Hi ladies, my doctor ordered me a thyroid test (TSH) when I told her that my hair was falling out a bit more than I would expect, and I got my results yesterday. I was relieved to see it was normal (2.66, the lab's reference range is 0.5-4.66).
But then I started looking it up online, and found a number of doctors who say that a healthy level is between 1 and 2, and that women could possibly have impaired fertility at levels higher than 2. Also, people with a value of 2.5 or higher will likely have some hypothyroid symptoms (i.e. hair falling out, fatigue, dry skin...which I have).
I'm planning on calling my doctor to ask about it, but I was wondering if anyone else has had their thyroid tested. If so, were your results normal or abnormal? It it was abnormal, how are you being treated? I never realized that your thyroid can cause infertility, so I'm just trying to learn as much about this as I can. TIA!
Re: Thyroid & Fertility? a little long
Thyroid problems run in my family, so my doc has tested me annually for this. The nurse told me that my b/w results for TSH and 2 other hormones was "excellent."
I'm glad your results came back normal, but I can understand your concern, too. Good luck.
Love, luck, and prayers to my BFPB Dr. SnowflakeBride
I have Graves Disease, which is basically hyperthyroidism. I took radioactive iodine to kill off some of my thyroid, making me hypo, and I'm now on thyroid med.
Anyway, my RE wants to see me around a 2 for TSH, maybe even lower (I was at 0.5 when I was last tested, and she said that just fine for TTC). If you are having some symptoms, then you might want to start a low dose of a medicine like levoxyl (I have no side effects on it). When I do get pregnant, I will need to instantly increase my medication, since I don't have much of a thyroid left to do it for me, and thyroid levels are supposed to increase during pregnancy. So even if you go on medication now, I'd also suggest getting your TSH tested again as soon as you get pregnant, since hypothyroidism in pregnancy can cause a lot of problems. Good luck!
Hi ladies, thanks for the advice!
Luckily, my doctor's office is a co-op (meaning my insurance company and doctor's office are one and the same), so I don't have to worry about the insurance company middlemen.
Carina 12.28.2010 | Aurelia 9.23.12 | Chart - Round 3