doctor asks me to take one tablet of camazol carbimazole everyday for one month. from what i know this is a drug. Drug normally only work when the patient intake it. what going to happen if i stop? i'm now taking broccoli everyday with camazol. My goal is to gain weight.
The food you get L carnitine from is meat and dairy foods. The amount you'll get is very unpredictablebecause your liver has to make it out of 2 different amino acids. Many people do not have enough, therefore it is a very widely used nutritional supplement. To have the effect described in the article, you would need to buy a supplement from a vitamin store.
Your levels are certainly up there, aren't they?
I'm surprised your doctor hasn't given you an anti-thyroid med.
Eating broccoli isn't going to hurt you, but I've no way of knowing whether or not it will help all that much either. You won't be able to gain weight, until your thyroid levels come down.
hi @youvegottobekidding where can get L carnitine from herb/fruits/foods ?
here is my blood test output
Free Thyroxine (FT4) 22.0 (lab range 9-25)
Thyroid Stimulating Hormone 1.510 (lab range 0.4 - 4.7)
Free Tri-iodothyronine (FT3) 6.6 (lab range 3.5 -6.5)
do you think ok if i take broccoli everyday? i'm trying to gain weight
Broccoli is a goitrogen. Goitrogens interfere with the thyroid's ability to use iodine. They can cause swelling/inflammation of the thyroid. The goitrogens are actually very good for you, other than their effect on thyroid health. Cooking them removes the goitrogenic properties, so they have no adverse effects.
Soy is a goitrogenic that I do not recommend eating at all.
I'm not sure that eating broccoli will have that much effect on your hyperthyroidism. Maybe you'd be better off to get an anti-thyroid medication from your doctor.
Please post your current thyroid levels so members can better assess your situation and possibly make suggestions. Be sure to include reference ranges, since those vary lab to lab and must come from your own report.
http://www.lef.org/magazine/mag2007/dec2007_report_thyroid_01.htm
I have no personal experience of this (I'm hypothyroid) but it might be worth asking your doctor about this. It sounds as if it might be better than goitrogenic foods.