Hi. a friend of mine recently had blood done and her thyroid results were as followed:
TSH 6.18
TG 214
What do you make of these results??
Thanks in advance.
TSH 6.18
TG 214
What do you make of these results??
Thanks in advance.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Hi. a friend of mine recently had blood done and her thyroid results were as followed:
TSH 6.18
TG 214
What do you make of these results??
Thanks in advance.
Adrenal fatigue perhaps from the albuterol she was using. But she had to endure a minor surgery around the same time things started to go downhill. A mole had become infected and she Needed to be put under anesthesia. There was a cancer scare for a while and she was very stressed out.
But Overtraining, not really. She always allowed enough time for her cns to recover.
And the diet / appetite has been the same? More stress eating? Less stress eating? Any change during this period of time? Does it seem like more water weight than fat?
This is so true. Not only with athletics, but women's sexual health can be a REAL not imagined problems. Good luck, and keep trying.^^ Thanks for adding that in -- recently I started reading stuff on menopause / estrogen and impact to the body (e.g. ability to lift / train / do cardio / compete) and considerations for dealing with it all - and holy crap..... talk about a knife edge balance between estro / progesterone / thyroid / adrenals. And ALL of these are not what we'd call "well researched" areas, and even less for women. Case in point - 10-20 years ago the big push for Estrogen Replacement Therapy, followed by the more recent ANTI ERT push. And Progesterone - talk about the "forgotten hormone"! For women, the balance between estro & progest determines basically how much your joints are going to hate you during per-/ menopause. And Thyroid - as noted above - extremely under-understood area and so critical to our ability to function.
Well, she had the additional quest labs done as per her docs request. The lab results were forwarded to him and she went in for her scheduled appointment on monday. Before she could even see the doctor, they tell her at the desk that her insurance is no longer accepted and the doctor not only wont see her, but he wont disclose the new lab results! Wtf kind of shit!? She called the next day and spoke with the receptionist to ask the doc to disclose the results but he has yet to return her calls. This doc is a real fuckin jerk! Is there a way that she can request the quest lab results directly via fax or email even though it was done through that doctors prescription? Is that possible?
I have access to t3 and i dont want to dispense meds to her for obvious reasons, but if the lab results show hypo, would it be a good idea to get her on a low dose of t3 until she can reschedule with a new doc? I honestly dont understand, ethically, how this doc would not disclose the results as a gesture of patient health. Just to pop his head out from the office and give a thumbs up or down, at the very least.
Anyway, do you think its possible for her to contact the lab directly and request the results or is this against their protocol? If not, she will have to wait until next week to locate and schedule something with a new general practitioner.
Well, she had the additional quest labs done as per her docs request. The lab results were forwarded to him and she went in for her scheduled appointment on monday. Before she could even see the doctor, they tell her at the desk that her insurance is no longer accepted and the doctor not only wont see her, but he wont disclose the new lab results! Wtf kind of shit!? She called the next day and spoke with the receptionist to ask the doc to disclose the results but he has yet to return her calls. This doc is a real fuckin jerk! Is there a way that she can request the quest lab results directly via fax or email even though it was done through that doctors prescription? Is that possible?
I have access to t3 and i dont want to dispense meds to her for obvious reasons, but if the lab results show hypo, would it be a good idea to get her on a low dose of t3 until she can reschedule with a new doc? I honestly dont understand, ethically, how this doc would not disclose the results as a gesture of patient health. Just to pop his head out from the office and give a thumbs up or down, at the very least.
Anyway, do you think its possible for her to contact the lab directly and request the results or is this against their protocol? If not, she will have to wait until next week to locate and schedule something with a new general practitioner.