kryptychyck
Cathlete
Feel free to comment or offer some of your wisdom below!
Ugh - I was enroute to Boston on Saturday and as I was sitting in the PHL airport with my sister. We were chatting and my heart started to race. I asked her to count 10 seconds and I checked my pulse. It was 96 bpm. That is too high for me. My normal is about 50 - 60 bpm. I was nauseaous and I could not get my eyes to focus on anything. My sister was asking me if I was ok and I started to have a panic attack. I calmed myself down without creating a scene. I was ok for a while. Then when we were on the train to Boston South Station (from Providence), it all started again. This time I got really depressed and I started to cry. It was bad. All of this insanity added with the accelerated hairloss (other post here) and a steep drop in weight indicated to me that my thyroid medicine was wrong. I was taking 75 mcg of levothyroxine - generic (even though I refer to it as Levoxyl - the brand name). I decided I was taking myself off of the medicine ASAP. I just started thhis medicine Jan 9th.
I felt better on Sunday - a bit calmer and today I feel even more in control. I called the doctor's office and explained to them what happened. The person who answered the phone (nurse? receptionist?) asked what I was taking and I told her: levothyroxine. She got very angry (not at me) and informed me that none of the doctors ever prescribe generic because of the risk of having this type of reaction. She asked for the number to my pharmacy and said she would call me back. Well, she called me back and explained that my doctor did not write "brand name" on the prescription. I asked her about the side affects that I was having and she said that I would not have the problem with the Levoxyl. I asked her about the hairloss and she said, albeit not as confidently, that the Levoxyl will help with that too.
I am not so sure that I trust these people anymore. If it is such a strict policy and a huge deal about not prescribing generics because of known adverse reactions, why then did my doctor fail to specify brand name on the script?
I am going to search for another endocrinologist even though the one I currently see is supposed to be one of the best in the country. I felt very dismissed by him during my original consulation. I let that go because he was supposed to be the best. I had called his office last week and voiced my concern over the dramatic hairloss and I did not get anywhere. I am not asking for him to hold my hand, but obvisouoly something is wrong and he is not taking me seriously.
I am supposed to go to his office tomorrow to pick up the new prescription for brand name Levoxyl and some samples "for my troubles". I will go. I will pick up the prescription, but I will also be requesting copies of all of the tests and other information. I am getting a second opinion.
There. Thanks for listening. I am very angry at this point. I am not the type of person to sit around and wait. Hopefully I can get in with the group at the University of Pennsylvania Hospital asap. I had good luck there with my ENT surgeon.
Ugh - I was enroute to Boston on Saturday and as I was sitting in the PHL airport with my sister. We were chatting and my heart started to race. I asked her to count 10 seconds and I checked my pulse. It was 96 bpm. That is too high for me. My normal is about 50 - 60 bpm. I was nauseaous and I could not get my eyes to focus on anything. My sister was asking me if I was ok and I started to have a panic attack. I calmed myself down without creating a scene. I was ok for a while. Then when we were on the train to Boston South Station (from Providence), it all started again. This time I got really depressed and I started to cry. It was bad. All of this insanity added with the accelerated hairloss (other post here) and a steep drop in weight indicated to me that my thyroid medicine was wrong. I was taking 75 mcg of levothyroxine - generic (even though I refer to it as Levoxyl - the brand name). I decided I was taking myself off of the medicine ASAP. I just started thhis medicine Jan 9th.
I felt better on Sunday - a bit calmer and today I feel even more in control. I called the doctor's office and explained to them what happened. The person who answered the phone (nurse? receptionist?) asked what I was taking and I told her: levothyroxine. She got very angry (not at me) and informed me that none of the doctors ever prescribe generic because of the risk of having this type of reaction. She asked for the number to my pharmacy and said she would call me back. Well, she called me back and explained that my doctor did not write "brand name" on the prescription. I asked her about the side affects that I was having and she said that I would not have the problem with the Levoxyl. I asked her about the hairloss and she said, albeit not as confidently, that the Levoxyl will help with that too.
I am not so sure that I trust these people anymore. If it is such a strict policy and a huge deal about not prescribing generics because of known adverse reactions, why then did my doctor fail to specify brand name on the script?
I am going to search for another endocrinologist even though the one I currently see is supposed to be one of the best in the country. I felt very dismissed by him during my original consulation. I let that go because he was supposed to be the best. I had called his office last week and voiced my concern over the dramatic hairloss and I did not get anywhere. I am not asking for him to hold my hand, but obvisouoly something is wrong and he is not taking me seriously.
I am supposed to go to his office tomorrow to pick up the new prescription for brand name Levoxyl and some samples "for my troubles". I will go. I will pick up the prescription, but I will also be requesting copies of all of the tests and other information. I am getting a second opinion.
There. Thanks for listening. I am very angry at this point. I am not the type of person to sit around and wait. Hopefully I can get in with the group at the University of Pennsylvania Hospital asap. I had good luck there with my ENT surgeon.
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