Just wondering if anyone’s had an experience of being prescribed T3 in another country or sourcing it themselves, then telling their Endo or GP at home in the UK? If so, what happened?
I recently was prescribed a T3/T4 combo by a doctor in Switzerland and wonder if my bloods showed a positive improvement if my endo would proceed to prescribe it in the UK?
Any thoughts would be much appreciated.
HC x
Written by
HypoCrazy
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I was self-medicating in T3. My doc rang after a blood test asking why my results were so weird.
I said to him that my T3 was prob near top of range, T4 was non-existent and TSH very, very low. He said I was right and asked how I knew. I told him it was because I’d been self-medicating with Liothyronine. He went ballistic when I told him I’d been getting it from Mexico. But I remained defiant and told him the T3 only had given me my life back.
He sent me to two different endos. The second agreed to keep me on it but moved my dose from 75mcgs to 60mcgs. That was three years ago and I feel so well and healthy.
I would say be polite but firm and tell them how much it’s changed your life. (If it has, that is.)
You don't need to take advice if you have improved and you can state you were prescribed by an expert and the fact that you've improved you don't want any changes in your dose. You have also been advised by people who are not medically trained but who had to fight their way to a healthy lifestyle - the aim being a TSH of 1 or lower and with an FT4 and FT3 in the upper part of the ranges (rarely tested). The fact too that the medical professionals seem to believe that a low TSH is dangerous and will give us heart attacks. We are not 'hypERthyroid' and need an equate dose of to bring TSH to 1 or lower and an FT3/FT4 in the upper part of the ranges if T4 alone isn't improving our health.
It is a great feeling when you finally get a dose of hormone replacements that have restored your health.
Risky. Even when my blood tests were good on T4 alone I still felt terrible for years. I've always found Dutch doctors are better informed. Your GP won't know his bottom from his elbow and most NHS endos aren't much better. Since finally getting T3 I avoid endos like the plague. Good luck.
Thank you. My Endo is one of the few who prescribes T3, but he seemed reluctant to give it me at the time (in fairness I had only been on T4 for a few months)!
Probably due to the exorbitant cost in the UK - T3 has gone from some ££s up to a 6,000% increase. That's the prime reason it was stopped but obvioulsy they had they perfect excuse.
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