>>Having been told to stop it 'cold turkey,' I did not take this morning's
dose.
He said it would be about 4-6 weeks before we can assess the difference.<<
That is scary, because of what I've been through and what I have seen in
others.
A friend was told to stop Synthroid. I was shocked the next time I saw her.
The damage to her was inexcusable! (I won't go through the long details.)
How much were you taking?
Have others write down daily and report to your doctor on what is happening
to
you, because soon you may not be able to do so.
That includes changes in your skin color, swelling, falling asleep
inappropriately,
how you move compared to before, etc.
For as long as you can, write down changes you are experiencing, new pain,
new or worse allergic reactions, how well you are able to think, breathe,
remember words, etc.
Check your blood pressure.
Check your temperature on rising and three times throughout the day.
Notice how cold or warm you feel compared to the real temperature
in the space where you are.
If physical or mental damage happens, make the doctor pay for the results.
(That should have been the agreement before the experiment started, I learned
too late.)
Don't drive unless you are sure your mental alertness and reflexes are
working properly.
Don't be alone.
Have someone help you look right now to get you another doctor,
because you may need one soon -- sooner than four to six weeks.
On the other hand, you may be one of the lucky ones --
something I have yet to see (as a non-medical person who just does a lot of
observing).
Maybe you have a thyroid gland that can start up again -- but that seems to
work better with Wilson's protocol using T3 or gradual tapering off,
if there is a thyroid left to work again.
I thought another friend was one of the lucky ones after stopping Synthroid
(only 100 mcg) -- now she has gained a lot of weight, swelling, and is
developing congestive heart failure.
Check into the doctor's background.
Ask to talk to patients who have succeeded with his/her treatment.
Suggest a support group of patients.
If the doctor won't let you be contacted by other patients, get suspicious.
Listen to the other patients in the waiting room. Look at them.
Do they seem to be improving?
Peg
_______________________________________________________________
Snip, Please
If you "Reply" to a message, and *you* fail to erase or delete
the previous message, *your* message cannot be distributed.
Why not ask a question? If we're not currently talking about
what *you* want to hear about, ask about another topic! Or
make a statement. To be prepared, you might want to search
the Thyroid Archives http://www.Emissary.Net/thyroid/index.html
to see what has been said before about any thyroid-related topic.
_______________________________________________________________
|