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Would you take a look at this recent bloodwork? Appreciate any comments.

RBC 4.81 3.9-5.3

WBC 8.0 6.0-17.0

HGB 13.5 11.5-13.5

HCT 40.8 H 34.0-40.0

HGB and HCT still elevated, wth? She appears to have no breathing problems. How

do we get more oxygen?

MCV 84.4 75-87

MCH 28.1 24-30

MCHC 33.1 31-37

RDW 12.3 11.5-14.5

RDW-SD 37.7 34.7-51.0

MCH reduced due to B-12 and folic acid.

Platelets 370 140-440

MPV 11.6 9.4-12.4

Bun 19 6-19

Creatinine 0.4 0.3-1.3

Sodium 141 136-145

Potassium 4.6 3.5-5.0

Chloride 104 101-111

Co2 28 22-30

Anion Gap 14 10-20

Calcium 10.7 H 8.5-10.5

Parathyroid, Intact 17 10-64

Calcium 10.7H 8.5-10.5

CA, IONIZ PH/ADJ 1.32H 1.12-1.23

CA, IONIZ Ph/Meas 1.37H 1.12-1.23

Calcium is down from 11.4 on previous test, dr also not concerned about the

elevations.

Free T4 1.9 0.9-1.9

T3 Free 8.1H 1.5-4.1

TSH 0.01 0.27-4.20

This is on 1 3/4 grains Armour, now reduced to 1 grain, she took the Armour on

the day of the test, should we have given it to her on that day?

Glucose Timed 100 70-110

Lactic Acid 2.0 H 0.5-1.6

Dr said this was fine, but this worries me, should it? What can be done to

reduce it? She does appear to be slightly fatigued.

Bilirubin Total 0.1 0.1-1.5

Alk Phos 290 117-390

SGOT 29 0-31

SGPT 22 0-45

First time liver values have been in normal range.

Protein Total Serum 7.0 6.0-8.5

Albumin 4.6 3.4-4.8

Globulin (Calc) 2.4 1.65-3.90

Ammonia 45 9-33

The dr said anything under 50 was not problematic, I found normal ref range

online to 57. Is this anything diet related or is it fine?

Behaviorally doing well, cognitive and social are excellent, consistently NT,

now, thorough psychological exam revealed no cognitive deficits and no

diagnosis. But what we appear to have still......is a physically ill child.

Any comments, suggestions appreciated.

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> Would you take a look at this recent bloodwork? Appreciate any comments.

>

>

As I recall from earlier posts she is about 5 and 40 something pounds.

> RBC 4.81 3.9-5.3

> HGB 13.5 11.5-13.5

> HCT 40.8 H 34.0-40.0

>

> HGB and HCT still elevated, wth? She appears to have no breathing

problems. How do we get more oxygen?

Don't suppose anyone ever checked ferritin?

Could be poor ability to USE oxygen, which the elevated lactate

supports, in which case more oxygen probably won't do much. You could

try getting someone to Rx a tank and stick a mask on her, seeing if

she feels better while it is on (and probably some afterwards).

> Calcium 10.7 H 8.5-10.5

>

> Parathyroid, Intact 17 10-64

> Calcium 10.7H 8.5-10.5

> CA, IONIZ PH/ADJ 1.32H 1.12-1.23

> CA, IONIZ Ph/Meas 1.37H 1.12-1.23

>

> Calcium is down from 11.4 on previous test, dr also not concerned

about the elevations.

Well, I am.

Check the various vitamin D levels (25 and 1,25 hydroxy forms) and

make sure she gets lots of magnesium frequently.

> Free T4 1.9 0.9-1.9

> T3 Free 8.1H 1.5-4.1

> TSH 0.01 0.27-4.20

>

> This is on 1 3/4 grains Armour, now reduced to 1 grain, she took the

Armour on the day of the test, should we have given it to her on that day?

FREE levels are elevated for 1-3 hours after taking medication, total

levels are not affected.

