From 168lbs to 139lbs (pics) w/ hypothyroidism

2»

Replies

  • themommie
    themommie Posts: 5,033 Member
    Congrats on your weight loss, you look great. I too have hypothyroid and know how hard it can be to lose, it maybe be hard but not impossible
  • PayneAS
    PayneAS Posts: 669 Member
    Great job OP! You look great!
    Please don't tell me muscle weighs more than fat so I must be putting on muscle. Muscle does weigh more but the difference is miniscule.

    Minuscule? /blinks in disbelief

    18429001_8072.jpg

    Doesn't seem minuscule to me but maybe I'm crazy.

    Sorry OP to derail the thread a little, I couldn't help but respond to that when I saw it.
  • Ivana331
    Ivana331 Posts: 230
    wow, you wear 139 well for being 5'0". I am 5'2" and weigh about 128 now, and as you can see in my pics, I don't wear the weight well at all.
    But good job, you look amazing!! :)
  • nwhitley
    nwhitley Posts: 619
    You look great! Congratulations!!
  • Artbyrosie
    Artbyrosie Posts: 4 Member
    Congratulations jroseonline, and thank you for sharing your journey. Having read the other posts I can see that I am in 'good' (not) company, if you know what I mean about hypothyroid and it's control over our bodies. I had my thyroid removed in 1988 due to a large goiter obstructing my wind pipe. I was so overweight that it did not show in my neck! I was the fattest anorexic you would ever see, I ate about 500 calories a day and weighed over 230lbs on a 5' 4" frame, an apple with legs was how I described myself. After my thyroid removal, I was put on 200mg of levothyroxine and over a period of two years I got down to 155lbs. I was extremely happy and fit and all was well until about 2000 when my thyroid meds were changed to a different brand. I put on weight rapidly and my doctor even put me on Duromine as he thought I was overeating! So I ended up not eating at all and ended up in hospital as I was starving to death inside this fat body! I gave up pretty much and decided that this was how my body wanted to be, fat! I just ate what I wanted and gradually my weight settled at 198lbs. I exercised at the gym three times a week, did all the required strength and cardio regimes and never lost an ounce, did not put an ounce on either, trainer was despairing but I knew that was how it was. I moved out to New Zealand in 2005 and I could not get my normal dose or brand of levothyroxine here so was put on Eltroxin, which made me extremely sick. I ended up taking reflux medication and despite throwing up every day my weight never budged. Now a new doctor (could not cope with one who just did not give a damn) has put me on 50mg of Synthroid daily (from 200mg Eltroxin) and I am now following a Mediterranean type of diet and lower carb to see if I can lose weight. He thinks my metabolism is completely shot to bits and my BMR is so low that my body just does not cope with food and I am in a permanent starvation mode. So I am now trying my hardest to lose weight and stay fit and healthy. I do now eat, work out a little and try my hardest not to stress out about it. I am down to 194lbs only a 4lb loss in 12 weeks, but it is a loss. Sorry for the long post, it's been a long journey! I so wish I could get back to that 155lbs again, but at this rate, I will be 100 by the time that happens lol, but I am NOT GIVING UP....
  • jroseonline
    jroseonline Posts: 45 Member
    I didn't realize I was still getting responses as I am not notified when I do.

    For those that are struggling with hypo, it took me 2 1/2 years after being diagnosed to actually start losing weight. I finally found an endocrinologist who listened to me and how I was feeling physically as well as look at my lab results.

    I started out with levoxyl for 1 1/2 years, nothing happened, not even my hypo symptoms decreased. then I found a new doctor, an endo, who put me on 2 weeks of synthroid while waiting for my results from the blood tests. when we got those results, he found that I was also borderline diabetic and that I needed both T4 and T3 so he put me on Armour Thyroid. for 6 months, I changed my diet and started to exercise but I still wasn't losing weight.

    So he increased my dose of Armour Thyroid and recommended Blood Sugar Support supplements and it was then I started to lose weight. I lost 11lbs in 4 weeks. and the rest leads to where I'm at now. and I'm no longer borderline diabetic.

