Multivitamins aren't recommended. They contain too little of anything to help raise low levels or deficiencies, they tend to use the cheapest and least absorbable form of active ingredients, and they usually include things we should be tested for first and only supplemented if found to be deficient, eg iron, calcium, iodine.
We always advise testing and then supplement where necessary at the appropriate dose, we can make suggestions if you post results with their reference ranges plus units of measure for Vit D and B12. Core nutrient tests are
Clearly TSH is too HIGH and you need next 25mcg dose increase in levothyroxine up to 50mcg
Bloods should be retested 6-8 week later
Unless very petite you are likely to need at least 100mcg daily
Have you had TPO and TG thyroid antibodies tested?
If not they need testing
If TPO or TG thyroid antibodies are high this is usually due to Hashimoto’s (commonly known in UK as autoimmune thyroid disease).
About 90% of all primary hypothyroidism in Uk is due to Hashimoto’s. Low vitamin levels are particularly common with Hashimoto’s. Gluten intolerance is often a hidden issue to.
We never recommend taking multivitamins. Too little and often cheap least absorbable ingredients
Ferritin is extremely low
GP should be doing full iron panel test for anaemia. Likely to need iron supplements
Heavy periods are classic sign of being hypothyroid and will often lead to low iron and ferritin ask for full iron panel testing for Anaemia
Never supplement iron without doing full iron panel test for anaemia first
Eating iron rich foods like liver or liver pate once a week plus other red meat, pumpkin seeds and dark chocolate, plus daily orange juice or other vitamin C rich drink can help improve iron absorption
This is interesting because I have noticed that many patients with Hashimoto’s disease and hypothyroidism, start to feel worse when their ferritin drops below 80 and usually there is hair loss when it drops below 50.
Thank you so much slowdragon.😊 Im going to get the ranges from the local hospital lab where they were tested & repost my results later. Your help is much appreciated.
Thanks for your reply, I know it’s a very little amount. I just wanted to see first if I had any Vitamin/ mineral deficiencies first before I had to up the dosage.
The problem with starting on such a low dose is that it is not a sufficient replacement dose so your thyroid stops producing a certain amount of thyroxine but the dose doesn’t take up the slack; hence you are almost in a worse position than before.
As penny explained ....levothyroxine doesn’t “top up” failing thyroid it replaces it
our thyroid controls our metabolism
As an example....if, when perfectly healthy, your own thyroid made the equivalent of 125mcg levothyroxine....and this metabolism is controlled by pituitary sending messages - TSH (Thyroid stimulating hormone)
Then as your thyroid starts to fail (usually due to autoimmune thyroid disease) ....you might get diagnosed when your thyroid has reduced output to roughly equivalent of 75mcg levothyroxine
Pituitary has noticed there’s a drop in thyroid hormones in the blood....(that’s Ft4 and, most importantly, the active hormone Ft3) ....so to try to make more thyroid hormone ...pituitary sends out stronger message to thyroid - TSH rises up
When GP starts you on 50mcg ....initially you feel a bit better ....as you have 75mcg from your own thyroid and 50mcg levothyroxine
But (here’s the bit some GP’s don’t understand)....levothyroxine doesn’t “top up” your own thyroid output.....well it does very briefly....but the pituitary very soon “sees” the levothyroxine in the blood....and TSH starts to drop
So at the end of week 6 ....TSH has dropped a lot. Your thyroid takes a rest ....has a holiday
So at this point you are now only mainly using the 50mcg levothyroxine....which is actually a dose reduction down from managing on 75mcg from your own thyroid before you started on levothyroxine
So you start to feel worse .....and are ready for next 25mcg dose increase in levothyroxine
Modern thinking ....and New NICE guidelines suggests it might actually be better to start on higher dose .....but many medics just don’t read guidelines ....and many patients can’t tolerate starting on more than 50mcg and need to increase slowly.
Starting on 50mcg and stepping dose up in 25mcg steps, retesting 6-8 weeks after each increase. But we still very often need to increase up to around a full replacement dose
Consider starting levothyroxine at a dosage of 1.6 micrograms per kilogram of body weight per day (rounded to the nearest 25 micrograms) for adults under 65 with primary hypothyroidism and no history of cardiovascular disease.
Aim is to bring TSH down under 2.5 as absolute maximum.
Traditionally we have tended to start patients on a low dose of levothyroxine and titrate it up over a period of months.
RCT evidence suggests that for the majority of patients this is not necessary and may waste resources.
For patients aged >60y or with ischaemic heart disease, start levothyroxine at 25–50μg daily and titrate up every 3 to 6 weeks as tolerated.
For ALL other patients start at full replacement dose. For most this will equate to 1.6 μg/kg/day (approximately 100μg for a 60kg woman and 125μg for a 75kg man).
If you are starting treatment for subclinical hypothyroidism, this article advises starting at a dose close to the full treatment dose on the basis that it is difficult to assess symptom response unless a therapeutic dose has been trialled.
A small Dutch double-blind cross-over study (ArchIntMed 2010;170:1996) demonstrated that night time rather than morning dosing improved TSH suppression and free T4 measurements, but made no difference to subjective wellbeing. It is reasonable to take levothyroxine at night rather than in the morning, especially for individuals who do not eat late at night.
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