A potential simple answer to why your TSH went up is that something may have caused your absorption of your Levoxl to go down, which makes you hypo. This can happen if you eat or drink too soon after taking the Levo. The makers of Synthroid recommend allowing 1/2 to one hour between taking the pill and eating/drinking. Have you changed your morning routine, time getting up, taking pill, eating? I got caught doing this myself and went hypo; calcium fortified orange juice did me in.
Another possibility - have you started taking a new drug or supplement recently that might interfere with your Levo.
Anxiety, resting heart rate 80, palpitations, irregular heart beat - these definitely can be hypo symptoms.
You should not wait until February to get this straightened out. If you have been on Levo for quite a while, your family doctor should be able to help you; if not, he should be able to get you to a specialist before February.
Hi... I'm sorry I didn't see this sooner. Anxiety and depression are a couple of those that apply to either/both hyper or hypo; hair loss can apply to either also, but typically we associate it with hypo. Heat insensitivity, typically, applies to hyper (over medication), but with a TSH of 10.99, I'd doubt you're hyper... that's why we need the Free T4 and Free T3 levels, because some people actually "might" have a high TSH level with high thyroid levels, though it's quite unusual.
Since they don't even test the T3 level, can you, at least get a copy of the report so you can tell us what the T4 result so we can see what that is... At least that might give us some idea of what's happening. I do hope they test FREE T4, not just T4... they aren't the same test and don't give the same information.
Any doctor who doses thyroid medication based only on TSH and doesn't test Free T4 and Free T3 is really not a good thyroid doctor. I'd seriously consider finding a different doctor if I were you, unless this doctor is willing to begin testing these parameters every time you have blood work and actually basing your medication dosage on actual thyroid hormone levels, not TSH.
All of that said, have you had Vitamin B-12, D and Ferritin tested? Those are all necessary for proper metabolism of thyroid hormones. If you haven't had them tested, you should ask your doctor to test them.
Thank you for your reply. I don't recall the T4 level, but I know they typically don't check T3 at my primary care and typically base changes on TSH. I am having heat intolerance, increased anxiety, hair loss, increased depression and tearfulness, slower heart rate than normal (just noticed that after getting lab results). My biggest issues before labs were increased anxiety and heat intolerance.
Symptoms can often "cross over"... in other words some symptoms can apply to either hyper or hypo. It would be most helpful if you could tell us exactly what symptoms you had/have and whether anything other than TSH was tested. Your doctor should be testing Free T4 and Free T3 every time TSH is tested.
TSH is a pituitary hormone and should never be used as the sole indicator for diagnosis or for adjusting medication. It neither causes nor alleviates symptoms. Symptoms are caused by too much or too little of the actual thyroid hormones, Free T4 and Free T3, but specifically, Free T3, which is the active hormone - the one used by nearly every cell in your body.
If you've never had Free T4 and Free T3 tested, you should insist that your doctor test them so you can get the full picture of what's going on.
All of that said, a TSH of 10.99 indicates that your actual thyroid hormones are too low, meaning you might be hypothyroid. Both hyper and hypothyroidism can cause anxiety.