Posted by katia on October 25, 2003, at 18:54:23
In reply to Re: oops! same question » katia, posted by BarbaraCat on October 25, 2003, at 14:41:16
Hi Barb,
Just found this post from you regarding basal thermometers -** Nope. I wonder what it is. Let me know if you find out more about it. I've heard about inaccurate tests for sure. I've heard that TSH tests can be inaccurate and the best way to tell is taking the basal body temp first thing in the mornng even before you get up to pee. You shake out a mercury thermometer the night before, preferably a mercury basal one (they're getting hard to find), and stick it under the armpit (why the armpit I haven't the foggiest) for 10 minutes. If it's under 97.4 you're most likely hypothyroid. Mine was 96.4 pretty consistently just a while ago. Of course, with lithium my TSH was going through the roof. I'm hoping with the natural thyroid med I'll start evening out. There's been some controversy lately about if supplemental T3 is really needed. An endo study said this. There was a big storm of backlash on the about.thyroid.com site (a goldmine in case you haven't visited it). I dunno. I feel better on T3/T4 but it can make me jittery if I take too much at one time, so I split the it.
I bought one (a basal thermometer - an electronic one/battery operated, not mercury) and I stick it under my tongue for one minute until the beep. Is this as accurate as a mercury one under the arm? My body temp. has been low, but not like you describe. Average is 98.3. I'll keep monitoring it thru'out the month. See if the rise/fall is around my ovulation. (that's what this thermometer is for).
Did I tell you I recently read that a lot of rapid cyclers do well on hypothyroid meds? even if the tests indicate that they are not hypothyroid.katia
poster:katia
thread:238206
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/20031025/msgs/273309.html