    When I lost about 20 lbs, he tried to decrease my dose of Armour Thyroid, but my hypo symptoms came back even though my lab results showed I was ok with the dose. So at my quarterly check up, i told him about my hypo symptoms coming back, but I was still losing weight, just not as fast, it slowed down a lot. He ended up going by my feelings and increased it back to where I was prior and now i'm feeling great.

    And even though I'm not losing weight as quickly, I know I am trimming down because I take measurements and pictures. I am teetering between 139-141lbs right now, but my clothes are definitely fitting better. I went from a sz 8 to a sz 5/6. 6 being a little loose but 5 being a bit too tight.

    just a tip: it's not always a great idea to stick to the scale, the measuring tape and taking progress pics are probably the best way to go, especially in the last stretches where you only need to lose about 10lbs.

    and for those who work out constantly and burn a lot, but still stick to low calorie diets, you may just be working against yourself. I did that in the beginning and I hit a plateau. I tried working out more, but still eating the same and nothing happened. Your body needs the fuel and like many has already said, you need to eat at least half your exercise calories. You'll start to notice a bit of weight gain at first, but then you'll definitely start losing.

    I recommended sticking to your low calorie on days you don't work out and eating a bit more on the days you do work out.

    Also, weight training helps out soooo much. I only did cardio the first 4-5 months of my journey and have now added weight training and I must say the results are a lot better than cardio alone.

    Hope this helps and again, thank you to everyone who's shown me support!
  • icesk8ermom
    icesk8ermom Posts: 82 Member
    Hypothyroidism sucks. I am 50 pounds overweight and it is absolutely impossible to shed an ounce. I am 56 years old and I go to the gym 5-6 days a week for two hours. I don't leave until I have burned 1000 calories. I lift weights, do cardio and stay fairly busy throughout the day walking me two big dogs and even riding the stationary bike at my house. Please don't tell me muscle weighs more than fat so I must be putting on muscle. Muscle does weigh more but the difference is miniscule. I need help. I take synthroid, cytomel and don't know what else to do. I've tried a high protein diet, but one doctor, who is hypothyroid himself, said that this diet is not good for anyone with this condition. I usually eat about 1400 calories. Glad to hear about your success, but I never get any. Frustrated beyond belief.

    Lynne I feel you...I am in the same boat!

    You said you eat a 1400 calorie diet and that you burn minimum 1000 calories a day.....Are you also eating the 1000 calories you burned? You need to eat a minium of 1200 calories a day AFTER you account for the calories you burn in order to lose weight and live a healthy life. So based on the info you shared you need to be eating 2400 calories because 1000 of those 2400 have been burned to nothing.
  • icesk8ermom
    icesk8ermom Posts: 82 Member
    Great job OP! You look great!
    Please don't tell me muscle weighs more than fat so I must be putting on muscle. Muscle does weigh more but the difference is miniscule.

    Minuscule? /blinks in disbelief

    18429001_8072.jpg

    Doesn't seem minuscule to me but maybe I'm crazy.

    Sorry OP to derail the thread a little, I couldn't help but respond to that when I saw it.

    Actually muscle weighs the same as fat....the difference as you can see in the picture is 5 lbs. of muscle is larger in volume than 5 lbs. of muscle.
  • icesk8ermom
    icesk8ermom Posts: 82 Member
    I've posted a few success stories the last few months, but thought I'd share again as I am at my lightest I have been in the last 4 years. It's been a long struggle. I developed hypothyroidism in 2009 and gained 40+ lbs. I am far from over, but I am extremely proud of my accomplishment so far. Once upon a time I used to be about 125lbs. 3 kids, development of hypothyroidism and almost a decade later, I shot up to my most heaviest at 167.9lbs.

    Finally found a doctor who put me on the right treatment plan and I've dropped about 29lbs in the last 10 months. Now I am working towards my ultimate goal of 125-128lbs and 17-18% body fat. Started at 167.9lbs 34% body fat and now down to 139.8lbs and 26% body fat.

    Oh and a side note: I am 5'0" tall. I've had 3 kids and I am 31 yrs old.

    See pics below. After seeing these pics side by side, I have found new motivation to push harder and get to my ultimate goal. I'm giving myself a realistic time frame to hit my goal. and that's the end of this year. I'm sure I can do it.

