Guest guest Posted March 13, 2004 Report Share Posted March 13, 2004 Hi all, I'm new here and just wanted to introduce myself. My name is (i'm female) and I suffer from Hypothyroidism. I was diagnosed around 2 years ago after putting on 80 lbs in a year and being fatigued to the point that I spent most of the day in bed. I was on Levothroid but now, since they no longer make it, I'm on levoxyl. It's not really helping. I've managed to get my weight down by 40 lbs through a combination of the atkins diet and Metformin (I also have Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome, another disease that makes you put on weight like crazy! UGH!), but I'M SOOOOOOOOO EXHAUSTED ALL THE TIME! I can literally sleep for 14 hours, be up for three and then need to sleep again. I'm currently unemployed (after all of this happened to me, I hit a major depression and had to be hospitalized, so I lost my job and my apartment and partner and am now living at home at the age of 32, oh joy!) and I just can't see HOW I CAN GET A JOB FEELING LIKE THIS! My disability ran out this month and I'm not sure I'm going to get SSI...so I need to find other options. Does anyone know of anything else that I could ask my doctor about to help the fatigue, or is this all in my head?????? I kept thinking that once the depression lifted and I didn't have to be on so many meds the fatigue would lift, but it hasn't and now I realize that I've just plain felt crappy since the months preceding my diagnosis as hypothyroid. Any help/advice would be GREATLY APPRECIATED! I'm willing to try anything at this point! I've heard that certain combinations of meds sometimes work, but I'm not sure what these are or what tests to ask the doctor for (my doc is very good, she'll do any labs I ask for, but every time she does a thyroid check it comes back 'normal'...but I think something has to be up, otherwise I wouldn't be this exhausted, right?). Thanks so very much, Sincerely, Baer Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 2004 Report Share Posted March 14, 2004 Hi and Welcome! I think you're going to find out here that you're right on target. I took synthetic T4 meds for yrs, then got so ill that I HAD to investigate other things. I was going to work like this and just pulling myself along. One year ago, I hit this thyroid site and another one and learned that I was probably taking the wrong type of thyroid med for me. For the last 5 1/2 months, I made a transition to Armour Thyroid, which is the oldest thyroid hormone around, made from pigs' thyroids, and the most similar to ours. It has things in it, as our own healthy thyroid used to, not only T3 and T4, but also T1, T2, and calcitonin. These are all the things that our own thyroids used to do. First, we really need for you to post your lab values here, along with the reference ranges, to compare. The very best tests that you can have (but many doctors don't know to, or won't give them) are the Free T3, Free T4, and TSH. NEVER accept a verbal thing of " your tests are normal " . Always get a hard copy of your test results to keep with you and to judge for yourself. If you will get those posted here, we can all pitch in and see what's going on there. It sounds like you are on an excellent diet, and I probably don't have the discipline to do the Atkins diet exactly the way they call for. It's not your fault. It's your thyroid, at this point. Your metabolism has to pick up in order to lose weight, at this point, but as a hypothyroid person, you are better off in this department eating 6 or 7 small meals a day, rather than 2 or 3, or starving yourself. As a matter of fact, if you go too long without eating as a hypo patient, you're more likely to put on weight because your body will think that it's starving, and so it will store everything as fat and slow down even more so. Tx Hi all, I'm new here! > Hi all, > I'm new here and just wanted to introduce myself. My name is > (i'm female) and I suffer from Hypothyroidism. I was diagnosed > around 2 years ago after putting on 80 lbs in a year and being > fatigued to the point that I spent most of the day in bed. I was on > Levothroid but now, since they no longer make it, I'm on levoxyl. > It's not really helping. I've managed to get my weight down by 40 > lbs through a combination of the atkins diet and Metformin (I also > have Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome, another disease that makes you put > on weight like crazy! UGH!), but I'M SOOOOOOOOO EXHAUSTED ALL THE > TIME! I can literally sleep for 14 hours, be up for three and then > need to sleep again. I'm currently unemployed (after all of this > happened to me, I hit a major depression and had to be hospitalized, > so I lost my job and my apartment and partner and am now living at > home at the age of 32, oh joy!) and I just can't see HOW I CAN GET A > JOB FEELING LIKE THIS! My disability ran out this month and I'm not > sure I'm going to get SSI...so I need to find other options. > Does anyone know of anything else that I could ask my doctor about > to help the fatigue, or is this all in my head?????? I kept thinking > that once the depression lifted and I didn't have to be on so many > meds the fatigue would lift, but it hasn't and now I realize that > I've just plain felt crappy since the months preceding my diagnosis > as hypothyroid. Any help/advice would be GREATLY APPRECIATED! I'm > willing to try anything at this point! I've heard that certain > combinations of meds sometimes work, but I'm not sure what these are > or what tests to ask the doctor for (my doc is very good, she'll do > any labs I ask for, but every time she does a thyroid check it comes > back 'normal'...but I think something has to be up, otherwise I > wouldn't be this exhausted, right?). > > Thanks so very much, > Sincerely, > Baer Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 2004 Report Share Posted March 14, 2004 Hi, welcome! Well, shall we start with the basics? Your labs, 'normal'. Normal my be within normal ranges of the labs that they've set up, but 'normal' may not be normal for you. So the first thing we need to do is find out what your labs are showing... and, based with your still feeling like crap, I would assume that your meds are short, as in you're not getting enough. There are a couple of other possibilities here, too, but first lets see what the labs, and the ranges, are and go from there... Ideally your doc would have taken at least three tests: TSH, Free T3 and Free T4... There is a strong possibility