Ferritin folate vitamin D and vitamin B12 - Thyroid UK

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Ferritin folate vitamin D and vitamin B12

Nikki58 profile image
11 Replies

Hi here are results for ferritin, folate, vitamin D and vitamin B12.

Feedback is appreciated.

Ferritin - 10 (15 - 150)

Folate - 1.4 (2.5 - 19.5)

Vitamin B12 - 183 (180 - 900)

Vitamin D total - 44.2 (25 - 50 vitamin D deficiency. Supplementation is indicated)

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Nikki58 profile image
Nikki58
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11 Replies
SeasideSusie profile image
SeasideSusieRemembering

Nikki58 Go and see your GP about these:

Ferritin - 10 (15 - 150) - Under range, ask about iron injections and maybe a full iron panel

Vitamin B12 - 183 (180 - 900) - So low I would ask about testing for Pernicious Anaemia especially as

Folate - 1.4 (2.5 - 19.5) is below range (B12 and folate work together)

Pop over to the Pernicious Anaemia Society forum here on Health Unlocked for further advice about B12/folate results

healthunlocked.com/pasoc

Vit D - 44.2 As you can see this is deficient. Recommended level is 100-150nmol/L. Don't bother with your GP, he wont help and you'll get better quality supplements yourself. I suggest 5000iu D3 daily for 3 months then reduce to 5000iu alternate days as a maintenance dose. Retest in the spring to ensure you stay within the recommended levels.

When taking D3 we also need K2-MK7 and magnesium, both are important co-factors. D3 aids absorption of calcium from food and K2 directs the calcium to bones and teeth rather than arteries and soft tissues. D3 and K2 are far soluble so should be taken with the fattiest meal of the day.

Vit D co-factors vitamindcouncil.org/about-v...

Magnesium comes in different forms, see here and see which will suit you best naturalnews.com/046401_magn... Magnesium is calming and best taken in the evening.

Nikki58 profile image
Nikki58 in reply to SeasideSusie

Thanks I will talk to GP about these and see what he says.

cc120 profile image
cc120

A great resource: b12d.org/ - all B12 issues covered

Learner1 profile image
Learner1

Are you on a gluten free diet? Being low in those nutrients can be related to intestinal damage from gluten.

Candida or an intestinal parasite might also be possibilities.

Nikki58 profile image
Nikki58 in reply to Learner1

Thanks no I am not on a gluten free diet. I recall having h pylori checked in my stool and it was negative.

Learner1 profile image
Learner1 in reply to Nikki58

I would consider getting on one right now.

Try a Paleo Diet. Plenty of good cookbooks these days.

bluebug profile image
bluebug

If your GP states your ferritin and/or folate levels don't matter come back here and post a new thread to ask.

If you aren't sure of the gap to leave between supplements and other medication come back here and post a new thread to ask.

SlowDragon profile image
SlowDragonAdministrator

Only start one supplement at a time and then wait for about 10 days/two weeks before adding another.

As you have Hashimoto's, the other supplement that should help is selenium. It improves conversion and helps reduce antibodies.

Are you gluten free? If not, have you been tested for coeliac?

Many of us with Hashimoto's find going gluten free really helps

Nikki58 profile image
Nikki58 in reply to SlowDragon

Thanks no I am not gluten free, GP strongly suspects I am coeliac but I did a gluten challenge for 6 days (endo didn't tell me how long I need to do it for) and it was negative. Since increasing gluten in my diet I have been getting more wind, bloating and diarrhoea. My diet has been more gluten than anything else for the past 3 months. Maybe get checked for coeliac again?

Polaris profile image
Polaris in reply to Nikki58

It would be a good idea to post on the PA site as your B12 is very low and should be investigated without delay, especially if you're experiencing neurological symptoms. It's highly likely that, with thyroid disease and low B12, you could have absorption issues resulting from autoimmune/leaky gut. Dr Datis Kharrizian has written two excellent books and explains why a gluten free diet is important:

m.youtube.com/watch?v=_oJWC...

SlowDragon profile image
SlowDragonAdministrator

Only definite way to confirm is by endoscopy. I had several coeliac blood tests, first one over 20 years ago - all were negative.

But endoscopy this year confirmed gluten intolerant (most likely coeliac). The endoscopy was done 5 weeks AFTER I went gluten free - hence slightly ambiguous result. But because of my mobility being so badly affected I was advised NOT to do gluten challenge. I am so much better on strict gluten free diet.

My gastroenterologist said coeliac blood test is only correct about 60% of the time!

Ask for endoscopy to get definitive result.

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