    Thanks for letting me share my success story.

    385456_10150422278799090_355906481_n.jpg
    this was me when I was 21 yrs old and at about 120-125lbs.

    photo4.jpg
    Left Side: 167.9lbs Right Side: 139.8lbs

    photo3.jpg
    Left: 155lbs Middle: 144lbs Right: 139lbs

    You look great.....I also am hypothyroid and struggle with my weight loss. So far I have only seen a 5 lbs. loss in 6 weeks; frustrating but I have seen a huge loss in inches. I am trying to keep my chin up because I know (like others here) I am gaining my muscle loss back from starving myself in the past. I had a huge amount of muscle atrophy and know I am building that back now so I know this is why I am not seeing the scale move.

    I have Hashimotos and had half my thyroid remove due to it be enlarged; mostly likely the other half has died off from what I have been told. I am on synthroid; 110 mcg and 112 mcg (alternating every other day). I am at that wonderful age of 43 so that doesn’t help either!


    ~ Good luck everyone

    ***Feel free to add me as a friend for support if you’d like!
  • I usually just lurk but had to post on this thread! I lost 60 pounds 5 years ago and have maintained but was unable to shed any more weight! I'm a zumba instructor, roller derby girl, and work out at least 5-6 times a week. Figured my body had found it's plateau and that was that.

    For the last 4-5 months I was feeling tired, cranky.....not myself.....although I couldn't pinpoint anything specific wrong with me. Finally went to my doctor and found out I have an inactive thyroid. After about 4 weeks, my medications were adjusted properly and I'm doing much better! Have only shed a few pounds so far; but that's a HUGE accomplishment for me. I credit following the doctor's orders, ther ight combination of meds, and using MFP to track foods/exercise. I also use it as motivation and stories like yours rock! Thanks for sharing and you look amazing.
  • pittskaa
    pittskaa Posts: 319 Member
    wow you look awesome!!!! :wink:
  • vvanm
    vvanm Posts: 157
    I was exposed to housing that had high Chlordane levels in 1977 and developed some Thyroid antibodies even though I tested normal range. It felt like chronic flu. Doctors have been very confused, not knowing if it is a for sure correlation, and just gave me synthroid 100 mcgs. Then another doctor insisted that Armour was the natural way to go and I gained 15 lbs. I'm back on Synthroid and added 5 cytomel (T3) and that helps. Never really feeling normal though. Did lose the last 15 though! A friend was also put on Armour and said she felt great. I saw her 6 mos. later and she had gained about 15 lbs. She's on synthroid now too. Obviously some people do fine, but you couldn't pay me to take that stuff again. Congrats on your weight loss! I think the hormones become more stable in a normal weight range.
  • katm427
    katm427 Posts: 227 Member
    You look fantastic, and have a great sense of style at any size, OP. Seriously. Congratulations!
  • LiamGTR
    LiamGTR Posts: 20 Member
    Looking good!
  • jennco3
    jennco3 Posts: 72 Member
    Thank you for sharing. You look great! And you have inspired me.
    I also have hypo. And felt a little defeated latley. But after reading you post and everyone else that commented Im feeling a bit better. So thank you to everyone for sharing your stories and giving advice.
  • saverys_gal
    saverys_gal Posts: 808 Member
    I didn't realize I was still getting responses as I am not notified when I do.

    For those that are struggling with hypo, it took me 2 1/2 years after being diagnosed to actually start losing weight. I finally found an endocrinologist who listened to me and how I was feeling physically as well as look at my lab results.

    I started out with levoxyl for 1 1/2 years, nothing happened, not even my hypo symptoms decreased. then I found a new doctor, an endo, who put me on 2 weeks of synthroid while waiting for my results from the blood tests. when we got those results, he found that I was also borderline diabetic and that I needed both T4 and T3 so he put me on Armour Thyroid. for 6 months, I changed my diet and started to exercise but I still wasn't losing weight.

    So he increased my dose of Armour Thyroid and recommended Blood Sugar Support supplements and it was then I started to lose weight. I lost 11lbs in 4 weeks. and the rest leads to where I'm at now. and I'm no longer borderline diabetic.

