next course I already had been taking it I liked the T3 I felt better on it but I didnt like each increase of T4, he cut the T4 down to 50 and the T3 was 10mcg then the T4 went up to 75 then he wanted to increase it to 100 thats when he gave me another prescrip and I said thanks came home and started the Armour. Do you think I should have carried on with the T4 and T3 then? Michele _,_._,___ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 22, 2008 Report Share Posted October 22, 2008 I've been wondering about this too. I have to see a NHS CFS specialist next week and the form asks about nutrition and alternative therapies. I don't know whether to lie or not. I don't usually lie but I feel pushed into it. Sorry if I'm brusque or unclear. I've only just started Armour and the brain fog is still terrible. > > Hi all > > Just wondering for those of you who go to Dr P or who self-treat, did you mention what > you are doing to your GP or not? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 22, 2008 Report Share Posted October 22, 2008 The lesser-evil principle may apply here. On the one hand the effect of self-treatment, if not disclosed, might confuse the doctor/specialist in their diagnosis. On the other, if they are prejudiced in principle against self-treating, as I think many are, they may react badly and even refuse to proceed. Rgds Hans > > I've been wondering about this too. I have to see a NHS CFS specialist > next week and the form asks about nutrition and alternative therapies. > I don't know whether to lie or not ... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 22, 2008 Report Share Posted October 22, 2008 Hello Everyone I am lucky to have a supportive GP but I have still chosen to go undercover re: self treatment. Back in 2002, when I finally worked out I could be hypo with a scary selection of symptoms, I presented my case to a doctor who looked at me with such pity saying that she had been testing my thyroid function again and again with normal results. She did enable me to see Dr Skinner and after a few months of rapid improvement (and evidently my test results also supported my case), I was recognised by my GP and got the medical exemption card to prove it. When Dr S put me on T3 they again supported me up to a maxium of 60mg T3 and 100mg T4 and I even got on the repeat prescription system. I think it helps that they are a teaching practice. The psychiatrist, who I had been seeing about my 'depression', was VERY interested in my case, and has been trying thyroid treatment with some of her more serious cases who present with hypo symptoms too. About this time last year I began to notice a downturn in my health and asked if I could see an NHS endo - with the proviso that we could ignore whatever he said - and my GP said nothing would be changed without my agreement and the endo he suggested was someone who thought 'out of the box'. How wrong he was! He said the only thing he would consider were the test results. I was made to feel like a... fake! My change in symptoms were small at that time but 6 months later I was in a worsened state, probably due to stress, and knowing my GP could do nothing without some instruction from the endo, and being unable to see either Dr S or Dr P, I turned to Sheila and Bob for help and with my selection of supplements and armour I have made SOME improvement. I have experimented on myself somewhat, and can take T3/Armour till it is coming out of my ears with no hyper reaction - or anything obvious, but no release from the symptoms now presenting either. Thus I am hoping that Dr P can get me back on track and that there is still hope. When I was preparing for my 6 month blood test for my repeat prescription I did cut my armour because I am terrified of what others have reported has happened. I have a note to say make a 'routine' appointment so obviously nothing 'serious' showed up. Sadly with my damned memory, I keep forgetting to ring up for the results!!! Throughout my treatment I have been treated with sceptism and because of this DO wonder if I made it all up! So even with a very supportive GP I feel the need to lie and hide the real facts from them. It is SO sad that we are made to feel this way. In friendship, Louise Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 23, 2008 Report Share Posted October 23, 2008 Hi there, I am wondering about this too. I am thinking after I have seen DrP and hopefully start on the Armour, the doctor will notice I am not collecting my scripts as often etc and will wonder what is going on. I am concerned that if I self treat and tell the doc he will strike me off the list and then how will I get a sick note if I am off work? We could do with some files on this. I know there has been something on the news about this as some cancer patients etc have to buy meds themselves. I will try to find out some info, maybe call PALS at the local Hospital. Alice " <.fairyhedgehog@...> wrote: > > I've been wondering about this too. I have to see a NHS CFS specialist > next week and the form asks about nutrition and alternative therapies. > I don't know whether to lie or not. I don't usually lie but I feel > pushed into it. > > Sorry if I'm brusque or unclear. I've only just started Armour and the > brain fog is still terrible. > > > > > > > > Hi all > > > > Just wondering for those of you who go to Dr P or who self-treat, > did you mention what > > you are doing to your GP or not? > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 23, 2008 Report Share Posted October 23, 2008 Enkai For what it's worth my GP practice isn't at all supportive, but I took a deep breath and told them everything, for lots of reasons. As you rightly say they would have picked up on the fact I wasn't collecting my thyroxine prescriptions or my synthetic progesterone (I'm doing Serenity now). Also, on Armour our thyroid function results will be different. I explained that I'd taken the steps I had (Armour, Dr P etc) because I was determined to get better and not