Γεια σας, ο καλύτερος φίλος μου χθες στο τεστ αίματος tupica χωρίς λόγο ... Βρέθηκε TPO 504 (κανονική περιοχή κάτω από 5) και Tg 7 (κανονική περιοχή κάτω από 5) .. Tsh 1.2 (κανονική 0.5 έως 4.70) "και ft4 0.89 κυμαίνεται από 0,60 έως 1,90). Πριν από 2 χρόνια διαγνώσθηκε για ασθένεια του Πάρκινσον επειδή είχε προβλήματα αρθρώσεων και αργά βήματα, ότι χωρίς κανένα άλλο τεστ "παίρνει 2 βάρκες για πάρκινσον αλλά δεν αλλάζει. Γνώμες;
Tpo, tg: Γεια σας, ο καλύτερος φίλος μου χθες στο... - Thyroid UK
Tpo, tg
мы не говорим по-русски. вы можете перевести на английский?
это английский сайт (this is an english site not a Russian one) I don't know if anyone speaks Russian on here.
Is this Greek or Russian? I am getting confused now.
Εγώ write English, somethink go wrong here
I have been using a translation site to reply to you lol
Του speak Russian too l
Я говорю по-французски, но не по-русски извините
Tiz GREEK ...
I could just imagine you shouting at your computer pmsl Have you noticed how similar the alphabet is between the two countries. ie. The basic Cyrillic alphabet is similar to the Greek. It is used in Russian; some other variant letters occur in other slavic (Bulgarian, Macedonian, Serbian, Ukranian) and non-slavic (Azerbaijani, Chechen, Kazakh, Kirgiz, Ossetian, Tadzhik, Tatar, Turkmen, Uzbek, etc.) languages using this alphabet.
I have lived in Greece for the past 15 years so have observed the connections with other languages and religions too - Greek Orthodox - Russian Orthodox and so on ... The Greek language is beautifully challenging. 😊
почему ты говоришь по русски?
Report the problem to admin.
Better to report it to HealthUnlocked, there's nothing admin can do.
healthunlocked.com/pasoc/po...
Posted in English on the PAS Forum ... of course you are correct - better to report to HU if there is a translation issue
So, what country are you in? Does make a hell of a lot of difference to the way we're treated sometimes.
Based on what you said on the PAS forum - thank you, @Marz - your friend has Hashi's, which is a thyroid disease. But, could very well account for his symptoms. But, he could have both Parkinson's and Hashi's. There are no tests for Parkinson's, and symptoms are non-specific - just like hypothyroidism - so it's difficult to diagnose. And there's scope for a misdiagnosis. Do the drugs he's taking help him.
He isn't actually hypo at the moment. So, doubtful if any doctor would treat him for hypo - there is no treatment for Hashi's, just taking thyroid hormone replacement to replace the hormone the thyroid can no-longer make. But further testing would be advisable, if possible.
It would be a very good idea if he could get his FT3 tested, and also his nutrients - the symptoms you mention could be down to nutritional deficiencies, which are common with Hashi's. He should ask for vit D, vit B12, folate and ferritin. And, as doctors probably won't understand the results, if he gets the tests you could post the results and ranges on here for people to comment.
He should also continue to get his thyroid tested at regular intervals. Because one day, the odds are, he will go hypo.