The reference range given is for adults, an age appropriate fT3 range

is up to about 7.8. These values are not entirely unreasonable though

a bit high. A full replacement dose for her based on weight would be

1 or 1 & 1/4 grain more or less.

Being hyper is much worse for adults than for children. Being hypo is

much worse for children than for adults.

> Glucose Timed 100 70-110

> Lactic Acid 2.0 H 0.5-1.6

>

> Dr said this was fine, but this worries me, should it?

Well, not WORRY, but concern as it isn't fine.

> What can be done to reduce it?

Things to support pyruvate transport and use, a lower carb higher

protein and fat diet, " mitochondrial support. "

2-5 mg biotin 3-4 times a day may help with pyruvate utilization.

B complex, magnesium, zinc, Q 10 help with the mitochondria, as does

omega 3.

> She does appear to be slightly fatigued.

She should be good for very high bursts of energy when rested,

followed by being tired VERY quickly and taking a long time to perk

up. Strength should be good, endurance poor.

If she fought back really vigorously during the blood draw for a

couple of minutes before they stuck her then the lactate may not mean

anything, but if she was reasonably compliant it is significant.

> Ammonia 45 9-33

>

> The dr said anything under 50 was not problematic,

since you don't die from it....

but if you don't want to feel like crap and not be able to think it

needs to be handled.

> I found normal ref range online to 57. Is this anything diet related

or is it fine?

The problem here is that protein elevates ammonia. And she probably

needs a lot of protein to not rely on carbs for energy.

Things that help with this are MODEST amounts of supplementary

manganese, alpha ketoglutarate (or especially the supplement ornithine

alpha ketoglutarate which is commerciallly available), and making sure

she has a somewhat acidic digestive tract and frequent bowel

movements. E.g. some of the vitamin C in acid form, enough C and Mg

to be somewhat laxative.

>

> Behaviorally doing well, cognitive and social are excellent,

consistently NT, now, thorough psychological exam revealed no

cognitive deficits and no diagnosis. But what we appear to have

still......is a physically ill child.

>

> Any comments, suggestions appreciated.

These are exactly the situations I have seen due to heavy metal tox,

blown off by 100% of " regular " doctors, which respond beautifully to

an adequate amount of chelation.

Andy

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Well, this just gets more fun the longer we go. Yes, the Ferritin level was 33,

and the rest of the panel was also normal, you looked at if before, last blood

test 3 months ago, and said it was fine.

And, yes, she did struggle before the test as the #* & *^ last phlebotomist put

the needle in OUTSIDE the clearly marked area where we had put the Emla cream,

so maybe the lactic acid level is not accurate, although the energy pattern you

describe fits her to a " T " , problems with stamina.

My concern is with the ammonia level, as even me, who knows nothing specifically

asked the dr if there was a connection between the high hemocrit and the level

of ammonia.

So some questions:

I read online this test should be a fasting test, there was no fasting, is it

valid?

What would he have done if it was over 50 or what does a dr do about this?

I also assume you monitor this by repeated blood tests, which we will do, any

idea if 6 weeks is enough to see a difference in the level?

We will implement the suggestions you made.

Thanks for your time and attention,

[ ] Re: Andy-recent blood work

> Would you take a look at this recent bloodwork? Appreciate any comments.

>

>

As I recall from earlier posts she is about 5 and 40 something pounds.

> RBC 4.81 3.9-5.3

> HGB 13.5 11.5-13.5

> HCT 40.8 H 34.0-40.0

>

> HGB and HCT still elevated, wth? She appears to have no breathing

problems. How do we get more oxygen?

Don't suppose anyone ever checked ferritin?

Could be poor ability to USE oxygen, which the elevated lactate

supports, in which case more oxygen probably won't do much. You could

try getting someone to Rx a tank and stick a mask on her, seeing if

she feels better while it is on (and probably some afterwards).

