History, since my last post was many months ago:
The following are my various TSH results, though I wasn't formally diagnosed with Subclinical Hypothyroidism until April 2016 (Yes, I know my TSH was high in July 2015, but since my doctor at the time didn't say anything, I didn't think much of it. I now know better and wish we could have got a headstart on treating this many months prior to when we did). I have been on the same dose of 25 mcg Levothyroxine since April 2016, with the exception of roughly a month when I gave Armour Thyroid a try - It didn't work out for me, and I went back to the Levo. I also had a test for Thyroid Antibodies in August 2016, but came back with values of less than 1 for Thyroid Peroxidase and Thyroglobulin Antibodies - which apparently means that I do NOT have Hashimotos (despite showing just about every single symptom - I don't necessarily trust the facility where it was tested, but I couldn't afford to go anywhere else). I recently found paperwork I had missed from this time period and the doctor that ordered the antibodies test had me marked down on the paperwork as "Euthyroid Hashimoto's". That was the first and last time it was mentioned on any official documents.
July 2015 - 5.41 TSH, 0.9 Free T4
April 2016 - 5.64 TSH, 1.2 Free T4
July 2016 - 2.36 TSH, 1.31 Free T4
October 2016 - 2.77 TSH, 1.33 Free T4
April 2017 - 2.48 TSH, 1.44 Free T4, 3.4 Free T3
February 2018 - 1.77 TSH, 1.3 Free T4
April 2018 - 1.976 TSH
July 2019 - 4.042 TSH
I asked about the spike in TSH in July 2019, asked if maybe it was a sign the meds weren't working anymore or if it could be tied to some stress I was going through, and the person I spoke with (not my doctor but another doctor at the same clinic) said that it was within their testing range and they don't typically worry about variations until it is outside of their testing parameters. I do know, however, that I feel better when I'm around the 1.5 - 2.5 TSH range. The April and July results were done at a different medical facility where apparently testing for T3/T4 is not standard with a TSH test.
I've been sickly since probably June or July 2016 with various minor illnesses - colds, coughs, dizziness, headaches, fatigure - but since my levels stabilized, the GP's I've been seeing pretty much brush it all off. I'm 29 years old and have bald patches now due to the thinning of hair that I really do feel is related to my thyroid issues (not to mention the 50 pounds weight gain that I put on in just 6 months when I began treatment with the Levo after maintaining the same weight for 10+ years). It sounds incredibly vain, and I realize I shouldn't care about little things, but the hair loss is hitting me hard.
I'm thinking of asking for a referral to an endocrinologist when my insurance sorts itself out in April, but am just afraid that he'll agree with my GP's that as long as the TSH falls within testing parameters, I'm allegedly okay.
Have any of you had good experiences with an endo after not-great experiences with a GP who is clearly clueless about hypothyroidism? Is it possible that this IS Hashimoto's despite the antibody test being negative?
((I'm in the US and realize that this site/forum is geared towards the UK, but we don't really have any forums like this))