
No Improvement After Taking Thyroid Medication. Feeling Cold, Dizziness And Foggy Brain. Any Help?

I am experiencing foggy brain; general confusion; feeling that my brain works slower than it has in the past; aching neck, pains in arms, legs, feet, ankles and hands; feeling cold and hot continually (never normal); sweating profusely when I do even a tiny amount of exercise (eg a small walk); dizinesss; a veer towards the left when walking and general feelings of unbalance; feeling of all over weakness and lethargy.
Would you have concerns about any other conditions I should be checked for?! Does it seem like a thyroid medication issue?!
Regarding thyroid, armor thyroid is not the recommended medication. Levothyroxine is preferred. How much your body needs of this will be determined by a blood test for TSH and free T4. It will be useful to run TPO antibodies as a lab test too.


Serum Cortisol (9am: 492 nmol/l (ref 101-536)
Serum Iron Level: 10.1 umol/l - Low
Serum Ferritin: 151 ng/mol
Serum TSH: 2.5
Serum Folate: 6.4 ug/l
Serum Folate: 6.4 ug/mol
Many Thanks
XXXXXXX
The low iron levels can be taken care of by an Internist or hematologist.
The thyroid test looks normal.


What does this mean considering I have been on Levothyroxine (200 mcg) and Armour (2 grains) for over 3 years?
Sorry to ask such bitty questions. I just kee getting different blood test results back at different times.


What does the presence of these antibodies even after 3 years of taking Thyroxine signify? Does this mean that my Thyroid gland will continue to become less fnctional? Do the TPO Abs make people feel ill in themselves or is it the action on thyroid that causes people to feel ill?
Why is T4 prefereable to Armour and/or T3. I was under the impression that people respond differently to these treatments - and furthermore there is no conclusive evidence that suggests either one is more effective than the other. I'm not disagreeing. Just wondering what you base your statement that "levothyroxine" suffices on.
Thanks
XXXXXXX
The antibodies by themselves are not known to directly cause ill-effects. They cause thyroid cells to be destroyed after which the individual becomes hypothyroid typically for life. So after treatment with thyroid medication is begun, it does not matter what the antibody status is. There is no need to keep checking them either. The only utility of checking them is to know if there are positive once so we understand that the person harboring them is prone to hypothyroidism.
Regarding t3 vs T4, the latter is preferred. Read the following link for details:
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