Guest guest Posted January 7, 2003 Report Share Posted January 7, 2003 Taya, I can't respond to the TSH level question, but I can speak to the ultrasound issue. After my initial radioactive iodine treatment I asked if I could, rather than repeating this, do regular ultrasounds, given that my papillary nodule was encapsulated and my risk was generally low. My endo. agreed to this, and said it was a common practice for people with my diagnosis. I feel, personally, quite confident in this kind of neck inspection. Gwen At 06:41 PM 1/7/2003 +0000, you wrote: >After waiting seven months for an appointment with my >endochrinologist since my last surgery, I saw him last week. He told >me that my TSH level was fine. It is currently at 0.12. When I >asked, " shouldn't it be under 0.1? " , he said it was close enough. I >then told him that I had gained about 25 pounds since I had surgery >and went on 150 mcg of Levoxyl. He told me to join a gym and that it >was hard for pharmacies to get the 167 mcg of Levoxyl so he would >keep me at my present dosage. He then told me to come back in March >for another appointment and said I should get some blood work done >while I was there. Since he didn't bring it up, I asked him if I >should be getting a scan done - perhaps in April since it will be 1 >year since my last surgery. He told me that it was very unlikely >that I would have a recurrance and that it wasn't necessary and not >worth going off my medication for six weeks. But I could go for an >ultrasound at some point before April. Now, this is the same guy who >told me I should wait six months and see if the nodule on my thyroid >gets any bigger, and that I had follicular cancer which was later >diagnosed after the first surgery as papillary cancer. I am trying >to get a second opinion of treatment from another endo in my area, >but it's close to impossible to get appointments with these doctors. >Has anyone had a similar experience, what did you do? > >Taya >PT 11/01 >Dx: Papillary Cancer and Hashimoto's disease >TT 4/02 >150 mcg Levoxyl > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2003 Report Share Posted January 7, 2003 Taya, Did you have RAI after your last surgery? And are you being followed for Tg and TgAB? Judith (British living in Holland) dx 1965 pap thyca T4-N1-M0 > After waiting seven months for an appointment with my > endochrinologist since my last surgery, I saw him last week. He told > me that my TSH level was fine. It is currently at 0.12. When I > asked, " shouldn't it be under 0.1? " , he said it was close enough. I > then told him that I had gained about 25 pounds since I had surgery > and went on 150 mcg of Levoxyl. He told me to join a gym and that it > was hard for pharmacies to get the 167 mcg of Levoxyl so he would > keep me at my present dosage. He then told me to come back in March > for another appointment and said I should get some blood work done > while I was there. Since he didn't bring it up, I asked him if I > should be getting a scan done - perhaps in April since it will be 1 > year since my last surgery. He told me that it was very unlikely > that I would have a recurrance and that it wasn't necessary and not > worth going off my medication for six weeks. But I could go for an > ultrasound at some point before April. Now, this is the same guy who > told me I should wait six months and see if the nodule on my thyroid > gets any bigger, and that I had follicular cancer which was later > diagnosed after the first surgery as papillary cancer. I am trying > to get a second opinion of treatment from another endo in my area, > but it's close to impossible to get appointments with these doctors. > Has anyone had a similar experience, what did you do? > > Taya > PT 11/01 > Dx: Papillary Cancer and Hashimoto's disease > TT 4/02 > 150 mcg Levoxyl Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2003 Report Share Posted January 7, 2003 Taya, Did you have RAI after your last surgery? And are you being followed for Tg and TgAB? Judith (British living in Holland) dx 1965 pap thyca T4-N1-M0 > After waiting seven months for an appointment with my > endochrinologist since my last surgery, I saw him last week. He told > me that my TSH level was fine. It is currently at 0.12. When I > asked, " shouldn't it be under 0.1? " , he said it was close enough. I > then told him that I had gained about 25 pounds since I had surgery > and went on 150 mcg of Levoxyl. He told me to join a gym and that it > was hard for pharmacies to get the 167 mcg of Levoxyl so he would > keep me at my present dosage. He then told me to come back in March > for another appointment and said I should get some blood work done > while I was there. Since he didn't bring it up, I asked him if I > should be getting a scan