Hi ladies,
Just wanted to update - I am 11 and a bit weeks PG again lol. I went for my routine blood test earlier this week and I've been called in urgently to see the GP tomorrow morning as a result. I don't think I've done anything wrong. I feel fine, my dose got put up to 150mcg when I was just over 6 weeks as expected (and as happened with Eddy). I am worried now though that it's going to be bad news. I'm normally the optimistic one as you know, but now I'm worried - what if I've done damage to my baby. I know the main thing is developmental problems....I'm so worried now that I've caused my baby to have learning difficulties.
It could also just be a minor adjustment to my dose, or to have a go at me about my anti-d's.![]()
So I've heard. Unfortunately, won't help me w/ this pregnancy. In my favor, I don't have any kind of history of miscarriages, and both times that I've been pregnant, I conceived within 1-2 cycles of coming off a hormonal form of birth control (pills with DD seven+ years ago, Mirena removed in late November w/ this pregnancy).Your tsh needs to be ideally between 1-2 for fertility.
No.Hope39 said:Have you had thyroid antibodies tested?
No. Spoke w/ doc on phone on Tuesday. He said he was going to check on what kind of dosage to put me on & call me back.Are you on thyroxine already?
Amazingly, the doctor called me back today. He's put in for me to start 50 mcg of levothyroxine daily; gonna pick up the prescription today and start it tomorrow morning. I'll watch carefully for signs of hyperthyroidism. I have my first prenatal check-up with him in two weeks two days, and I'm sure we'll go over it more then. He wants to re-test my blood and see how I'm doing in six weeks.
I'm glad that we're treating with a low dose of levothyroxine given how much my TSH has risen in 4 months, but now I can understand why my doctor chose not to treat before I got pregnant, and knowing that my risk of adverse outcomes in pregnancy are much lower than it would be if I had overt hypothyroidism puts my mind at ease.Experts agree that overt hypothyroidism should be treated for both maternal and fetal benefit, but whether SCH should be treated is less certain. Although the risks for pregnancy complications and fetal neurologic damage are far from clear, available evidence suggests a possible risk for adverse outcomes. Levothyroxine treatment is relatively cheap, safe, widely available, and well tolerated; however, the 2 prospective interventional trials (ie, Negro and colleagues and CATS) had negative primary outcomes. This leaves the clinician who diagnoses SCH in a difficult position. ACOG recommends against "screening and treating" SCH in pregnancy, but does not directly address the situation if it is found incidentally or by means of risk factors. Other endocrine organizations, such as the Endocrine Society, and the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists, do recommend treating SCH in pregnancy. Given the lack of clear guidance from the literature, it is reasonable to leave the treatment decision up to the individual physician and patient.
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Physicians should exercise caution when interpreting maternal FT4 levels. Method and trimester-specific reference ranges should be used when available. Although some studies have found an association between SCH and pregnancy complications, including increases in abruption, preterm delivery, and pregnancy loss, others have not. Nevertheless, theoretical concern surrounds SCH and the risk for neurologic impairment in the fetus. More studies are needed to confirm and define this risk.
If SCH is diagnosed either by symptoms or by risk factors, insufficient evidence exists either for or against a recommendation for treatment with a low dose of levothyroxine. Universal screening of all pregnant women for hypothyroidism, overt or subclinical, is not currently recommended.