    When I lost about 20 lbs, he tried to decrease my dose of Armour Thyroid, but my hypo symptoms came back even though my lab results showed I was ok with the dose. So at my quarterly check up, i told him about my hypo symptoms coming back, but I was still losing weight, just not as fast, it slowed down a lot. He ended up going by my feelings and increased it back to where I was prior and now i'm feeling great.

    And even though I'm not losing weight as quickly, I know I am trimming down because I take measurements and pictures. I am teetering between 139-141lbs right now, but my clothes are definitely fitting better. I went from a sz 8 to a sz 5/6. 6 being a little loose but 5 being a bit too tight.

    just a tip: it's not always a great idea to stick to the scale, the measuring tape and taking progress pics are probably the best way to go, especially in the last stretches where you only need to lose about 10lbs.

    and for those who work out constantly and burn a lot, but still stick to low calorie diets, you may just be working against yourself. I did that in the beginning and I hit a plateau. I tried working out more, but still eating the same and nothing happened. Your body needs the fuel and like many has already said, you need to eat at least half your exercise calories. You'll start to notice a bit of weight gain at first, but then you'll definitely start losing.

    I recommended sticking to your low calorie on days you don't work out and eating a bit more on the days you do work out.

    Also, weight training helps out soooo much. I only did cardio the first 4-5 months of my journey and have now added weight training and I must say the results are a lot better than cardio alone.

    Hope this helps and again, thank you to everyone who's shown me support!

    Thanks for sharing your story! You look incredible! I gained about 35lbs. in 6 months last year and have been fighting for 8 months to drop it with no luck...I had my one thyroid removed 8 years ago and have been on no meds but have recently been displaying hypo symptoms which my last endo wouldn't do anything about. I've got an appointment here in 3 weeks with a new endo and am hoping to have results like yours.

    Keep up your awesome work!! Your story has inspired me to stick with it right now even though it's been a rough 8 months! :flowerforyou:
  • MidwestAngel
    MidwestAngel Posts: 1,897 Member
    .
  • ebenso1
    ebenso1 Posts: 39 Member
    I have been hypothyroid for the last 16 years. I don't attribute my weight gain solely to my condition. I am also a nurse. I work in internal medicine where most of our patients are hypothyroid. If you are adjusted correctly it really is a non issue. Yes, your thyroid affects many body functions, but the synthroid is to replace what your body isn't doing for you, so if your adjusted correctly you should be like any other "normal" person. I have been eating a 1500 calorie a day diet, I work out pretty hard core 6 days a week with cardio and weight training, I do a bootcamp. I have lost 35 pounds and it hasn't been easy but not impossible. Keep your chin up, it will happen for you!
  • icesk8ermom
    icesk8ermom Posts: 82 Member
    Hi. What if you do not eat the recommended amount of calories? would you lose more weight or would I be putting myself into starvation mode?

    Not eating your calories back is harmful to you and your body. No you will not go into starvation mode immediately but if you continue this way for eating yes you could.

    The problem with those who have hypothyroid is that your metabolism is shot due to the improper functioning thyroid. First, solution is to make sure your meds are correct for you. Second, is you must eat enough for your body to fuel itself so it doesn't hoard your fat and make more. And third, you need to do circuit training (cardio and weights) to boost your metabolism.

    Here is what most people do not understand.......A 1200 calorie diet (for women) is based on NO exercise; this is what you need to function and live a healthy life. When you burn the calories it is like you never ate them; therefore, you must eat more to meet the 1200 calorie daily intake. When the doctor or nutritionist tells you to "eat" 1200 calories this is based on NO exercise so if you exercise you have to eat more to start with OR eat back your calories.


    Lets' say it takes 3 logs to keep a fire going; if they all burn to ashes what will happen to the fire if you don't replace the logs???

    Ok so if you don’t eat the recommended amount of calories one would think I would weigh nothing and look great right???

