Member Comments are provided by individuals and reflect their personal opinions only. Under NO circumstances should you act on any advice or opinion posted in this forum.  ALWAYS check with your personal physician before taking any action regarding your health! MedHelp International and our partners, sponsors and affiliates have no obligation to monitor any comments posted on this site, or the content and/or accuracy of such exchanges. MedHelp International does not endorse the views of any user.
 | 

any help

by mspriscilla, Sep 09, 2009 09:17AM
Hi everyone... I had my thyroid removed 26 yes ago.  I had Grave's Disease.  After surgery I was on either 75 mcg or 125 mcg for at least 3 yrs.  Moved to south Florida in 1989 then in 1990 went to the Dr.(I saw 4 different Drs) for my Thyroid test.  They all put me on .025 mcg saying I had been over medicated. NOT one of these Drs. EVER got my medical records from my Endo in Kentucky.  Even tho I filled out the papers for them to recieve me records. I felt like ****.  Then in 1998 I finally found an Endo who put me on 75 mcg. I felt great; my weight was good; had all kinds of energy had no other problems. Even my cholestrol was good  160 total. He retired and now I see a new Dr.  He put me on .025 mcg  I do not have insurance so all expenses I pay for.  My new Dr tells me I have been over medicated. Now I have high cholestrol and in June I had stents put in both leg artiers.  85 - 95% blocked. I have been on .025 mcg for 4 yrs now. I alos have high blood pressure.  Never had high bp when I was on 75 mcg.  I know I'm under medicated and need help.

Priscilla
Member Comments (2)

by srm4041, Sep 09, 2009 11:19AM
Goodness!  Sometimes you just have to tell your doctor what you want and don't take no for an answer.  Go online and find the website of the hospital you use and see if you can compare the profiles of the doctors within the endocrine department or call that department and ask the secretary who she may recommend (if you are lucky, they will help).  If you have no insurance, call the hospital business office to work out a payment plan and/or go to the social services of the hospital to see if you can qualify for help paying for meds.

If YOU know what works for you, just tell him/her!

by gimel, Sep 09, 2009 03:51PM
Please post whatever thyroid test results and reference ranges you have, so that members can give you the best response.  I have a suspicion that your doctors have been diagnosing and medicating you based on TSH, which frequently doesn't work very well at all.  
Related discussions
Post Comment
To
Comment
Post Comment
Recent Activity
Heatherm4 commented on Day 2 of no AF
25 mins ago
feelbetteroneday commented on SURGERY
29 mins ago
JennaMarie83 commented on Day 2 of no AF
31 mins ago
k10road commented on Day 2 of no AF
46 mins ago
sk123 commented on MedHelp's new iPhone ...
1 hr ago
MrsMacDugle commented on Back on Nov 13 had an...
1 hr ago
moonpiebaby commented on Back on Nov 13 had an...
1 hr ago
Heatherm4 day 2 of missing AF...
RSS Expert Activity
When Your Cold Is Not A Cold
8 hrs ago by Steven Y Park, MD
Cataract, Removal, Artificial Lens,...
22 hrs ago by Jim Humphries, B.S., D.V.M.
7 Ways to Reduce Stress During the ...
Dec 07 by Steven Y Park, MD
Community Members