...I have no Thyroid anymore but my TSH levels are not to bad a little above normal. ..."What was it exactly on your last blood test and how long ago was it? If it's not less than .5 then the pituitary is still sending out TSH telling the thyroid to make more. You have no thyroid so it can't make any. You have to take more. In order to determine how much more you need to take, you need to have the Free T3, Reverse T3, and Free T4 checked. It also is probably a good idea to have your adrenals checked and maybe sex hormones as well -- they all affect how your body uses the thyroid hormones. (Some people have a TSH less than .1 when they finally get the Free T3 and Free T4 into the upper third of the normal range where they should be.)Also, which thyroid replacement are you taking? If it's synthetic T4 only replacement, like synthroid or levothyroid, then you probably need to add some T3 or better yet change to Armour natural thyroid -- it contains T4, T3, and trace amounts of T2 and T1 and calcitonin which helps prevent osteoporosis. Have you ever read the patient info on synthetic thyroid? One of the side effects is osteoporosis.I had more than half of my thyroid removed about 20 years ago. After many years of normal TSH readings and severe hypothyroid symptoms I finally changed docs several months ago, had tests done the other doc had never ordered, and am now taking Armour, Adrenal Support, and some other supplements. My heart rate used to be in the low 60s and BP 105/65 or lower -- now heart rate is 76 to 80, and BP around 110/75 and my hypothyroid symptoms are going away!!Check out: stopthethyroidmadness.comAlso, Yahoo has a thyroid group with lots of good info. http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/NaturalThyroidHormones/ The instructions on the yahoo group about switching to Armour Natural Thyroid are crucial if you make the switch. Most Docs do not know enough about natural thyroid (which has been around for about 100 years). Most docs will start you on a dose which is maybe as much as 3 or 4 times what your starting does should be, and will not increase the dose any where near high enough -- and you have to increase very, very slowly to give your previously deprived body time to adjust.BTW, lack of thyroid hormones can cause heart problems.
It doesn't sound like the classic signs of heart failure.It is quite possible to actually go a couple kilos under your true dry weight with the only sign being low bp.You said you feel you are getting better dialysis since you have been doing it at home. Do you think its possible that you may be eating just slightly more thus gaining some weight? I had a similar problem for a while and the doc recommend about the same as Amber_79 said. He suggested to come off heavy for a while until it corrected itself. It did but still from time to time my bp goes screwy like that.I would suggest that you are able to use a crit-line or similar machine once a month to make sure your what your dry weight happens to be. Not sure how or if they can be done on your NxStage machine and it might require you to dialyze in clinic to use such a machine. Yes I know you no longer like that idea but sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do.
...My TSH level was 7.58 that was last week! I thought the normal range was like 0.50 - 5.00 or something close to that. ... Thank you again for the wonderful, very informative post. or your choice.
I have low BP before dialysis. Now I drop into the 60's/30's while on the machine. If I go lower then I feel it and know I will crash. Crashed, blacked out, totally immoble and that wasn't funny. I know my body and what it feels like when BP goes below 60/30. I can leave the clinic at 85/45. Just have to make sure my graft still throbs. This is the main reason I won't do home dialysis. Never had high blood pressure except when my kidneys first shut down. I would crash almost every treatment till I asked my nephrologist why I'm on high BP pills if they can't keep my pressure up. They took me off and I never had high BP since then, only lowBP. I'm a strange one they tell me.
I'm a strange one they tell me.
LOL, I heard that myself SO many times. - Epoman