> Calcium 10.7 H 8.5-10.5

>

> Parathyroid, Intact 17 10-64

> Calcium 10.7H 8.5-10.5

> CA, IONIZ PH/ADJ 1.32H 1.12-1.23

> CA, IONIZ Ph/Meas 1.37H 1.12-1.23

>

> Calcium is down from 11.4 on previous test, dr also not concerned

about the elevations.

Well, I am.

Check the various vitamin D levels (25 and 1,25 hydroxy forms) and

make sure she gets lots of magnesium frequently.

> Free T4 1.9 0.9-1.9

> T3 Free 8.1H 1.5-4.1

> TSH 0.01 0.27-4.20

>

> This is on 1 3/4 grains Armour, now reduced to 1 grain, she took the

Armour on the day of the test, should we have given it to her on that day?

FREE levels are elevated for 1-3 hours after taking medication, total

levels are not affected.

The reference range given is for adults, an age appropriate fT3 range

is up to about 7.8. These values are not entirely unreasonable though

a bit high. A full replacement dose for her based on weight would be

1 or 1 & 1/4 grain more or less.

Being hyper is much worse for adults than for children. Being hypo is

much worse for children than for adults.

> Glucose Timed 100 70-110

> Lactic Acid 2.0 H 0.5-1.6

>

> Dr said this was fine, but this worries me, should it?

Well, not WORRY, but concern as it isn't fine.

> What can be done to reduce it?

Things to support pyruvate transport and use, a lower carb higher

protein and fat diet, " mitochondrial support. "

2-5 mg biotin 3-4 times a day may help with pyruvate utilization.

B complex, magnesium, zinc, Q 10 help with the mitochondria, as does

omega 3.

> She does appear to be slightly fatigued.

She should be good for very high bursts of energy when rested,

followed by being tired VERY quickly and taking a long time to perk

up. Strength should be good, endurance poor.

If she fought back really vigorously during the blood draw for a

couple of minutes before they stuck her then the lactate may not mean

anything, but if she was reasonably compliant it is significant.

> Ammonia 45 9-33

>

> The dr said anything under 50 was not problematic,

since you don't die from it....

but if you don't want to feel like crap and not be able to think it

needs to be handled.

> I found normal ref range online to 57. Is this anything diet related

or is it fine?

The problem here is that protein elevates ammonia. And she probably

needs a lot of protein to not rely on carbs for energy.

Things that help with this are MODEST amounts of supplementary

manganese, alpha ketoglutarate (or especially the supplement ornithine

alpha ketoglutarate which is commerciallly available), and making sure

she has a somewhat acidic digestive tract and frequent bowel

movements. E.g. some of the vitamin C in acid form, enough C and Mg

to be somewhat laxative.

>

> Behaviorally doing well, cognitive and social are excellent,

consistently NT, now, thorough psychological exam revealed no

cognitive deficits and no diagnosis. But what we appear to have

still......is a physically ill child.

>

> Any comments, suggestions appreciated.

These are exactly the situations I have seen due to heavy metal tox,

blown off by 100% of " regular " doctors, which respond beautifully to

an adequate amount of chelation.

Andy

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,

It looks as though this child is exhibiting some signs of

thyrotoxicosis. I realize that many in this forum believe there is a

benefit in giving children thyroid supplements even when conventional

testing suggests normal thyroid function. Nonetheless, the very high T3

certainly suggests over-replacement. In addition, the fatigue that the

child demonstrates and the mild elevated calcium are also characteristic

of excess thyroid hormone. It may be useful to measure her pulse to see

if she has evidence of rapid heart rate. If so, I would give serious

consideration to reducing the thyroid supplementation.

Jim

________________________________

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of Cochran

Sent: Thursday, June 29, 2006 6:14 AM

Subject: [ ] Andy-recent blood work

Would you take a look at this recent bloodwork? Appreciate any comments.

RBC 4.81 3.9-5.3

WBC 8.0 6.0-17.0

HGB 13.5 11.5-13.5

HCT 40.8 H 34.0-40.0

HGB and HCT still elevated, wth? She appears to have no breathing

problems. How do we get more oxygen?

