Guest guest Posted February 17, 2003 Report Share Posted February 17, 2003 update and other things.............. > The surgeon also said he spoke w/the endo. and the endo. said that with this small amount of cancer found, no RAI is necessary. That is fine for me for the most part, but I Just need to get these meds fixed. > > But, he said that my primary might feel comfortable enough in adjusting my meds, which I hope he does, but if not, that's fine. I at least want to see him so he knows about what I've been going thru these past few weeks. > > -- > PT 1/30/03 (98% removed!!), > 7 mm. papillary cancer found in right lobe, > right lobe 10x larger than normal and left lobe 4x larger, > 100 mcg. levoxyl and thinking I might need some more soon! > , I think many of us here would urge you to find a good endo who has experience with thyca. S/He does not have to be in your neighborhood -- you don't see the endo all that often! Some people travel quite a distance for these consultations. (You don't mention if the jerk has thyca experience anyway, aside from his " bedside manner " .) You should have a thyca-experienced endo explain the pros & cons of (not) having RAI ablation with your particular situation. Treatment is not something that we " have " or " get " to have or not have, it is something we " decide " to have/not have based on our particular medical situation and risk tolerance. You may also benefit from a second opinion on whether or not treatment would be a good idea for you. You say not having it is " fine " with you but only " for the most part " , and don't sound overly confident in the endo's opinion (even a jerk can have a valid expert opinion, but I don't know about this doctor's experience or outlook or results with other patients). I don't know what the prevailing wisdom is on small tumors. I think others have already mentioned that it takes 4-6 weeks for the T4 meds (e.g. Levoxyl) to stabilize in your blood. Testing too soon would give a false picture. After my treatment I started on 125mcg, and a couple of months later the dose was changed. Meanwhile, even though I was starting to feel better over those weeks, I wasn't feeling " normal " until a few weeks after the increase to 150. It can be a slow and frustrating process. Don't forget, either, that you are barely post-op, and your body is still recovering from the shock of surgery. You do still have some thyroid remnants, which may be going to contribute some hormone when they settle down a bit! You may want to be sure that your primary gets copies of your treatment, lab tests, pathology, etc. from the other doctors involved -- just ask them to send him the copies directly, this is a common practice. In fact, my primary called me when she got a copy of my TT pathology report, to be sure I understood what it said and that there were plans to follow up on the cancer diagnosis. And if you are going to have your primary deal with the meds issues, be sure he knows what the goals are -- it's not just " how you feel " as it would be for a non-cancer hypo patient! (How much does your primary know about thyca, for that matter?) and in another message you mention .... >The concerns I have right now is the remaining thyroid tissue that is left and I'm wondering how common it would be for cancer to be there too? > I think this is one reason for having the ablation -- to be sure to zap whatever may be lurking around, as well as kill off any thyroid cells that might decide to " misbehave " ! Plus, there are followup methods that are only useful if you have had ablation. There is, unfortunately, more to post-thyca-TT followup than getting meds adjusted. There's that pesky lifelong monitoring! bj Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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