Guest guest Posted August 15, 2011 Report Share Posted August 15, 2011 Hi Carole Firstly, i hope the move goes ok - it must be very stressful but i hope you soon get settled into your new place. > 30/5/2011 private urine test T3 454 (592-1850) T4 970 (347-1994) T3-T4 ratio 0.5 (0.5-2.0) low Those are too low. In his book, Dr hertoghe said " watch out for low levels of T3 (under 1500 pmol/24h) and/or t4 (under 1800 pmol/24h) " Not only that, but your T3 is below the bottom of the very wide reference range for T3, anyway. so you are low in T3. it's there, in black and white. >Ft3 test and the result is bang in the middle of the range at 5.2 I think the range is something like 2.5-7, she did tell me (phone call), but I didn't write it in time. Ok but that is just a snapshot of what is happening at anyone time. The urinary test shows what is happening over the course of a day. Perhaps later in the day, T3 is low? Also, my understanding, is that the blood test is level of T3 in the blood, it doesn't mean that the T3 is being used or has been used. If you have adrenal problems or deficiencies then the body cannot use it properly? > I don't have my Ft4 and TSH yet, will ring for them tomorrow, but 6/5/2011 tsh 0.03 ft4 12.7 and was raised from 12.5mcg to 25mcg thyroxine at that point. History tests have been stable tsh 0.1 and ft4 14-16 on average, so well in range. Yes, but 12.7 is near the bottom of the range, and 14-16 averaged is 15, which isn't exactly high, either, is it? Consider what Dr Myhill says: http://www.drmyhill.co.uk/wiki/Hypothyroidism_-_A_Common_Hormonal_Problem_in_CFS " There is another problem too which is that the so-called " normal range " of T4 is probably set too low. I know this because many patients with low normal T4 often improve substantially when they are started on thyroid supplements to bring levels up to the top end of the normal range. Indeed Dr Skinner, who is a consultant virologist at Birmingham, has shown how many patients with CFS have low normal levels of thyroxine (T4) and do well when their levels are increased to average levels. The laboratory I use has a normal range of 12-22 pmol/l and I am finding many levels coming back at 12-15. In these patients there is an indication for trying T4, especially if symptoms suggest this. I emphasise that this is a trial - it does not commit one to thyroid hormones for life. " > So do I now accept in my case it really is M.E. which I was diagnosed with 2004? But how does that square with low urinary T3 and other symptoms? What is M.E. anyway? it doesn't really mean anything does it. do you have symptoms of other deficiencies, too, like adrenals? Have you done the Hertoghe questionnaire in this folder? thyroid treatment/files/MEDICAL%20QUES\ TIONNAIRES/ I think I would want to exhaust all possiblities (testing of all hormones, and if necessary a trial with a physiological dose of hormones, and treatment of deficiencies etc) before accepting a diagnosis of ME. I hope you soon get settled in, maybe think about how you'd like to proceed when you move? Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 16, 2011 Report Share Posted August 16, 2011 I would agree with that you still have poor thyroid results. ME is a diagnosis of exclusion. In other words, you can only be said to have ME if there is no other possible reason for the fatigue, but you do have another possible reason. Strictly speaking, a diagnosis of hypothyroidism negates a diagnosis of ME. Apart from the levels of thyroid hormone, there are all the co-factors that keep being mentioned here. Until these are all correct too the whole thyroid system won't function well. At the moment my own GP is being a bit funny about the ME or hypothyroid diagnosis issue. In June when I presented her with a private lab test showing my TSH to be 24.87 she insisted that all my symptoms were down to the ME. However, when I saw her recently after 2 months of 25 mcg Levothyroxine and a blood test she had organised herself (TSH now 15), she was expecting my symptoms to show improvement, and even said that she sometimes referred people to an endocrinologist if they had thyroid symptoms but a normal TSH! A bit of a turnaround there! Miriam > I am currently taking 25mcg Levothyroxine daily. > > 30/5/2011 private urine test T3 454 (592-1850) T4 970 (347-1994) T3-T4 ratio 0.5 (0.5-2.0) low [Ed] Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 16, 2011 Report Share Posted August 16, 2011 MODERATED TO REMOVE MOST OF PREVIOUS POST. MODERATOR Thankyou Miriam and Chris unfortunately Dr hertoghe isnt going to sway the NHS. Like most GPs, if results in range its normal!! I need to hunt for evidence that blood serum FT3 isnt accurate and someone can still be hypo when it says theyre not. But no time now, too much to do before move, so short and sweet. Carole 30/5/2011 private urine test T3 454 (592-1850) T4 970 (347-1994) T3-T4 ratio 0.5 (0.5-2.0) low > > [Ed] > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 >> unfortunately Dr hertoghe isnt going to sway the NHS. I agree with you, Carole, but I was responding to your question: " So do I now accept in my case it really is M.E. which I was diagnosed with 2004? " And using the examples from Dr H's book (and the Genova lab ranges, which you fall below on on T3) to give my view that no you shouldn't give up, not how to sway the NHS etc to give you proper treatment. >I need to hunt for evidence that blood serum FT3 isnt accurate and someone can still be hypo when it says theyre not. I don't think that it's not accurate, but that it's not the be all and end all, as there are many factors that can affect thyroid uptake etc, and a Ft3 test done at 9am or 12pm or whenever is only a snapshot at that point in time. Versus a 24 hour urinary thyroid test which shows what was produced over 24 hours. I will try and find some evidence and if I find any, post it chris > > > unfortunately Dr hertoghe isnt going to sway the NHS. Like most GPs, if results in range its normal!! I need to hunt for evidence that blood serum FT3 isnt accurate and someone can still be hypo when it says theyre not. But no time now, too much to do before move, so short and sweet. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 1) you may have Central Hypothyroidism .......this can give normal results 2) You may genetically be one of those who cannot convert T4 into T3 ...........look up the work of Panicker et al on Google Scholar 3) demand a referral to the top ME specialist preferably whoever suceeded Betty Dowsett If it was not for her explosion " who the hell said this was ME its thyroid ? all those years ago my Husband would be dead Pat Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 Hi Carole, Apart from what has been said so far there is also the consideration that you may have some problems with thyroid hormone processing that are occurring at an entirely cellular level. If this was the case then no blood test will reveal it. Your tests will continue to come back looking normal but your symptoms would remain. I'd start by asking to push the thyroid hormone up a little higher as there is more scope for this with your current results. However, if you symptoms do not improve then some form of thyroid treatment that contains T3 may be needed. I'm sure you've been given all the advice already about having a wide range of nutrients tested. You've also probably been told in the past to keep regular records of your body temperature, heart rate as well as symptoms. I f you temp remains very low and your symptoms are severe after your TSH approaches 1 with high levels of FT3 and FT4 then this may suggest a cellular issue and natural thyroid or an T4/T3 combination would be the next obvious step. Don't accept the ME story. I was told that as well. My endo at the time said he had a nice group of thyroid patients who appeared to have ME that got together once a week - an ME support group. He asked me if I wanted to join! I told him that I didn't have ME and that I had a fixable thyroid problem that needed more investigation. His growing group of ME people were the proof that we was a lousy diagnostician! ME is an umbrella term for a collection of symptoms that may have multiple causes. Causes may include post-viral issues, weak immune system, undiagnosed hypothyroidism, impaired cellular response to thyroid hormone (cellular level issues), extreme adrenal fatigue, and a host of other things. In your case I don't buy it. You already know you have hypothyroidism - your doctor shouldn't be looking for a nice label he can give you to stop him having to get off his a**e and do some work. Good luck, > > Hi, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 NEVER accept a diagnosis of ME - most people who have been given a diagnosis of ME, CFS or fibromyalgia have found that treatment using the active T3 gives them back their normal health again. Read Dr Lowe's web site. Blood tests ONLY show you what level of thyroid hormone is in the blood at that particular time the blood was drawn. The 24 hour urine test checks your level of thyroid hormone that has been used by the tissues and in the cells during the previous 24 hours, and this is the test you need. Thyroid hormone DOES NOTHING IN THE BLOOD - IT IS THE CELLS WHERE THE ACTION OCCURS. Luv - Sheila " So do I now accept in my case it really is M.E. which I was diagnosed with 2004? " > > unfortunately Dr hertoghe isnt going to sway the NHS. Like most GPs, if results in range its normal!! I need to hunt for evidence that blood serum FT3 isnt accurate and someone can still be hypo when it says theyre not. But no time now, too much to do before move, so short and sweet. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 > NEVER accept a diagnosis of ME - most people who have been given a diagnosis of ME, CFS or fibromyalgia have found that treatment using the active T3 gives them back their normal health again. I’m sorry but that sentence is quite simply incorrect and misleading. ME has been classed by the World Health Organisation as a neurological condition for over 40 years; in reality it is a multi-system failure, a neuro-immune disease, affecting every system and part of the body. ME is characterised by neurological, immunological, gastrointestinal, cardiovascular and musculoskeletal features. Now it is true that most people with ME do have thyroid / adrenal problems and that if these problems are correctly treated (which sadly rarely happens) there can be some improvement – but, as there is far more to ME than endocrine problems, there will not be a return to full health. Anyone who does get completely better with thyroid / adrenal treatment alone is unlikely to have had true ME in the first place. Please take a look at the list “Some of the abnormalities that have been demonstrated in ME†- http://www.meactionuk.org.uk/MECFS_peer-reviewed_research_data.htm and go through the documents mentioned at the bottom. You will soon see evidence of ME being a devastating, multi-system illness. Hazel. www.oneagleswings.me.uk http://oneagleswingsme.blogspot.com/ avast! Antivirus: Outbound message clean. Virus Database (VPS): 110817-0, 17/08/2011Tested on: 17/08/2011 16:16:16avast! - copyright © 1988-2011 AVAST Software. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 >Anyone who does get completely better with thyroid / adrenal treatment alone is unlikely to have had true ME in the first place. I think that was the point that was being made :-) - ie, some people are given this (mis)diagnosis of ME when they are actually hypothyroid or have adrenal issues all along. chris > > I’m sorry but that sentence is quite simply incorrect and misleading. ME has been classed by the World Health Organisation as a neurological condition for over 40 years; in reality it is a multi-system failure, a neuro-immune disease, affecting every system and part of the body. ME is characterised by neurological, immunological, gastrointestinal, cardiovascular and musculoskeletal features. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 After three diagnoses of CFS/ME, two by consultants and one by my GP and being told it was pointless carrying out any other tests, I am now nearly better, using the information I have gained from this and other websites. I have fixed, with no help from the NHS, my B12 and D deficiencies, am raising my ferritin from the very bottom of the range and am gradually fixing my thyroid issues with T3 prescribed by the NHS under an exemption certificate. I am also taking one NAX a day to keep my adrenals on track. The IBS I have had since the 1970s has gone, my hair is growing in, my nails are long and strong for the first time since puberty, my psoriasis has gone after 20 years, yet three highly qualified doctors told me I had ME/CFS and wanted to put me on the scrapheap. I know many more ladies of a certain age in the same situation who lack the strength to do the necessary research and to fight the system. It is a national disgrace! D > >Anyone who does get completely better with thyroid / adrenal treatment alone is unlikely to have had true ME in the first place. > [Ed] Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 Hi i also have been diagnosed with M.E and Fibro , one diagnosis from one of the leading professors in M.E not a chance i refuse to believe it i'm getting better on T3 much better now i need to know whats happening with vitamins and minerals. Great to see a fellow sufferer ditch the M.E headline!!!!!! Its disgusting that we get labelled and dumped in a skip and left to live with it well done you i'm following you fast whooop whooop love sha xxxxxxxx > > After three diagnoses of CFS/ME, two by consultants and one by my GP and being told it was pointless carrying out any other tests, I am now nearly better, using the information I have gained from this and other websites. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 Hi, I was told by two specialists that I had ME. I didn't have ME. ME is a collection of symptoms with no underlying absolute and agreed cause. Whilst there are many patients with ME for whom no doctor can find any cause for their condition (because if they did they would have a chance of treating it), there are many, many, many, many ME diagnoses which could be more properly treated. It is horrible that some people are given this ME label when they could actually recover with correct hormonal treatment. I have no idea what percentage of ME patients fall into this category and what percentage fall into the 'you just have to live with it' category. BUT I KNOW SOME FALL INTO THIS CATEGORY. THE ONES THAT ARE TREATABLE WE ARE REACHING OUT TO. Let the message go out. To not allow this is to deny recovery to some people. One of the real problems with ME is that eventually because of a million reasons some people begin to see ME as a badge that they wear that defines them. This is their choice. I chose to say f**k it I don't believe I'm