done - perhaps in April since it will be 1 > year since my last surgery. He told me that it was very unlikely > that I would have a recurrance and that it wasn't necessary and not > worth going off my medication for six weeks. But I could go for an > ultrasound at some point before April. Now, this is the same guy who > told me I should wait six months and see if the nodule on my thyroid > gets any bigger, and that I had follicular cancer which was later > diagnosed after the first surgery as papillary cancer. I am trying > to get a second opinion of treatment from another endo in my area, > but it's close to impossible to get appointments with these doctors. > Has anyone had a similar experience, what did you do? > > Taya > PT 11/01 > Dx: Papillary Cancer and Hashimoto's disease > TT 4/02 > 150 mcg Levoxyl Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2003 Report Share Posted January 7, 2003 Taya, The fact that your nodule was encapsulated is good but more importantly, what was the size of that nodule? Nodule's under 1cm are sometimes removed with no RAI follow up. Anything 1 cm or above needs RAI. Did you have RAI? Your tsh is close to suppression. But the issue is really how you feel? People can be at 0.1 and feel crummy or great! If you still don't feel well then the tsh can be brought slightly lower like to 0.08 or .05. Doctors who are unwilling to fine tune medication this way are not considering the full scope of the patients situation. Additionally, do you know if your antibodies have abated. Hahimoto antibodies can persist thus not giving the doctor accurate information off the thyroglobulin test. The antibodies make the test inaccurate. This would be another reason to be scanned. If they can't look for recurrance through your tg then a scan after one year is appropriate. I happen to believe it's appropriate under any circumstances, but that's just my opinion. That is nonsense about the difficulty in getting a higher dose. All the doctor had to do was prescibe one of the small doses in addition to your .15 and give you a daily dose adjustment. Some people increase their dose only 2x a week, others do it every other day. Do not give up on seeking another opinion. Gail dx: 1968, TT, pap. & foll. well differentiated w/hurthle cell, RAI, rad.neck dissection,lung surgery, hashimoto, tg antibody 575, iodine resistant,existing thyca nodules in lungs. Last surgery 1972 > >After waiting seven months for an appointment with my > >endochrinologist since my last surgery, I saw him last week. He told > >me that my TSH level was fine. It is currently at 0.12. When I > >asked, " shouldn't it be under 0.1? " , he said it was close enough. I > >then told him that I had gained about 25 pounds since I had surgery > >and went on 150 mcg of Levoxyl. He told me to join a gym and that it > >was hard for pharmacies to get the 167 mcg of Levoxyl so he would > >keep me at my present dosage. He then told me to come back in March > >for another appointment and said I should get some blood work done > >while I was there. Since he didn't bring it up, I asked him if I > >should be getting a scan done - perhaps in April since it will be 1 > >year since my last surgery. He told me that it was very unlikely > >that I would have a recurrance and that it wasn't necessary and not > >worth going off my medication for six weeks. But I could go for an > >ultrasound at some point before April. Now, this is the same guy who > >told me I should wait six months and see if the nodule on my thyroid > >gets any bigger, and that I had follicular cancer which was later > >diagnosed after the first surgery as papillary cancer. I am trying > >to get a second opinion of treatment from another endo in my area, > >but it's close to impossible to get appointments with these doctors. > >Has anyone had a similar experience, what did you do? > > > >Taya > >PT 11/01 > >Dx: Papillary Cancer and Hashimoto's disease > >TT 4/02 > >150 mcg Levoxyl > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2003 Report Share Posted January 7, 2003 Hi, you doctor kinda sounds similar to my ENT doctor. I went in to see him in Feb of 2000 because my general physician felt a lump in my thyroid I went through the ultra sound and all that and the ENT doctore told me it was a goiter nothing to worry about told me to come back in 6 month and sent me on my way. Well I came back in 6 month and had another ultrasound he told me it was still a goiter becuase it hadn't grown so it wasn't cancer. But my mom insisted on them doing an FNA so they did and sure enough it was cancer. Well after that I had the endo from hell he was so cold and mean. I only saw him once. After that I went to my general doctor and had him do my blood work and adjust my dosage of my meds. Well the