waste so much of their valuable time. I did ask though if they would help me through this, through monitoring etc. as after all we all want the same outcome (ie.me getting better!) As a result, they asked that I go and see an endo (which is a whole other story!), but so long as he was satisfied they would go along with it....and that's just what has happened. A little grudgingly granted, but they test my thyroid and I'm doing my own thing which I think is a result! Good luck whatever you decide to do. Pen x Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 23, 2008 Report Share Posted October 23, 2008 Good for you Pen, I think on the whole it really does pay to be truthful with your doctor, but make sure you can give him good sound reasons why you felt the need to help yourself back into normal health again. Then, as you did, ask your GP to monitor you while you go through this. Luv - Sheila Enkai For what it's worth my GP practice isn't at all supportive, but I took a deep breath and told them everything, for lots of reasons. As you rightly say they would have picked up on the fact I wasn't collecting my thyroxine prescriptions or my synthetic progesterone (I'm doing Serenity now). Also, on Armour our thyroid function results will be different. I explained that I'd taken the steps I had (Armour, Dr P etc) because I was determined to get better and not waste so much of their valuable time. I did ask though if they would help me through this, through monitoring etc. as after all we all want the same outcome (ie.me getting better!) As a result, they asked that I go and see an endo (which is a whole other story!), but so long as he was satisfied they would go along with it....and that's just what has happened. A little grudgingly granted, but they test my thyroid and I'm doing my own thing which I think is a result! Good luck whatever you decide to do. Pen x Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 23, 2008 Report Share Posted October 23, 2008 Janet: They don't! My GP told me he'd never finished a course of antibiotics - I was shocked! No wonder there are resistant bugs about. Best wishes, Kat I wonder if the medics follow their own guidlines if they get ill, I bet they don't > just think 'well I am a somatoform now and will have to wait til I reach the right figure > before I can get well,' and then go into retirement for a few years!! > > love janet Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2008 Report Share Posted October 24, 2008 Hi Janet It makes a little more difficult with the 1 1/2 grain tablets as you have to split your dose of Armour. It would have been better to have started with the 1 grain tablet. If you go to our FILES and scroll down until you see a file called " How to Use Natural Thyroid Extract " read all of that. It tells you all you need to know about Armour and the end bit is about how you should use it. Basically, we recommend starting by using half a grain only for 7 days (starting quarter of a grain if you have had previous heart problems). You cut the half grain in two with a pill cutter, or a very sharp knife and take one dose as soon as you wake and about an hour before food, and the other half in the middle of the afternoon. This is because Armour has the active hormone T3 in it and it is the T3 that is the active hormone. However, unlike T4, T3 has only a short half life and after 6 to 8 hours, the effect will start to dwindle and you might experience what we call 'the afternoon slump' - so taking it in a split dose keeps you topped up. After 7 days, if no adverse effects, you add another half grain and take it in the same way but stay on this dose for about 3 to 4 weeks. Again, if no adverse effects, you take another half grain and you carry on increasing your dose every 3 to 4 weeks until you do get some of the adverse effects. This is when you stop your increases and you go back down to the dose you were taking before the dose that made you feel these adverse effects. This shows you have reached your sweet spot and that is the dose your body needs daily. There is often no need for any further increases. Adverse effects can include a bit of dizziness, sweating, palpitations, feeling 'spaced out' and generally yuk and it can be a little frightening if you don't understand what is happening to you. Quite simply, this is just a reaction of your body absorbing too much T3. Because T3 has such a short half life, this feeling disappears after say, a couple of hours. Just sit comfortably for this time and wait for it to pass. You don't take any more Armour for that day. Once you have built up to the dose that makes you feel good, you may wish to try taking all of your Armour when you go to bed. This leaves the day time free to take your other supplements. Never take calcium or iron anywhere near to taking thyroid hormone replacement as it interferes with absorption. Always take it at least 3 to 4 hours apart. There really is no way of doing a proper calculation as to how much Armour you should take to replace your levothyroxine dose. T4 is mainly an inactive hormone which has to convert to the active T3. Armour contains T4, T3, T2, T1 and calcitonin, so you are introducing other hormones your body has probably been without for quite some time. Remember that natural thyroid extract was the ONLY thyroid hormone replacement for all sufferers of hypothyroidism before levothyroxine was manufactured and used well into the 1980's by a lot of doctors. It has been a very safe and effective medication. Considering you have bought the 1 1/2 grains, it might mean that you would need to cut the tablet into 3 portions to start with, but this isn't a problem. Don't worry if you cannot get them into equal portions, because normally, your thyroid does not excrete the same amount of hormone throughout the day. Don't worry either about your GP at the moment, first, wait and see if Armour works, and if it does and you really do start to feel and look so much better, you can consider what you are