Guest guest Posted October 26, 2004 Report Share Posted October 26, 2004 I went on 88 mcg Levoxyl, I had almost no real symptoms for about 3 or 4 weeks, _______________________ This makes perfect sense. It can take up to a month to use up the existing stores of T4 that you had in your blood before the your thyroid removal. 88mcg of Levoxyl or Synthroid or anything is grossly too low for the body to successfully live on. The human thyroid makes 4-1/2 to 5 grains of Armour equivelent a day or about 333 to 370 mcg of Synthroid or Levoxyl equivelent a day. It is imperative that you be allowed to adjust your dose up as high as needed to regain your health. Since you do not have a thyroid, you need full replacement and 88 mcg will not do it, no how, no way. Your health will continue to decline on this dose untill you become housebound and incapacitated, I guarantee it. In the past before the TSH test became popular in the mid 1970s, thyroid doses averaged 3 to 5 grains of Armour or 300 to 400 mcg of Synthroid or Levoxyl. This was the average for people who had thyroids that contributed some to their daily total. So, this means that you could need far more. Every person is different and the average amount of hormone a healthy thyroid makes is just that " average. " Many people fall outside of average, as much as 25% of people do. Please find another more open minded doctor, who at least has enough brains in their pin heads to have remembered how much hormone a healthy thyroid makes. You can also treat yourself. You can do it how it was done for 50 years before the TSH test. Thyroid patients lived long and healthy lives prior to the TSH test. For 83 years prior to these tests, thyroid doses were adjusted up to whatever level that made the patient healthy and normal again. Doctors used patient appearance, patient description of their state, body temperature, reflex action, and pulse as guides. They simply adjusted the thyroid dose up in small increments of about 1/2 of a grain or 25 mcg of synthroid every 2 weeks to a month untill health was restored. Doses from the late 1800s up untill about 1975 were 3 times higher than they are today. To learn how to adjust your dose, check out these two pages: http://www.drrind.com/tempgraph.asp http://www.fudgedesign.co.uk/tuk/treat/glandulars.htm Body temperature is a very excellent way to determine your true metabolic rate, which is controlled by thyroid and adrenal. It is a better test of success of treatment than the TSH test in my opinion and in the opinion of some of the more enlightened doctors. It is a direct measure of the adequacey of thyroid levels. TSH is an indirect measure of thyroid function. You can get thyroid hormone from MyRxForLess and other Mexican pharmacies or you can order a thyroid glandular from Nutri+meds. Each Nutri+meds contains about 1/4 grain of thyroid per tablet, which is about the equivelent of 19 mcg of Synthroid or Levoxyl. I would personally recommend Armour over the synthetics. If you have any cardiovascular problems, dose raises with Armour or nutri+meds need to be in small increments, probably 1/4 grain and wait a minimum of 2 weeks before another raise. If you don't want to go this route and want a doctor, Chack out the following doctor lists: http://thyroid.about.com/ http://www.wilsonssyndrome.com/ http://www.armourthyroid.com/ To read a little about doses in the past, check out: http://thyroid.about.com/library/derry/bl11.htm A good book on this is " Thyroid Guardian of Health " by G. Young. For more details on the TSH test and why it is of little use: http://www.thyroid-info.com/articles/david-derry.htm To learn why you might be better off with natural thyroid like Armour: http://personal.bellsouth.net/w/u/wurmstei/ http://www.royalrife.com/thyroid.html The thyroid makes 7 thyroid hromones and all are needed by the body. Synthroid is only one hormone T4 and it is relatively inactive and must be converted in tissues to the other hormones. Many tissues in the body are not good at converting. Synthroid and Levoxyl are less efficient and therefore patients often need higher doses to get T3 up in the normal ranges. Most importantly of all, you need to find a doctor who will allow you to adjust your dose up to wherever you need it to feel well, be healthy, and have a productive life. This seems so simple, but, today, it is a very difficult thing to do. Doctors seem to have lost so much knowledge about thyroid function. Tish Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 26, 2004 Report Share Posted October 26, 2004 , I take Levoxyl very early in the AM, at least 1 hour before I eat. I take the Levoxyl w/water, I don't do it sublingually (yet). I usually eat 3 squares a day, not much snacking in between, but some. I take a multivitamin daily (Centrum Silver + Vit E (400IU) + Vitamin C (500mg)). Thanks for any advice you can offer. For what it's worth, I don't mind you getting carried away at all. Nick Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 26, 2004 Report Share Posted October 26, 2004 , I take Levoxyl very early in the AM, at least 1 hour before I eat. I take the Levoxyl w/water, I don't do it sublingually (yet). I usually eat 3 squares a day, not much snacking in between, but some. I take a multivitamin daily (Centrum Silver + Vit E (400IU) + Vitamin C (500mg)). Thanks for any advice you can offer. For what it's worth, I don't mind you getting carried away at all. Nick Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 26, 2004 Report Share Posted October 26, 2004 I have not tracked any basals yet. As far as sleep, I used to sleep soundly all night before all of this began. Now, since surgery (actually even before surgery) I sleep " lightly " , waking up thru the night alot. I still feel like I've gotten enought rest, but the sleep pattern is totally different; more like alot of catnaps. Nick Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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