thing about general doctors they don't know much about thyroid cancer so he was really slow on uping my dosages. All this time I was questioning a lump on the side of my neck and I even asked the endo about it he said it was just draining fluid even though I told him it has been there for a long time. Well I year went by and on my own I asked my doctore to set up and ultrasound. So I went and sure enough it was more cancer on the side of my neck so I had to have a radical neck disection done. they remove 19 lymph nodes and 1 of my jugular vains. Now I have a new endo she is great I had jump from 175 to 250 to 300 mg of synthroid in 6 month I feel alot better my TSH is supressed but still don't have all my energy back. Well that's my sorry I hope I didn't bore you see ya bubhye. -Theresa TT1 11/00 RAI 1/01 Rad. Neck Disection 10/01 RAI 7/02 > After waiting seven months for an appointment with my > endochrinologist since my last surgery, I saw him last week. He told > me that my TSH level was fine. It is currently at 0.12. When I > asked, " shouldn't it be under 0.1? " , he said it was close enough. I > then told him that I had gained about 25 pounds since I had surgery > and went on 150 mcg of Levoxyl. He told me to join a gym and that it > was hard for pharmacies to get the 167 mcg of Levoxyl so he would > keep me at my present dosage. He then told me to come back in March > for another appointment and said I should get some blood work done > while I was there. Since he didn't bring it up, I asked him if I > should be getting a scan done - perhaps in April since it will be 1 > year since my last surgery. He told me that it was very unlikely > that I would have a recurrance and that it wasn't necessary and not > worth going off my medication for six weeks. But I could go for an > ultrasound at some point before April. Now, this is the same guy who > told me I should wait six months and see if the nodule on my thyroid > gets any bigger, and that I had follicular cancer which was later > diagnosed after the first surgery as papillary cancer. I am trying > to get a second opinion of treatment from another endo in my area, > but it's close to impossible to get appointments with these doctors. > Has anyone had a similar experience, what did you do? > > Taya > PT 11/01 > Dx: Papillary Cancer and Hashimoto's disease > TT 4/02 > 150 mcg Levoxyl Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2003 Report Share Posted January 7, 2003 It is currently at 0.12. When I > asked, " shouldn't it be under 0.1? " , he said it was close enough. I > then told him that I had gained about 25 pounds since I had surgery > and went on 150 mcg of Levoxyl. He told me to join a gym and that it > was hard for pharmacies to get the 167 mcg of Levoxyl so he would > keep me at my present dosage. I'll join the chorus of " you don't have to take the same dose every day to end up with the right dose " I'm a 150 a day with 1/2 on sundays for a dose of 139.28 which is just perfect for me.. he could get you close to 167 by doing 175 each day and 1/2 on sunday . that's an effective dose of 162.5 per day averaged over the week. Join a gym.. yeah that's sympathetic medical care.. argghhh... if we could be the Thyca jury.. we could sentence him to a month of being hypo and then challenge him to lose weight while on levoxyl (it can be done but it takes a lot more concentration) barb tt 8/99 RAI 4/00 Clean Scans 12/00, 5/02 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2003 Report Share Posted January 10, 2003 I keep seeing postings about Hashimoto's disease. What is it? Thanks, SoCal TT: 1-9103 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2003 Report Share Posted January 10, 2003 I keep seeing postings about Hashimoto's disease. What is it? Thanks, SoCal TT: 1-9103 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2003 Report Share Posted January 11, 2003 > I keep seeing postings about Hashimoto's disease. What is it? > > Thanks, > SoCal > TT: 1-9103 Hashimoto's thyroiditis is an immune system disease - a chronic inflammation of the thyroid. Our bodies usually produce antibodies to fight things that invade it, but with Hashi's, the immune system produces antibodies that attack and damage our own thyroid gland. It's more common in women, and more common as we age. Most people with Hashi's eventually will need to take T4, because their thyroids stop functioning. For those of us with Hashi's who have thyca, it affects us in this way (obviously we have to take T4 anyway :-)): The thyroglobulin (TG) test is used as a cancer marker. Only healthy or cancerous thryoid tissue can produce TG. So, after surgery and RAI ablation to kill the rest of our thyroid, our bodies shouldn't produce it anymore. Our TG levels should be unmeasurable. However, if our bodies are still producing these antibodies (Anti-TG or TgAb), they can interfere with the TG test, and make it in accurate. Cheers, Alisa Currently - 140mcg Levoxyl 2/15/2002: Nodule found 2/27/2002: FNA 3/4/2002: Hysterectomy/oopherectomy-possible ovarian cancer - BENIGN!! 