Guest guest Posted December 12, 2002 Report Share Posted December 12, 2002 Aldyth Rae wrote: > > Hi everyone, > If your lab results come back as TSH 5.8 and your FT3 in the normal range (just) are you hypo or euthyroid? Technically you are 'subclinical hypothyroid', as TSH is abnormal (hypowards) but thyroid hormone levels are normal. At least that is how some define subclinical hypothyroidism. I hate the phrase " subclinical " as it implies not worth treating, or not a severe case, but we all know people vary, as do their demands. For say an Olympic hurdler may have different expectations of her body, than the average homemaker (if that's the PC, US, term). would appear to be hypo not hyper, but I think Terry has queried that already. fT3 belongs near the top of it's range, dragging along the bottom of the fT3 range might technically be " normal " , but I suspect the assumptions of what is normal fT3 suffer from similar issues to the TSH range, although conversely fT4 seems to usually be towards the bottom of it's range. Anyone got good frequency distribution data from these tests? Simon BTW: I emailed the TSH range issues (NACB advice and all that) issue to the radio 4 'More or Less' team (who report on abuse of mathematics and statistics), no reply yet, but I figured it wouldn't hurt. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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