going to tell him at that time. Always remember it is your health and the NHS medicine has not made you well, you are amongst many who have had to take their health into their own hands an d who are now well again. A good and caring doctor would appreciate that. To reassure you also, I have had 3 doctors telephone me and 2 doctors email me asking me to give them information about Armour, where to buy, how to treat etc. They were asking because they were hypothyroid and were being treated with levothyroxine and they still had symptoms. What is sad, is that although I gave them as much detail as I could and wished them luck, not one of them ever got back to me to let me know if it worked - but I bet it did. Good luck Janet. Luv - Sheila I don't know how I am going to cope with the GP issue either (as I know he will not be supportive as he tried to take me off the levothyroxine which was prescribed by another partner in the practice who has now gone. ) How different will the blood test be,will it be obvious? Do I need to have blood tests done to get the dose right, and if so where will I find a lab that wil do them for me if I can't face the GP. My instinct is to not let on about self treating as it is a bit frightening for the poor old soul, but it is my body and I have to live in it. I wonder if the medics follow their own guidlines if they get ill, I bet they don't just think 'well I am a somatoform now and will have to wait til I reach the right figure before I can get well,' and then go into retirement for a few years!! _,_._,___ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2008 Report Share Posted October 24, 2008 > I am concerned that if I self treat and tell the doc he will strike > me off the list and then how will I get a sick note if I am off work? That's exactly my fear,Alice. I'm not working at all now and I'm on Incapacity and I worry that my GP will stop signing sick notes if I don't co-operate. The trouble is that I'm not _officially_ hypothyroid - my TSH is currently " normal " . So my GP and the CFS specialist will see no need for thyroid treatment. If anyone knows a sympathetic GP in the Epsom area, please feel free to email me. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2008 Report Share Posted October 24, 2008 > I am concerned that if I self treat and tell the doc he will strike > me off the list and then how will I get a sick note if I am off work? That's exactly my fear,Alice. I'm not working at all now and I'm on Incapacity and I worry that my GP will stop signing sick notes if I don't co-operate. The trouble is that I'm not _officially_ hypothyroid - my TSH is currently " normal " . So my GP and the CFS specialist will see no need for thyroid treatment. If anyone knows a sympathetic GP in the Epsom area, please feel free to email me. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2008 Report Share Posted October 24, 2008 > For what it's worth my GP practice isn't at all supportive, but I took > a deep breath and told them everything, for lots of reasons. This is what I'd like to do once I feel better. At the moment I know I'd just burst into tears at even the hint of a negative reaction and I really can't face that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2008 Report Share Posted October 24, 2008 For those of you who have been diagnosed and prescribed levothyroxine only, I would approach your doctor with the intention of having a serious discussion with him/her regarding this and mentioning that no matter how you titrate your synthetic hormone replacement, it simply does not work for you and that it doesn't work for many thousands of others who are on Internet Forums. Tell him/her you felt the need to join such thyroid forums because you needed to find out why you were not regaining your health and heard that natural thyroid extract was the only medication used for 60 odd years for every hypothyroid sufferer and it had been used very safely and very effectively. Tell him/her the forum you are on has four medically qualified doctors with years and years of thyroid expertise and because you had done the necessary research, you decided to give yourself a trial to see if this was the medication your body required and you found that it was and that you are feeling so very much better on it. Tell him/her that you will understand if they feel unable to prescribe it for you because it was a 'grandfathered' drug and therefore never required a licence, and that you know his/her medical ionsurance would not cover them should anything go wrong, but you do know the MHRA has written to say that if a doctor is happy to prescribe it, then he/she can do so. Just ask if he/she will monitor you because you would be so much happier if he/she would do this as you value their expertise (creep! *grin*) - flattery could get you every where. Tell him/her that if they would like some information about how it works and why it works, you would be happy to supply this as you really have studied this subject in some depth. For you - I hope you do find a sympathetic doctor in your area soon. Luv - Sheila The trouble is that I'm not _officially_ hypothyroid - my TSH is currently " normal " . So my GP and the CFS specialist will see no need for thyroid treatment. If anyone knows a sympathetic GP in the Epsom area, please feel free to email me. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2008 Report Share Posted October 24, 2008 > For you - I hope you do find a sympathetic doctor in your area soon. > > Luv - Sheila Thanks, Sheila. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2008 Report Share Posted October 24, 2008 hi pen, i noticed that you are on serenity now, does it work for you ? i have just started to use it this week on dr. p's instructions. i am curious about others reaction to the cream. kind regards jane --- In thyroid treatment , " pennysometimes " <pennysometimes@... > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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