that she may have only taken the TSH, that's what a majority of the docs do. A brief blurb here to help you understand what this stuff means.. TSH is the Thyroid Stimulating Hormone that your Pituitary gland sends out to let your thyroid know if it has to increase or decrease production. Free T4 is the amount of the T4 hormone in the blood stream, available for use. Free T3 is the amount of the T3 hormone in the blood stream, available for use. T4 is the thyroid storage hormone, but is also used by some of the body organs. T3 is produced by the body by pulling an iodine molecule off of a T4 molecule... making it a T3. Since you are on a T4 only med, synthetic, your body is dependant on how well in converts (making T4 into T3). If you are a poor converter you won't have enough of the necessary T3 in your system to allow you to feel good. To be human. To not sleep all day. There are a couple of ways of getting T3 up, if your levels are low... You can take supplements that will help with the conversion process. You can avoid foods and supplements that bind with thyroid hormone reducing it's availability. You can add T3 to your system by adding synthetic T3 medication (popular brand name Cytomel), or by switching to Natural thyroid (popular brand name Armour) So..... check with your clinic to get copies of your labs.... post them here.. and we'll get started on helping you and your doc get you tweaked..... ....and, you're not alone. I'm 46, lost my house, and car, and BF and I'm living with my dad.... No way to get to town (we're out in the country) to get work.. so I do the best I can from home. Topper () On Sun, 14 Mar 2004 05:41:51 -0000 " gundicus " writes: > Hi all, > I'm new here and just wanted to introduce myself. My name is > (i'm female) and I suffer from Hypothyroidism. I was diagnosed > around 2 years ago after putting on 80 lbs in a year and being > fatigued to the point that I spent most of the day in bed. I was on > Levothroid but now, since they no longer make it, I'm on levoxyl. > It's not really helping. I've managed to get my weight down by 40 > lbs through a combination of the atkins diet and Metformin (I also > have Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome, another disease that makes you put > on weight like crazy! UGH!), but I'M SOOOOOOOOO EXHAUSTED ALL THE > TIME! I can literally sleep for 14 hours, be up for three and then > need to sleep again. I'm currently unemployed (after all of this > happened to me, I hit a major depression and had to be hospitalized, > so I lost my job and my apartment and partner and am now living at > home at the age of 32, oh joy!) and I just can't see HOW I CAN GET A > JOB FEELING LIKE THIS! My disability ran out this month and I'm not > sure I'm going to get SSI...so I need to find other options. > Does anyone know of anything else that I could ask my doctor about > to help the fatigue, or is this all in my head?????? I kept thinking > that once the depression lifted and I didn't have to be on so many > meds the fatigue would lift, but it hasn't and now I realize that > I've just plain felt crappy since the months preceding my diagnosis > as hypothyroid. Any help/advice would be GREATLY APPRECIATED! I'm > willing to try anything at this point! I've heard that certain > combinations of meds sometimes work, but I'm not sure what these are > or what tests to ask the doctor for (my doc is very good, she'll do > any labs I ask for, but every time she does a thyroid check it comes > back 'normal'...but I think something has to be up, otherwise I > wouldn't be this exhausted, right?). > Thanks so very much, > Sincerely, > Baer Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2004 Report Share Posted March 15, 2004 Hi Welcome to our group. I have Hypothyroidism too. Before I was diagnosed, I was exhausted all time too. Well, even after I was diagnosed. Somebody here (other than me) can probably tell you why better... but, I was just wondering have you been tested for sleep apnea? I don't think that has anything to do with the hypothyroidism, but that was why I was exhausted all the time. Or at least for the most part. Just a thought. > >Reply-To: The_Thyroid_Support_Group >To: The_Thyroid_Support_Group >Subject: Hi all, I'm new here! >Date: Sun, 14 Mar 2004 05:41:51 -0000 > >Hi all, > I'm new here and just wanted to introduce myself. My name is >(i'm female) and I suffer from Hypothyroidism. I was diagnosed >around 2 years ago after putting on 80 lbs in a year and being >fatigued to the point that I spent most of the day in bed. I was on >Levothroid but now, since they no longer make it, I'm on levoxyl. >It's not really helping. I've managed to get my weight down by 40 >lbs through a combination of the atkins diet and Metformin (I also >have Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome, another disease that makes you put >on weight like crazy! UGH!), but I'M SOOOOOOOOO EXHAUSTED ALL THE >TIME! I can literally sleep for 14 hours, be up for three and then >need to sleep again. I'm currently unemployed (after all of this >happened to me, I hit a major depression and had to be hospitalized, >so I lost my job and my apartment and partner and am now living at >home at the age of 32, oh joy!) and I just can't see HOW I CAN GET A >JOB FEELING LIKE THIS! My disability ran out this month and I'm not >sure I'm going to get SSI...so I need to find other options. >Does anyone know of anything else that I could ask my doctor about >to help the fatigue, or is this all in my head?????? I kept thinking >that once the depression lifted and I didn't have to be on so many >meds the fatigue would lift, but it hasn't and now I realize that >I've just plain felt crappy since the months preceding my diagnosis >as hypothyroid. Any help/advice would be GREATLY APPRECIATED! I'm >willing to try anything at this point! I've heard that certain >combinations of meds sometimes work, but I'm not sure what these are >or what tests to ask the doctor for (my doc is very good, she'll do >any labs I ask for, but every time she does a thyroid check it comes >back 'normal'...but I think something has to be up, otherwise I >wouldn't be this exhausted, right?). > >Thanks so very much, >Sincerely, >Baer > _________________________________________________________________ One-click access to Hotmail from any Web page – download MSN Toolbar now! http://clk.atdmt.com/AVE/go/onm00200413ave/direct/01/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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