Guest guest Posted April 25, 2008 Report Share Posted April 25, 2008 > > A conventional medicine doc )that doesn't believe in mercury > poisoning) checked my serum thyroid levels (ft3 and ft4) and he says > ft4 is too high. > > the results are: > > FT3 - 3,90 pmol/l > FT4 - 22,8 pmol/l > For others posting results, please include the normal ranges that are given on your test results. My results have the same units, pmol/L, so the normal ranges on my tests are: free T3 2.63-5.7 free T4 9.0-19.0 " Optimal " T3 would be in the top 1/4 or 1/3 of the normal range, so I see the free T3 as being a bit low. free T4 is a bit high > to me it might look like a mercury FT4->FT3 conversion problem, but > the doc doesn't see it that way and he prescribed me a thyroid > suppressing drug. > I would agree with you, and there are lots of other ways that mercury can mess with thyroid function. If it was me, I wouldn't take the thyroid suppressing drug. I would look for a doctor who would prescribe sustained release T3. > can someone interpret my results. oh, my tsh value from the beginning > of february was 1,55 IU/ml . On my test results the normal range for TSH is given as 0.3-5.5 mIU/L. The TSH is useless if the hypothyroidism is centrally mediated (originating from problems in the hypothalamus or pituitary, organs that mercury is known to poison). Standard medical text books and reputable medical websites state this. Doctors, even endocrinologists, have mostly been trained to worship the TSH test and do not, in general, understand the limitations. ie your TSH result means nothing. What is meaningful is symptoms. Find lists of hypothyroid symptoms and see if your symptoms match. J > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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