    Wrong…… not only did I gain weight (yes I said GAIN) that is because I lost all.....ALL of my muscle mass in my toned and very strong legs. And it showed on the soccer field. I could hardly kick the ball any more. I used to be able to kick the ball 40+ yards easily. Now I could hardly do 10-15 yards. I began to get injured quite regularly, bad painful injuries too. I didn't realize how bad I was or connect the dots as to why I pretty much sucked on the soccer field until I went to physical therapy. They did basic strength tests in my legs (resistant tests) to see how much I needed to build and where to set the weights for training etc.

    I was completely embarrassed to say I had played soccer for 35 years!!!

    I didn’t realize that I had been eating below on 1200 calories AND playing soccer (so pretty much ate negative calories on days I played soccer). I had a very busy life, work full-time, school full-time and worked a side job as an independent baker; I never made time to eat. Now that I look back there were days that I know I was eating probably only 600 calories a day and then played soccer on top of that! So yes, by eating below 1200 calories, will not only make you gain weight but make you lose muscle.

    I have slowly begun to drop my weight. Because I am building my muscle mass back I am not seeing a huge drop on the scale; however, in 2 weeks (from the time I measured) I have already seen a 1.5” drop in my thighs and waist measurements each. (bought a new skirt last weekend and had to exchange it because I bought my normal size….went down 2 sizes but the scale doesn’t say that…..so don’t live by what the scale is telling you; measure!)

    The hardest thing for people (myself included) is to recognize the difference between losing weight and looking skinner. Just because you lose weight may not make you look and skinner or better. You need to eat right exercise and lifts some weights to look skinner (or toned). Sometimes as someone posted above you can actually weigh more or the same and look a million times better!

    So yes you need to eat your exercise calories back or you will lose muscle mass and could actually gain weight which defeats the purpose.

    ~Good luck….if you do things right you can achieve a better looking you!
  • teachme93
    teachme93 Posts: 8 Member
    I have been using Myfitnesspal for just about a year now - Since I started using it I have lost 45 Lbs. But As of April I haven't lost a lb. I am eating about 1250 Calories a day and working out 7 days a week for a minimum of 30 minutes. I have had some bumps in the road - I was diagnosed with Iron Deficiency Anemia in November and at a recent check up was diagnosised with Hypothyroidism. I was put on 50mg of Synthroid and I go back for a recheck in 8 weeks. I am hoping this is part of why I am stuck - but the fact that the 45 lbs came off doesn't tell me it is the end of the story. My level was a 10 (my husband (who is a nurse) is kind of shocked they are treating me. as for myself I think they need to look into this a little more other then just one metabolic panel. Should I have been referred to an endocrinologist? Or can a Primary Doctor handle this? Any insite?? Good Job our your success :) I hope to continue mine.
  • vvanm
    vvanm Posts: 157
    If 10 is your TSH level, that is high. I think it should be under 5. Most GP's just check the TSH and prescribe Synthroid. An Endo may run some tests on T3, T4 levels if you are still having symptoms. The Synthroid, T4, is supposed to convert to T3 in your system and T3 is what your body needs most. Armour is also prescribed sometimes as more natural and it has T4 and T3 already. I had horrible results with side effects on that, including weight gain. There are also antibody tests they can do. Antibodies can block T4 conversion to T3. There is a Hypothyroid group on MFP where you could get some support. Hope this helps :smile:
  • denmark979
    denmark979 Posts: 112 Member
    get it girl!!!
  • aubriemedina
    aubriemedina Posts: 5 Member
    you look great!! very inspirational
  • teachme93
    teachme93 Posts: 8 Member
    Wow thank you - I will look for the group. Its all new to me and of course - I am trying to make sense of it.. since my first 45 lbs fell off within a matter of 6 months.
  • lobster888
    lobster888 Posts: 861 Member
    bump
  • ASDavis72
    ASDavis72 Posts: 77 Member
    You look amazing; I’m in the process of finding my way with hypothyroidism too. Most people can’t understand how much work must be put into losing weight, but it’s a battle I plan to fight to the end. Congratulations on your successful weight loss.
Do you Love MyFitnessPal? Have you crushed a goal or improved your life through better nutrition using MyFitnessPal?
Share your success and inspire others. Leave us a review on Apple Or Google Play stores!