MCV 84.4 75-87

MCH 28.1 24-30

MCHC 33.1 31-37

RDW 12.3 11.5-14.5

RDW-SD 37.7 34.7-51.0

MCH reduced due to B-12 and folic acid.

Platelets 370 140-440

MPV 11.6 9.4-12.4

Bun 19 6-19

Creatinine 0.4 0.3-1.3

Sodium 141 136-145

Potassium 4.6 3.5-5.0

Chloride 104 101-111

Co2 28 22-30

Anion Gap 14 10-20

Calcium 10.7 H 8.5-10.5

Parathyroid, Intact 17 10-64

Calcium 10.7H 8.5-10.5

CA, IONIZ PH/ADJ 1.32H 1.12-1.23

CA, IONIZ Ph/Meas 1.37H 1.12-1.23

Calcium is down from 11.4 on previous test, dr also not concerned about

the elevations.

Free T4 1.9 0.9-1.9

T3 Free 8.1H 1.5-4.1

TSH 0.01 0.27-4.20

This is on 1 3/4 grains Armour, now reduced to 1 grain, she took the

Armour on the day of the test, should we have given it to her on that

day?

Glucose Timed 100 70-110

Lactic Acid 2.0 H 0.5-1.6

Dr said this was fine, but this worries me, should it? What can be done

to reduce it? She does appear to be slightly fatigued.

Bilirubin Total 0.1 0.1-1.5

Alk Phos 290 117-390

SGOT 29 0-31

SGPT 22 0-45

First time liver values have been in normal range.

Protein Total Serum 7.0 6.0-8.5

Albumin 4.6 3.4-4.8

Globulin (Calc) 2.4 1.65-3.90

Ammonia 45 9-33

The dr said anything under 50 was not problematic, I found normal ref

range online to 57. Is this anything diet related or is it fine?

Behaviorally doing well, cognitive and social are excellent,

consistently NT, now, thorough psychological exam revealed no cognitive

deficits and no diagnosis. But what we appear to have still......is a

physically ill child.

Any comments, suggestions appreciated.

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Here I am, acting just like a " regular " doctor, but I have an

alternative hypothesis for the elevated ammonia and the lactate.

Namely, thyrotoxicosis causing unusually rapid depletion of

intramuscular ATP and stimulating the purine nucleotide cycle, with the

primary end products of ammonia, lactate and pyruvate. It would be of

interest to see if pyruvate is also elevated. I am pleased to see that

Andy agrees with reduction of thyroid supplementation, and that it has

already occurred.

Jim

________________________________

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of andrewhallcutler

Sent: Thursday, June 29, 2006 2:53 PM

Subject: [ ] Re: Andy-recent blood work

> Would you take a look at this recent bloodwork? Appreciate any

comments.

>

>

As I recall from earlier posts she is about 5 and 40 something pounds.

> RBC 4.81 3.9-5.3

> HGB 13.5 11.5-13.5

> HCT 40.8 H 34.0-40.0

>

> HGB and HCT still elevated, wth? She appears to have no breathing

problems. How do we get more oxygen?

Don't suppose anyone ever checked ferritin?

Could be poor ability to USE oxygen, which the elevated lactate

supports, in which case more oxygen probably won't do much. You could

try getting someone to Rx a tank and stick a mask on her, seeing if

she feels better while it is on (and probably some afterwards).

> Calcium 10.7 H 8.5-10.5

>

> Parathyroid, Intact 17 10-64

> Calcium 10.7H 8.5-10.5

> CA, IONIZ PH/ADJ 1.32H 1.12-1.23

> CA, IONIZ Ph/Meas 1.37H 1.12-1.23

>

> Calcium is down from 11.4 on previous test, dr also not concerned

about the elevations.

Well, I am.

Check the various vitamin D levels (25 and 1,25 hydroxy forms) and

make sure she gets lots of magnesium frequently.

