A number of individuals receiving stand-along T4 thyroid hormone therapy report persistent symptoms... A combination of T4 + T3 therapy may help...
Considerable research interest has focused on administration of combinations of T4 and T3 to a patient with symptoms of hypothyroidism that are apparently refractory to LT4 (31).
An initial double-blind, randomized trial in patients with hypothyroidism demonstrated improvements in mood and neuropsychological function in patients for whom T3 was given in place of a proportion of their LT4 dose.
Further evidence from randomized or observational studies has supported the possibility of significant differences in quality of life (QoL) scores or psychological scores in favor of the combination vs LT4 monotherapy.
Examples of medical conditions or treatments that produce symptoms resembling hypothyroidism |
Typical symptoms resembling those of hypothyroidism |
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Chronic fatigue GI diseases that affect LT4 absorption Addison’s disease Anemia Stress Changes in weight Pregnancy Medications that interfere with LT4 absorptiona |
Constipation Puffy eyes Hoarse/deep voice Muscle cramps Hair loss or dry hair Dry or scaly skin Muscle weakness Carpal tunnel syndrome |
Feeling too cold Slow thinking Tired/lethargic Weight gain Depression Loss of libido Menstrual abnormalities Poor memory |
Personalized treatment with LT4 + LT3 may be of benefit for some patients with persistent symptoms of hypothyroidism such as those with polymorphisms in the deiodinase enzyme 2 (DIO2)
Razvi, Salman et al. “Managing symptoms in hypothyroid patients on adequate levothyroxine: a narrative review.” Endocrine Connections vol. 9,11 (2020): R241-R250. doi:10.1530/EC-20-0205. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
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