Guest guest Posted September 19, 2011 Report Share Posted September 19, 2011 Gail, don't allow your GP to treat you in this way. As you have been given a diagnosis and prescribed L-thyroxine-only therapy, but you are still suffering symptoms and your doctor refuses either to increase your dose or give you a trial of the active thyroid hormone T3, or refuses to give you a referral to an endocrinologist- then consider writing a letter to her/him. Adapt the letter according to your specific needs. You may wish to send a copy of your letter to the Head of Practice too, but remember to keep a copy for yourself in case this needs to be referred to at any time. Ask that your doctor place your letter into your Medical Notes. Dear Doctor As I have been suffering with symptoms of hypothyroidism for a long time now and have had various titrations of my levothyroxine, without my symptoms being resolved, and without anybody apparently knowing why these have not been resolved, I am now determined to do whatever is necessary to find the cause, and hope that you will work with me. The present symptoms I am suffering are (here, list all of your symptoms and list your signs. You can check these against those under ‘Hypothyroidism Symptoms and Signs Checklist on our web site www.tpa-uk.org.uk ). My basal temperatures before getting out of bed in a morning and before having anything to drink for the last four mornings have been (here, list these if they were 97.8 degrees F (36.6 degrees C) – or less. (If this applies…)There are members of my family who have a thyroid and/or autoimmune disease and I am aware this can run down the family line (here, list those members of your family and their relationship to you). Please would you arrange for me to have a FULL thyroid function test to include TSH, free T4, free T3, TPO and TgAb I understand there are specific minerals and vitamins that should also checked to see whether any of them are low in the reference range that stop thyroid hormone from being fully utilised at the cellular level. Would you please arrange for my levels of iron, ferritin, vitamin B12, vitamin D3, magnesium, folate, copper and zinc levels to be tested? (If your doctor doesn’t know about these, or tries to tell you there is no connection, please copy out the references at the end of this message to show your doctor that there is a connection). Please would you make these results available to me together with the reference range for each test done? (If any are shown to be low in the range, these will need to be supplemented before the thyroid hormone will work). (You do not have to give any reason to a doctor why you want these results. Also, doctors cannot withhold any information that is in your medical notes under The Date Protection Act 1998). I would like a referral to a specialist in thyroid disease for a thorough clinical examination and an assessment of my clinical history, as well as the results of serum thyroid function tests to be taken into consideration in the hope of being given a trial of the active thyroid hormone T3, either synthetic Liothyronine or natural thyroid extract and would like to be referred to Dr ****** at ********Hospital. Please will you place this letter of requests in my Medical Records? I look forward to hearing from you in due course. Kind regards References: Low iron/ferritin: Iron deficiency is shown to significantly reduce T4 to T3 conversion, increase reverse T3 levels, and block the thermogenic (metabolism boosting) properties of thyroid hormone (1-4). Thus, iron deficiency, as indicated by iron saturation below 25 or a ferritin below 70, will result in diminished intracellular T3 levels. Additionally, T4 should not be considered adequate thyroid replacement if iron deficiency is present (1-4)). 1. Dillman E, Gale C, Green W, et al. Hypothermia in iron deficiency due to altered triiodithyroidine metabolism. Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology 1980;239(5):377-R381. 2. SM, PE, Lukaski HC. In vitro hepatic thyroid hormone deiodination in iron-deficient rats: effect of dietary fat. Life Sci 1993;53(8):603-9. 3. Zimmermann MB, Köhrle J. The Impact of Iron and Selenium Deficiencies on Iodine and Thyroid Metabolism: Biochemistry and Relevance to Public Health. Thyroid 2002;12(10): 867-78. 4. Beard J, tobin B, Green W. Evidence for Thyroid Hormone Deficiency in Iron-Deficient Anemic Rats. J. Nutr. 1989;119:772-778. Low vitamin B12: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18655403 Low vitamin D3: http://www.eje-online.org/cgi/content/abstract/113/3/329 and http://www.goodhormonehealth.com/VitaminD.pdf Low magnesium: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC292768/pdf/jcinvest00264-0105.pdf Low folate: http://www.clinchem.org/cgi/content/full/47/9/1738 and http://www.liebertonline.com/doi/abs/10.1089/thy.1999.9.1163 Low copper http://www.ithyroid.com/copper.htm http://www.drlwilson.com/articles/copper_toxicity_syndrome.htm http://www.ithyroid.com/copper.htm http://www.rjpbcs.com/pdf/2011_2(2)/68.pdf http://ajplegacy.physiology.org/content/171/3/652.extract Low zinc: http://www.istanbul.edu.tr/ffdbiyo/current4/07%20Iham%20AM%C4%B0R.pdf and http://articles.webraydian.com/article1648-Role_of_Zinc_and_Copper_in_Effective_Thyroid_Function.html From: thyroid treatment [mailto:thyroid treatment ] On Behalf Of gail Sent: 19 September 2011 14:42 thyroid treatment Subject: Brick wall with GP with under active thyroid I have had Levothyroxine for 6 years,for the past 2 years I have been yo yoing from 125 mcg to 100 mcg. I do not feel well on either, 125mcg gives me palpitations, violent headaches and pins and needles in my left arm....the 100 mcg well....permanent sore throat and chest, mood swings, breathlessness, tiredness and weight well.... I am a holistic therapist, reiki practitioner, 57, fit . 2 weeks ago my doctor refused to send me to an endocrinologist, refused to consider natural thyroxine for me, as far as he was concerned, and not the first doctor to say this, it was my age, Lister hospital in age will only do certain tests for Low thyroid and my tests were fine...just needed to drop to 100 mcg again! Which I knew would after time be a problem. I am typing this message before the brain fog kicks in and mood changes where i don't have the energy to try and explain this anymore. I have been requested to change doctors. I am on borrowed time till I will feel ill on 100mcg and will go back to the surgey and they will put it up again...see my problem...? Do you know of a doctor in stevenage who will help me please and treat me with natural thyroxine and check my adrenal system. I would be very grateful. kind regards Gail Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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