> Free T4 1.9 0.9-1.9

> T3 Free 8.1H 1.5-4.1

> TSH 0.01 0.27-4.20

>

> This is on 1 3/4 grains Armour, now reduced to 1 grain, she took the

Armour on the day of the test, should we have given it to her on that

day?

FREE levels are elevated for 1-3 hours after taking medication, total

levels are not affected.

The reference range given is for adults, an age appropriate fT3 range

is up to about 7.8. These values are not entirely unreasonable though

a bit high. A full replacement dose for her based on weight would be

1 or 1 & 1/4 grain more or less.

Being hyper is much worse for adults than for children. Being hypo is

much worse for children than for adults.

> Glucose Timed 100 70-110

> Lactic Acid 2.0 H 0.5-1.6

>

> Dr said this was fine, but this worries me, should it?

Well, not WORRY, but concern as it isn't fine.

> What can be done to reduce it?

Things to support pyruvate transport and use, a lower carb higher

protein and fat diet, " mitochondrial support. "

2-5 mg biotin 3-4 times a day may help with pyruvate utilization.

B complex, magnesium, zinc, Q 10 help with the mitochondria, as does

omega 3.

> She does appear to be slightly fatigued.

She should be good for very high bursts of energy when rested,

followed by being tired VERY quickly and taking a long time to perk

up. Strength should be good, endurance poor.

If she fought back really vigorously during the blood draw for a

couple of minutes before they stuck her then the lactate may not mean

anything, but if she was reasonably compliant it is significant.

> Ammonia 45 9-33

>

> The dr said anything under 50 was not problematic,

since you don't die from it....

but if you don't want to feel like crap and not be able to think it

needs to be handled.

> I found normal ref range online to 57. Is this anything diet related

or is it fine?

The problem here is that protein elevates ammonia. And she probably

needs a lot of protein to not rely on carbs for energy.

Things that help with this are MODEST amounts of supplementary

manganese, alpha ketoglutarate (or especially the supplement ornithine

alpha ketoglutarate which is commerciallly available), and making sure

she has a somewhat acidic digestive tract and frequent bowel

movements. E.g. some of the vitamin C in acid form, enough C and Mg

to be somewhat laxative.

>

> Behaviorally doing well, cognitive and social are excellent,

consistently NT, now, thorough psychological exam revealed no

cognitive deficits and no diagnosis. But what we appear to have

still......is a physically ill child.

>

> Any comments, suggestions appreciated.

These are exactly the situations I have seen due to heavy metal tox,

blown off by 100% of " regular " doctors, which respond beautifully to

an adequate amount of chelation.

Andy

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> So some questions:

>

> I read online this test should be a fasting test, there was no

fasting, is it valid?

Unknown, at least to me.

> What would he have done if it was over 50 or what does a dr do about

this?

Not much, less than I already told you, and put them on a low protein

diet which is not likely to be appropriate.

> I also assume you monitor this by repeated blood tests,

No.

> which we will do, any idea if 6 weeks is enough to see a difference

in the level?

The internventions should change it promptly, the detox over a period

of many months.

You really do NOT need to be sticking her repeatedly.

Take the calcium seriously too.

If they have to pincushion her just for fun and test soon and often,

get pyruvate and whole blood porphyrins and fibrinogen next time along

with the vitamin D metabolites.

> We will implement the suggestions you made.

> Thanks for your time and attention,

>

>

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> Well, this just gets more fun the longer we go. Yes, the Ferritin

level was 33,

So maybe somewhere she isn't oxygenating well.

If you think that is true you could try 1/2 capsule idebenone twice a

day for a while and see if she does better or worse on it. It makes a

lot of kids very hyper. It only helps if there really is such low

blood flow somewhere that there is oxygen deficiency.

> And, yes, she did struggle before the test as the #* & *^ last

phlebotomist put the needle in OUTSIDE the clearly marked area where

we had put the Emla cream,

If you see that phleb next time, send them away, decline to let them

provide service, ask for another one.