4/9/2002: TT - Stage 2 pap 2.5 x 2 x 1.6 cm nodule, dx Hashimotos 5/28/2002: WBS (2 mCi) and 100 mCi RAI --- 6/6/2002: WBS - No mets 12/16/02: WBS (5 mCi): clean scan - no thyroid tissue in body!!! Age: 49 -- Location: near Seattle WA --- Check out my posts: Radioactive Girl - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Thyca/message/19472 My LID - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Thyca/message/15872 My RAI - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Thyca/message/15873 LID thoughts, tips, ideas - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Thyca/message/25430 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2003 Report Share Posted January 11, 2003 > I keep seeing postings about Hashimoto's disease. What is it? > > Thanks, > SoCal > TT: 1-9103 Hashimoto's thyroiditis is an immune system disease - a chronic inflammation of the thyroid. Our bodies usually produce antibodies to fight things that invade it, but with Hashi's, the immune system produces antibodies that attack and damage our own thyroid gland. It's more common in women, and more common as we age. Most people with Hashi's eventually will need to take T4, because their thyroids stop functioning. For those of us with Hashi's who have thyca, it affects us in this way (obviously we have to take T4 anyway :-)): The thyroglobulin (TG) test is used as a cancer marker. Only healthy or cancerous thryoid tissue can produce TG. So, after surgery and RAI ablation to kill the rest of our thyroid, our bodies shouldn't produce it anymore. Our TG levels should be unmeasurable. However, if our bodies are still producing these antibodies (Anti-TG or TgAb), they can interfere with the TG test, and make it in accurate. Cheers, Alisa Currently - 140mcg Levoxyl 2/15/2002: Nodule found 2/27/2002: FNA 3/4/2002: Hysterectomy/oopherectomy-possible ovarian cancer - BENIGN!! 4/9/2002: TT - Stage 2 pap 2.5 x 2 x 1.6 cm nodule, dx Hashimotos 5/28/2002: WBS (2 mCi) and 100 mCi RAI --- 6/6/2002: WBS - No mets 12/16/02: WBS (5 mCi): clean scan - no thyroid tissue in body!!! Age: 49 -- Location: near Seattle WA --- Check out my posts: Radioactive Girl - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Thyca/message/19472 My LID - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Thyca/message/15872 My RAI - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Thyca/message/15873 LID thoughts, tips, ideas - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Thyca/message/25430 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2003 Report Share Posted January 11, 2003 > I keep seeing postings about Hashimoto's disease. What is it? > > Thanks, > SoCal > TT: 1-9103 Hashimoto's thyroiditis is an immune system disease - a chronic inflammation of the thyroid. Our bodies usually produce antibodies to fight things that invade it, but with Hashi's, the immune system produces antibodies that attack and damage our own thyroid gland. It's more common in women, and more common as we age. Most people with Hashi's eventually will need to take T4, because their thyroids stop functioning. For those of us with Hashi's who have thyca, it affects us in this way (obviously we have to take T4 anyway :-)): The thyroglobulin (TG) test is used as a cancer marker. Only healthy or cancerous thryoid tissue can produce TG. So, after surgery and RAI ablation to kill the rest of our thyroid, our bodies shouldn't produce it anymore. Our TG levels should be unmeasurable. However, if our bodies are still producing these antibodies (Anti-TG or TgAb), they can interfere with the TG test, and make it in accurate. Cheers, Alisa Currently - 140mcg Levoxyl 2/15/2002: Nodule found 2/27/2002: FNA 3/4/2002: Hysterectomy/oopherectomy-possible ovarian cancer - BENIGN!! 4/9/2002: TT - Stage 2 pap 2.5 x 2 x 1.6 cm nodule, dx Hashimotos 5/28/2002: WBS (2 mCi) and 100 mCi RAI --- 6/6/2002: WBS - No mets 12/16/02: WBS (5 mCi): clean scan - no thyroid tissue in body!!! Age: 49 -- Location: near Seattle WA --- Check out my posts: Radioactive Girl - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Thyca/message/19472 My LID - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Thyca/message/15872 My RAI - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Thyca/message/15873 LID thoughts, tips, ideas - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Thyca/message/25430 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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