Posted by BarbaraCat on October 25, 2003, at 21:09:27
In reply to Re: oops! same question » BarbaraCat, posted by katia on October 25, 2003, at 18:54:23
Hi Katia,
> 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?**Good question - I wonder also. I bought a digital thermom recently. Is yours lavender with a cute little baby on the front? When I took my underarm temp with it it was much lower than my mouth temp so I don't know what to think. I haven't compared it with my mercury thermom yet but I've read many many times NOT to use digital but mercury thermoms. I really don't know why. Digitals are so much easier.
Aside from the digital vs. mercury question, perhaps the armpit is supposed to be a degree lower than oral, much like rectal temp is a degree higher? I think this is one of those self tests to figure out which method works best for us.
>>My body temp. has been low, but not like you describe. Average is 98.3.
**I'm not sure that my frigid 97.4 readings are accurate anymore, since I've been using the old armpit method. But maybe those armpit numbers mean something for basal tests that score on some kind of curve.
Are you taking it when you first wake up or after you've been up and about? If you're 98.3 when you first wake up - and this is before you even have that first pee or stretch - chances are you're not hypothyroid. Chances are you might be HYPERthyroid. But please don't quote me on this. As I understand it, morning temps should be no more than 97.6 until you start ambulating - a degree lower than the standard 98.6. That's why lower than 97.4 is considered hypothyroid, taking into account that normal waking should be 97.6.
Have you ever been checked for thyroid antibodies? (Hashmoto's antibodies is a test you have to plead and beg for in our typical HMO arena. Do NOT expect that it will be remotely suggested unless you ask for it.) Hashimoto's thryoiditis is an autoimmune form of thyroid disorder that's been implicated in bipolar disorder. It fluctuates up and down and mimics that good ol' rollercoaster ride we know so well. Hashitmoto's is a little blip in the normal thyroid disorder spectrum but no less frequent or severe.
>> 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.
**I haven't heard about it regarding rapid cyclers specifically and that's very interesting. You'd think that anything that's the least bit hyper inducing would throw rapid cyclers into a spin.
Thyroid hormone is being used as a general augmentor for pmeds with good results and the T3 form especially. But there's been alot of controversy lately about T3. Have you been to http://thyroid.about.com? If not, by all mean go there. It's mind boggling. Catcha later - Barbara
poster:BarbaraCat
thread:238206
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/20031025/msgs/273453.html