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Originally Posted by AOII Angel
You are still WRONG about the thyroid and T3/T4 levels. It's rather insulting, too, that you think that your research with hypothyroid patients trumps 13 years of education that endocrinologists have with regard to the thyroid. Maybe they know what they are talking about. Taking extra synthroid may make you feel better, but it's also associated with a lot of other side effects. You do what you want, but leave the ugly commentary about physicians behind.
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I will tell you that my sophomore year in college I gained 40 lbs in one year despite eating better and getting a great workout every day on my hilly campus. I was pre-med at the time and noticed that I had a number of symptoms of hypothyroidism (we were studying the endocrine system at the time). So when I went home at the end of the year, I went to the doctor. And she wouldn't test me. Told me I was too young to have hypothyroidism and that I just needed to exercise more. By the time I came home from winter break of my junior year, I had gained another 20 pounds. I went to the doctor, crying, and she finally tested me. My TSH test came back at a 45 - but she still didn't want to treat me! So I asked for a referral to an endocrinologist and I've been treated ever since. Through REALLY hard work, and medication, I've been able to lose 20 of the pounds, but not all 60. My TSH is still around 10.
Some doctors who are more recent graduates and know all of the latest research on this stuff may know better than their patients, but not all doctors keep up on current research and treatments. Any patient who has had to change doctors due to new insurance or lack of "chemistry" with a given doctor knows that there is a huge variety of doctors out there, all with different methods. My doctor was old school, about five years out from retiring, and though she was a smart lady, she used old-fashioned approaches that were not appropriate for an unusual case like myself. She needed to recognize her areas of weakness and refer me to someone who knew more about my condition than she did.