Guest guest Posted October 17, 2004 Report Share Posted October 17, 2004 In a message dated 10/16/2004 11:10:27 PM Eastern Standard Time, artisticgroom@... writes: > I WANT fudge!!! > brownies....with pot in them...baron and janie can get together and do this... cindi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 17, 2004 Report Share Posted October 17, 2004 <Laurie licks her lips in anticipation> >brownies....with pot in them...baron and >janie can get together and do >this... >cindi Re: chocolate to everyone in this group.... In a message dated 10/16/2004 11:10:27 PM Eastern Standard Time, artisticgroom@... writes: > I WANT fudge!!! > brownies....with pot in them...baron and janie can get together and do this... cindi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 17, 2004 Report Share Posted October 17, 2004 Oh but what a nice fudgey chocolatey monster it is! I'll take that kind over the starvation/deprivation/restriction monster any day of the year. We only live once & life is too short to deprive oneself of everything that makes us happy. Re: chocolate to everyone in this group.... i've started a monster... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 26, 2004 Report Share Posted October 26, 2004 Haven't read them yet, but will, but this is really a scary thought, Janie, as in What if you really aren't all that iron poor, but are taking a ton of iron. Iron overload is detrimental to the heart. On the other hand, anemia is devastating, so this is so confusing for me, since I posted that other article about another type of testing for iron status. I had always thought that the ferritin was the hallmark or iron status. Re: chocolate to everyone in this group.... > > > The following was in the second link below and it's > important!: " These data suggest that serum ferritin appears to be > sensitive to thyroid status, especially in women. Further, increased > or decreased ferritin concentrations may not be an index of iron > stores in thyroid disorders. " > > Janie > > > http://intl-jcem.endojournals.org/cgi/content/full/84/9/3099 > > http://medind.nic.in/imvw/imvw17820.html > > http://www.thyroid-info.com/articles/hemachromatosis-iron.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 26, 2004 Report Share Posted October 26, 2004 wrote: >is devastating, so this is so confusing for me, since I posted that other >article about another type of testing for iron status. I had always thought >that the ferritin was the hallmark or iron status. > > Not in an inflammatory condition becuase it is an acute phase reactant - ie it responds to inflammatory processes such as Hashis , RA or infection etc by rising -which is why some test for inflammation eg antibodies or ESR need to be done to interpret a high ferrition Also ferritin will need to be checked freqiuently if it is mid range to check that this is not masking low iron stores. Low ferritin plus suggestive RBC indices or serum iron status will of course need iron. the best test for iron stores remains a bone marrow biopsy Alison http://www.alisonashwell.com new work uploaded http://www.artwanted/alisonashwell Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 26, 2004 Report Share Posted October 26, 2004 wrote: >>The following was in the second link below and it's >>important!: " These data suggest that serum ferritin appears to be >>sensitive to thyroid status, especially in women. Further, increased >>or decreased ferritin concentrations may not be an index of iron >>stores in thyroid disorders. " >> >> >> > > > > > > > i wasn't able to get that link to come up but i googled the quote and got a cached abstract - i am surprised the 50 controls did not have a higher ferritin than 183 in a mixed group- i wasn't able to find out more on their experiment - eg if the controls were screened for thyroid disease and anaemia, general good health. additionaly it would be interesting to know the number of vegetarians in the sample given that it was done in India. also its not a big sample given the attempt to categorise both hyper and hypo thyroidism effects in men and women -[essentially 4 populations within the test group] I would be surprised if the statistics stand up on sample size alone. -- Alison http://www.alisonashwell.com new work uploaded http://www.artwanted/alisonashwell Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 26, 2004 Report Share Posted October 26, 2004 So if you've got inflammation that means you've likely got Hashi's? Re: Re: chocolate to everyone in this group.... Not in an inflammatory condition becuase it is an acute phase reactant - ie it responds to inflammatory processes such as Hashis , RA or infection etc by rising -which is why some test for inflammation eg antibodies or ESR need to be done to interpret a high ferrition Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 26, 2004 Report Share Posted October 26, 2004 Caroline Pollak wrote: >So if you've got inflammation that means you've likely got Hashi's? > > > > > no-if you have hashis or another autoimmune problem you have to have more info before interpreting a ferritin result -- Alison http://www.alisonashwell.com new work uploaded http://www.artwanted/alisonashwell Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 27, 2004 Report Share Posted October 27, 2004 Ooh, bone marrow biopsy, painful!! No thanks. I have bragged about my ferritin, yet, because I know that I have had so much inflammation, on and off, I'm wondering if it's not a falso thing. I always have a 60 to 70 ferritin, despite the way I feel at times. I have strong allergies, constant sinus infections, and asthma, along with thyroid irritation and discomfort there from one time to the next. Then, each one goes away briefly, but there's usually something going on with one of them almost ALL the time. I think that this would warrant an ESR, as I've had thyroid antibodies soring for quite sometime. Maybe at some point I'll be able to run other antibody testing, as in the antigliadin, the specific ones for lupus (ANA was negative), and whatever else, but for now, the ESR will have to do, I guess. Maybe my ferritin is telling me a false story, who knows. Aaaggghhhh, this is so confusing, and it's like drowning in all this info sometimes. Re: Re: chocolate to everyone in this group.... > > wrote: > > >is devastating, so this is so confusing for me, since I posted that other > >article about another type of testing for iron status. I had always thought > >that the ferritin was the hallmark or iron status. > > > > > Not in an inflammatory condition becuase it is an acute phase reactant - ie it responds to inflammatory processes such as Hashis , RA or infection etc by rising -which is why some test for inflammation eg antibodies or ESR need to be done to interpret a high ferrition > > Also ferritin will need to be checked freqiuently if it is mid range to check that this is not masking low iron stores. > Low ferritin plus suggestive RBC indices or serum iron status will of course need iron. > the best test for iron stores remains a bone marrow biopsy > > > Alison Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 27, 2004 Report Share Posted October 27, 2004 The article I THINK that this quote refers to is an article by a doctor, but not a full blown doctor study. So there is more than one source for this. I can't remember the name of the testing that it referred to as being more of the hallmark for iron testing, but it wasn't the TIBC or the Transferritin, it was something I wasn't familiar with. Can't remember, duh! Re: Re: chocolate to everyone in this group.... > > wrote: > > >>The following was in the second link below and it's > >>important!: " These data suggest that serum ferritin appears to be > >>sensitive to thyroid status, especially in women. Further, increased > >>or decreased ferritin concentrations may not be an index of iron > >>stores in thyroid disorders. " > > > > i wasn't able to get that link to come up but i googled the quote and > got a cached abstract - i am surprised the 50 controls did not have a > higher ferritin than 183 in a mixed group- i wasn't able to find out > more on their experiment - eg if the controls were screened for thyroid > disease and anaemia, general good health. additionaly it would be > interesting to know the number of vegetarians in the sample given that > it was done in India. > also its not a big sample given the attempt to categorise both hyper and > hypo thyroidism effects in men and women -[essentially 4 populations > within the test group] I would be surprised if the statistics stand up > on sample size alone. > > -- > Alison Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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