Also put TAPE on her arm and use the emla cream on the exposed area -

they won't stick the needle through tape (and of course don't let them

pull it off!). Use the paper stuff that isn't too sticky that is used

to hold down iv tubes and needles, it comes off painlessly unless you

are hairy.

>so maybe the lactic acid level is not accurate, although the energy

pattern you describe fits her to a " T " , problems with stamina.

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Thank you for all the informative help. There won't be a struggle next time, she

quit struggling as soon as the needle went in and there was no pain. We told

this last phlebotomist and she was highly upset about the last incident and

promised she would take care of the other sadistic lab tech.

She has to be tested again in 5 weeks to check the thyroid, so we will add in

the other tests as the dr is only too happy to order them, and that is good.

One last question: We have the ornithine alpha-ketoglutarate here, 850 mgs.

Given her weight at 44 lbs what might be a reasonable dose and how often should

it be given?

Again, thank you, almost didn't post the results as I read online the upper

level was 57, so I figured the dr was on target, and she was well below that,

but, I am very, very glad I did. I now understand the this test is lab specific

and should be taken at face value.

[ ] Re: Andy-recent blood work

> So some questions:

>

> I read online this test should be a fasting test, there was no

fasting, is it valid?

Unknown, at least to me.

> What would he have done if it was over 50 or what does a dr do about

this?

Not much, less than I already told you, and put them on a low protein

diet which is not likely to be appropriate.

> I also assume you monitor this by repeated blood tests,

No.

> which we will do, any idea if 6 weeks is enough to see a difference

in the level?

The internventions should change it promptly, the detox over a period

of many months.

You really do NOT need to be sticking her repeatedly.

Take the calcium seriously too.

If they have to pincushion her just for fun and test soon and often,

get pyruvate and whole blood porphyrins and fibrinogen next time along

with the vitamin D metabolites.

> We will implement the suggestions you made.

> Thanks for your time and attention,

>

>

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> She has to be tested again in 5 weeks to check the thyroid,

See if the lab has proper ranges for children, if not either get them

from a pediatric or laboratory medicine text or ask me to provide them

(please check elsewhere first).

>so we will add in the other tests as the dr is only too happy to

order them, and that is good.

Good.

Make sure she hasn't taken the thyroid within 4 hours before the draw.

> One last question: We have the ornithine alpha-ketoglutarate here,

850 mgs. Given her weight at 44 lbs what might be a reasonable dose

and how often should it be given?

1 capsule every time she eats.

> Again, thank you, almost didn't post the results as I read online

the upper level was 57, so I figured the dr was on target, and she

was well below that, but, I am very, very glad I did. I now understand

the this test is lab specific and should be taken at face value.

>

>

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There were no signs of excess thyroid that you gave and we did keep a check on

her temperature and pulse which ran between 85-100, which I have read is normal

for children her age.

This does, however, bring up a question that I have been wondering about for

some time and that is are her thyroid problems due to mercury or autoimmunity

and is it likely that she now needs less correction, or less Armour due to the

lesser mercury load or a more functional immune system?

Thanks,

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It is really unclear what is going on.

Recall the fT3 range the lab gave is invalid for children, she was

about at the top of the children's range for her age.

Also the FREE hormone measurements may be falsely elevated by taking

the medicine a few hours before the test.

She how she settles down on 1 grain and how things look next time you

check.

The cause of the problems is unclear. The number of possibilities is

large enough it seldom gets sorted out.

Andy

>

> There were no signs of excess thyroid that you gave and we did

keep a check on her temperature and pulse which ran between 85-100,

which I have read is normal for children her age.

>

>

>

>

> This does, however, bring up a question that I have been wondering

about for some time and that is are her thyroid problems due to

mercury or autoimmunity and is it likely that she now needs less

correction, or less Armour due to the lesser mercury load or a more

functional immune system?

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Thanks,

>

>

>

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