Hi Barb,
Thank you for your response. I'll be taking 22mg copper (sebacate), 150% DV and 25mg zinc (HVP chelate), 170% Dv. I am also concerned about over supplementing copper through supplements.
Yes, meat is some of the best sources for copper, but this weekend I'm going to make a food plan and try to introduce non-meat copper and zinc rich foods into my diet while supplementing. Not sure when I should get blood work redone on those? I'm also concerned about other possible mineral deficiencies that I don't know about or that might arise from only supplementing two so I might take a mineral drops, but I'm not sure?
I'm ovo-lacto (eat eggs and milk). Love eggs and told my doctor I have about two a day and asked if I should cut back. He said no, exercise. Will do my best to eat non fishy fish. I've tried sole and managed to eat an entire ounce or two a few months ago so will try that again. I couldn't taste it (it's all psychological).
Going g/f might have contributed or been the primary reason for my weight loss since nothing else has changed (besides reducing Tirosint from 100 to 88). I also had restaurant bought chilli rellenos two days in a row and although, not much, it's battered in flour so maybe that explains the 8 lbs weight gain? It was also very salty so maybe some water weight too. When I told my husband (who's away) that I gained 8lbs, the first thing he said was gluten. I'd love to be back to 122lbs too! It doesn't sound like much weight, but I'm short and fluffy.
I really appreciate your story and found it very encouraging! It's hard for me to believe that it will have such a big effect on cholesterol as I'm pretty resistant to exercise, not much can motivate me. So, it's great for me to hear about your experience and I'm so happy you have your "winter neighbor" back!
Also, we've moved house and are a few months in a place with a gym in the building. So I have no excuse other than lazy resistance, I can't even say I didn't know. We also don't have a car now and I should be doing plenty of walking, but instead, I don't leave the house much and lately have also been lying in bed with my computer because my body hurts. I really should have suspected hypo because the last times I've felt REALLY ADD was with TSH of 63 and the months before Cytomel was added.
I really think I should convince him to put be back on Tirosint 100 and leave my Cytomel the same. If he wants good TSH numbers then he need to leave me on Tirosint 100 with nothing else. Then my FT3 will be well below range as it has been before Cytomel. This is exactly what I'm going to tell him. I found an old list of symptoms I brought him in November 2011, I am having some of the same symptoms that had resolved themselves on Tirosint 100 and Cytomel 10.
More questions:
Not sure how to supplement D? If I should supplement high to get my levels up then go on a maintenance dose or?
I've also been taking B12 (methylcobalamin) 5000mg 83,333% DV and that's been working.
Thanks!
Okay, you have my initial response from the other thread, so you know I think you're hypo....
Copper and zinc work together, so should be supplemented together. I take a zinc tab (30 mg) that also contains 300 mcg of copper. Copper is toxic in high doses. Meat is a good source of zinc/copper, so if you are vegetarian, that could be a factor.
I'm not really sold on the "blood type diet", so I won't say much, except that you have to make sure you replace all the nutrients that most/many of us get from meat. One ounce of lean ground beef has the following nutrients: Protein, Niacin, Vitamin B6, Phosphorus, Zinc and Selenium, and a very good source of Vitamin B12. It's also a good source of iron. Chicken and fish have similar nutrients, often with less fat, or at least with the "good" fats.
I'm not real clear on the vegetarian "rules". Some don't eat meat, but use dairy products (milk, yogurt, cheese), eggs, etc, while others ("vegans"? - or do I misunderstand it completely?) don't consume either meat or meat products, including eggs. I do know that for every food you eliminate, you have to figure out a food that will replace the nutrients.
Some have said they lost weight going g/f; others don't so you'd have to coincide your g/f start date with weight loss/gain to see if that might explain weight issues. If you figure that part of it out, let me know; I'd love to get back to 122 lbs..... lol
While I know that low thyroid levels can throw cholesterol out of whack, in one sense I do have to agree with your doctor -- exercise can go a long way toward lowering cholesterol levels..... Part of the cholesterol issue depends on how much your body produces and how much you consume in food.
Here's my story (you do want to read it, don't you?...... lol) --- last year in Aug, my cholesterol was high....... I wasn't doing much for exercise (because I live in a "high heat" area), except some sporadic yoga. In Oct, my "winter neighbor" got here, and we began walking every day (or most days) (it does cool off in the winter) for around an hour (ranging between 4-7 miles/day). We didn't "stroll"; we walked with a purpose!! In Feb, I had my cholesterol levels checked and they were awesome.... LDL was about mid range, HDL was upper range, triglycerides were well within range. Good to go, right?
My neighbor went back to her home state in Apr and I no longer had a walking partner; my husband threw a fit that I wanted to walk alone (long story that you don't want to read...lol), so rather than fight with him, I stopped walking.... Levels checked again in Aug and were back to WAY high....... I promised my doctor that I'd get them down by the next check in Feb 2013. Reason being, I knew my neighbor would be back and we'd resume our daily walks. She got back Tues and we resumed walking yesterday, so we've done 2 days. I can certainly "feel" it in my muscles.. I guarantee that when I get my cholesterol checked again in Feb, it will be within normal limits.