an ME patient. Don't give me that label. Don't ask me to your ME support group. Yes, I know I can't walk up my stairs at home without help. Yes, I know I have to sleep for 4 hours in the middle of each day. Yes, I know I pass out all the time and that I can't do anything useful anymore. But NO, I don't have ME - LOOK AGAIN YOU DORKS! GET SMART - INVESTIGATE. No, they didn't investigate. I did it myself and succeeded. Now, I play tennis 3-5 times per week and have energy to burn. I didn't have ME. Many other ME diagnosed patients don't have ME. They have a condition that hasn't been uncovered. This might be some nutrient deficiency that is chronic. It might be a requirement for T3 - real thyroid hormone that acts. It might be hypoadrenia or hypopituitarism. It might be an immune system under assault from gluten or dairy or something else. THE FACT REMAINS THAT SOME ME DIAGNOSES ARE WRONG and people should not just accept it - they should be looking for answers. Rolling over and just accepting an ME label and taking the ME guidelines WON'T FIX AN UNDERLYING BIOCHEMICAL PROBLEM and people may be stuck like that for life. I don't care if this applies to only 5% of ME patients (it might be 40% - who knows?) but those 5% need the solution that is possible for them. Treating these people is a good thing - not a bad thing. If you want to remove their ME badge from them when they are well - I don't care. Just help to fix the ones you can be fixed. Ex-ME diagnosed Patient > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 you go paul, every word is true !!!!! and the way i've looked at this illness now for the last 6 months, they've had 8 years of my life they are NOT having anymore !!!! love sha xxxxxx > > Hi, > > I was told by two specialists that I had ME. *** Please remember to snip old messages!! *** Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 Yours is a really typical story Dolly. I'd like to be effusive and say how brilliant this is. At a personal level - for you - it is awesome - you beat the bloody system Dolly - more power to you and well done. I actually feel I am tearing up reading your success and imagining what it cost you to achieve this. Amazing. On a more general level this highlights how poor the system is and how ready it is to take the ME badge out of the drawer and STICK IT ON THOSE PEOPLE THAT THE DOCTORS CAN'T WORK OUT. Yes, the doctors have failed to be informed. They have failed to be up to date with research. They have failed to use their brains and consider ALL of the issues that can cause these types of symptoms. They have totally failed to consider alternative ideas and possible nutrient and hormonal causes of these types of problems. SO, at a more general level - your recovery SHOULD BE A STANDARD FEATURE OF OUR HEALTH SYSTEM. It isn't so well done to you and crap job to them. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 The ME diagnosis has obvious touched a nerve with a lot of people. It certainly brings it all back to me. Maybe this should suggest something to us all. I'm not sure what at the moment because the emotions are all to close to the surface. Maybe the parliamentary debate should be about 'what do we do when we get shit diagnosis work done by the NHS?'. I've only had two major health issues in my life. I've had to solve both on my own - due to shit diagnosis work and doctors who aren't trained to actually think in a way that leads to proper diagnoses. Almost all of the doctors I've seen are like well trained plumbers (no offence to any plumbers!). They follow the strict procedures the've been taught to follow. When people with complex problems turn up at their doors that require real thinking then most of them (the vast majority) can't do it. They aren't used to doing it and they aren't trained to do it. An example of this is contained within my paper on histamine which can be found at the bottom of this link: thyroid treatment/files/PAUL'S PERSONAL EXPERIENCE.T3 / We need some doctors somwhere who are good are diagnosing. There don't appear to be many. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 Hi ,Consultant Physicians ought to be available in all hospitals; they ought to be the first port of call if you think they'll 'miss it' in Endocriminology.Bob>> The ME diagnosis has obvious touched a nerve with a lot of people.> It certainly brings it all back to me. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 The danger of accepting a diagnosis of ME is that other problems such as adrenals can become much worse if ignored. A year after being diagnosed with ME, I have found that I have really serious adrenal problems - thyroid issues too. I'm now on some pretty heavy duty medication which might have been avoided had the real problem of adrenals been addressed in the first place. I've been bedridden for a year and even now have 4 long rests each day. I know that the NHS can't/won't take adrenal issues seriously but unless we keep on questioning these assumptions that the health professions make, we won't raise any awareness of the problems patients are facing.Good luck with the move.Alison Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 Hi on the M.E association news letter it is now clearly stating that they are finding 1000's of people first thought to be and diagnosed m.e and fibromyalgia are now finding they are hypothyroid. I also have been very fortunate to have had one of the first leading professors in the uk to specialise in M.E and is continually looking for treatments and cures for M.E, It was also proved in lynne gilderdales book that she herself was found to have hypothyroid but it was already too late to treat as her pitutary gland was shrunk to an extreme tiny size. Its said in many circles of the medical profession that they can't help thinking when they do find the cause of M.E it is highly likely to be linked to the thyroid gland.Until they actually do find the cause they are treating a blind illness. I question my professor on many occasions and not even he will say a definate no to it being linked to the thyroid.M.E is an awful illness , i've been more or less bedridden for years with M.E symptoms and delved very much into the illness as i've fought for a cure in myself. I am just lucky i'd already had the hypothyroidism diagnosed 6 months before the M.E and fibromyalgia. Until a definate diagnosis has been made we can only speculate. I saw a neurologist who refused that it was a neurological illness apart from it was all in my head and i was making myself ill. M.E is still a very grey area, when myself and the support group are campaigning people laugh, m.ps still don't want to know and the benefits department don't even believe its a real illness, i've been through all that with them. So i believe don't believe you have M.E until ALL possible tests have been exhausted , which in my case like many others i know haven't been and its only now i can see this and am able to start to fight to get my health back . love Sha xxxx > > > NEVER accept a diagnosis of ME - most people who have been given a diagnosis of ME, CFS or fibromyalgia have found that treatment using the Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 Bob, I'd put you in charge of structural management changes regarding thyroid problems in an instant - good man! Yes, proper diagnosticians should be present and be available for endos and confused doctors to send their patients to. These people need to have ABILITY as well as TRAINING. Aptitude for diagnostic work is really important. More power to you Bob!!!!! > > Hi , Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 Hi just to add a couple of things Dr Derry in Canada pointed out that ME CFS and fibromyalgia only appeared after the TSH test was introduced . Drs hate going back on a diagnosis [in my experience] . Hence a close friend had ME for years-mother hypo -on disability benefits now hypo but any remaining symptoms when on only 50 T4 is the ME . Lastly ,yes, I agree Physicans in hospitals would be great but would they dare tread in the endos territory . I did not have any of these diagnoses but it needed T3 to get rid of numerous hypo symptoms . I don't think anyone can judge until we are all properly and adequately treated. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 In addition to my other comments I'd like to add that far too few doctors involved in ME treatment are up to date with everything that is happening in the world that relates to ME. My belief as a scientist is that ME is a collection of symptoms. Over time we will find that multiple diagnoses will be possible for people with these symptoms and that eventually (perhaps 20-30 years hence) no one will need to wear the badge of ME. All that will be left will be a number of disparate conditions that can all lead to symptoms that today we refer to as ME. People with the diagnosis of ME should not feel good about it - this diagnosis is simply the result of the failure of medicine today to understand all the underlying causes. I've met too many people who, for whatever reason, wear the ME badge and I see this as a reflection of the failure of modern medicine. Moreover, modern medicine prefers to be complicit in the the diagnosis of ME rather than spending more effort attempting to uncover the multiple causes for these symptoms. More intellectual effort is required - smarter work not more work. For those people with ME diagnoses I have the greatest sympathy. Some people are able to drag themselves out of this. These people are no less ME patients than the ones that can't drag themselves out. Anyone that tries to say the opposite is clearly fixated with the ME badge of courage. Many people aren't able to recover. They are at the mercy of modern medicine and I worry about how this might work out for them. It is pure hell to have these symptoms and I know a lot of people who are condemned to this Some of these people are open minded about possible causes of ME. However, some have been brainwashed into thinking that ME is ME is ME is ME ..... you get the picture. Modern medicine has been complicit in creating the illusion that ME patients can't recover and that they can only survive. This is so much BS. I don't want to hear any more of this rubbish. Doctors and patients should continue to look optimistically for solutions. Anything less is just total defeatism. This doesn't mean that basic advice on having good nutrition, sleep, exercise and routines shouldn't be followed - this is good advice for all of us. Just don't start wearing the ME badge as if it is something that is a life sentence - it isn't right and it doesn't help others, although it is comforting. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2011 Report Share Posted August 17, 2011 totally and emphatically agree ! > > In addition to my other comments I'd like to add that far too few doctors involved in ME treatment are up to date with everything that is happening in the world that relates to ME. [Ed] Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 18, 2011 Report Share Posted August 18, 2011 Thanks for this - you have hit the nail on the head and this is what we are talking about. There are literally tens of thousands being wrongly diagnosis as suffering with ME and who are being left without any treatment because doctors know little to nothing about the functioning of the thyroid and the adrenals. Over the years, I have seen such people coming to our forum who had been diagnosed with ME and who clung onto that diagnosis, refusing to believe their thyroid or adrenals had anything to do with their suffering, only to eventually learn that this WAS their problem and who were then treated appropriately, got their health back and went back to paid employment or to their previous good health. We need to stay realistic about this and this goes also to those being diagnosed with CFS and fibromyalgia. Luv - Sheila >Anyone who does get completely better with thyroid / adrenal treatment alone is unlikely to have had true ME in the first place. I think that was the point that was being made :-) - ie, some people are given this (mis)diagnosis of ME when they are actually hypothyroid or have adrenal issues all along. chris > > I’m sorry but that sentence is quite simply incorrect and misleading. ME has been classed by the World Health Organisation as a neurological condition for over 40 years; in reality it is a multi-system failure, a neuro-immune disease, affecting every system and part of the body. ME is characterised by neurological, immunological, gastrointestinal, cardiovascular and musculoskeletal features. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 18, 2011 Report Share Posted August 18, 2011 Hi Hazel - we have had this discussion before. Please note that I wrote " MOST people who have been given a diagnosis of ME, CFS or fibromyalgia….. " not ALL. The sentence I wrote is correct. Luv - Sheila - most people who have been given a diagnosis of ME, CFS or fibromyalgia have found that treatment using the active T3 gives them back their normal health again. I’m sorry but that sentence is quite simply incorrect and misleading. ME has been classed by the World Health Organisation as a neurological condition for over 40 years; in reality it is a multi-system failure, a neuro-immune disease, affecting every system and part of the body. ME is characterised by neurological, immunological, gastrointestinal, cardiovascular and musculoskeletal features. ,___ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 18, 2011 Report Share Posted August 18, 2011 I will add to this…….ME, CFS and fibromyalgia were never heard of before synthetic levothyroxine was manufactured. All patients suffering symptoms of hypothyroidism were treated with the natural thyroid extract (been in use now for over 100 years). It was when this was removed and patients had to take T4-only that many started missing the T3, T2, T1 and the calcitonin that you get in natural thyroid extract. Patients started complaining of all these different symptoms they had never had before, so new diagnoses started to develop - now tens of thousands who can't get well on T4-only are being given a wrong diagnosis. Luv - Sheila Hi just to add a couple of things Dr Derry in Canada pointed out that ME CFS and fibromyalgia only appeared after the TSH test was introduced . Drs hate going back on a diagnosis [in my experience] . Hence a close friend had ME for years-mother hypo -on disability benefits now hypo but any remaining symptoms when on only 50 T4 is the ME . Lastly ,yes, I agree Physicans in hospitals would be great but would they dare tread in the endos territory . I did not have any of these diagnoses but it needed T3 to get rid of numerous hypo symptoms . I don't think anyone can judge until we are all properly and adequately treated. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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