On low dose of levothyroxine : Hi I am new, I am... - Thyroid UK

Thyroid UK

141,182 members166,423 posts

On low dose of levothyroxine

Bev70 profile image
8 Replies

Hi I am new, I am 31 and on a low dose of levothyroxine but was on much more before. I am losing hair, gaining more weight, skin drier, passing stools less each day, periods stopping, feeling more cold and tired, memory deteriorating. I take 50mcg levothyroxine. Thanks for any advice or feedback

Written by
Bev70 profile image
Bev70
To view profiles and participate in discussions please or .
Read more about...
8 Replies
shaws profile image
shawsAdministrator

Welcome to our forum Bev70

First, I am sorry you have hypothyroidism and it would seem whomsoever you are seeing doesn't know how to treat till you are on an optimum of thyroid hormones. Optimum means we feel well with no clinical symptoms.

We have to read, ask questions, and become knowledgeable as few doctors appear to know anything or very little about treating people with hypothyroidism. Mainly they treat the 'blood test results' whilst not relieving disabling clinical symptoms.

50mcg is a starting dose of levo, with blood tests every six weeks with an increase of 25mcg levo until symptoms are relieved and you feel much better. I note your doctor has adjusted your dose (probably only going by the TSH) which is not correct.

The aim of taking thyroid hormones is to get the TSH down to 1 or lower, with a Free T4 and Free T3 towards the upper part of the range (these are rarely tested) and most important relief of clinical symptoms

Many doctors wrongly believe if TSH is somewhere in the range that we're on sufficient. Rarely are the Frees T4 and T3 tested even though they reveal more.

We need everything to be optimum, B12, Vit D, iron, ferritin and folate too.

We have to read, learn and ask questions in order to feel well. It can be done and many members have sourced their own hormones and self-medicate which really shouldn't be necessary but is for many.

Blood tests have to be at the very earliest, fasting (you can drink water) and allow a gap of 24 hours between last dose of levo and test and take afterwards. This helps keep the TSH at its highest as that's all doctors appear to look at and adjusts dose to keep it somewhere in the range, when the aim (once diagnosed) is a TSH of 1 or lower.

Also request B12, Vit D, iron, ferritin and folate as deficiencies in these cause symptoms too. Everything has to be optimum.

Bev70 profile image
Bev70 in reply toshaws

TSH 6.3 (0.2 - 4.2)

Free T4 12.9 (12 - 22)

Free T3 3.8 (3.1 - 6.8)

TPO antibodies 574 (<34)

TG antibodies 355.3 (<115)

greygoose profile image
greygoose

Who said you were taking too much? Did you feel you were taking too much, yourself? Sounds like you're not taking enough, now. 50 mcg is only a starter dose, and it's rare to find someone who is well on just 50 mcg.

Do you have copies of your blood test results? If so, post them on here, with the ranges, and let's have a look. Do you know if you've been tested for antibodies? :)

Bev70 profile image
Bev70 in reply togreygoose

Hi the GP thought I was on too much before. (150mcg levothyroxine)

TSH 6.3 (0.2 - 4.2)

Free T4 12.9 (12 - 22)

Free T3 3.8 (3.1 - 6.8)

TPO antibodies 574 (<34)

TG antibodies 355.3 (<115)

greygoose profile image
greygoose in reply toBev70

OK, well, GPs know very little about thyroid, and only look at the TSH, which is irrelevant when on thyroid hormone replacement. And, now, you are under-medicated. Your TSH is much too high - should be one or under - or, as you have Hashi's, it should be suppressed. And, your Frees are much to low - most people need them up the top of the range to feel well.

Did he tell you you have Hashi's - or Autoimmune Thyroiditis, as he probably calls it? Are you on a gluten-free diet and taking selenium to lower antibodies?

Bev70 profile image
Bev70 in reply togreygoose

Thanks no I didn't know I needed to be gluten free or taking selenium. Is going gluten free easy to do?

greygoose profile image
greygoose in reply toBev70

I'm afraid I'm not the right one to ask that question. But lots of people on here are gluten-free. Why not post a new question and ask them?

shaws profile image
shawsAdministrator in reply toBev70

Hopeless doctor and that's why you aren't feeling better. They are so poorly trained that they seem to believe that if we are 'somewhere' in the range that we're on sufficient. Your doctor doesn't even believe that as your TSH is above the top of the range, i.e. 4.2.

The aim is when diagnosed the dose is increased every six weeks with a 25mcg increase until the TSH is 1 or below.

You need an increase of 25mcg every six weeks until TSH is 1 and going gluten-free can help reduce antibodies which are attacking your thyroid gland.

Due to having thyroid antibodies, you have an Autoimmune Thyroid Disease commonly called hashimoto's. This is because the antibodies attack your thyroid gland until you are hypothyroid and going gluten-free can help reduce them.

Not what you're looking for?

You may also like...

On low dose of levothyroxine

Hi I am new. I was diagnosed hypothyroid 6 years ago when I was 24 (age 30, female). If I am on too...
Flower90 profile image

On low dose levothyroxine

New member here, do I need increase with these symptoms? Dry skin Pins and needles Tiredness...
Kimbo8 profile image

Expectations of low dose of levothyroxine 25mg

On week 2 (11 days) of 25mg daily, only plus is it appears to have relieved me of constipation and...
JaneHo profile image

Dose of levothyroxine

What factors determine dose of levothyroxine? I konw some people who are taking levothyroxine but...
sunsetalley profile image

Low dose Levothyroxine

Hi everyone! I have been diagnosed with subclinical hypothyroidism for 6 months and the doctor has...
Peglar profile image

Moderation team

See all
Jaydee1507 profile image
Jaydee1507Administrator
PurpleNails profile image
PurpleNailsAdministrator
SlowDragon profile image
SlowDragonAdministrator

Content on HealthUnlocked does not replace the relationship between you and doctors or other healthcare professionals nor the advice you receive from them.

Never delay seeking advice or dialling emergency services because of something that you have read on HealthUnlocked.