Synthroid patients who actually succeed in eating breakfast?

I'm at my wit's end with trying to eat. I'm on Synthroid, and I absolutely can't have anything in my stomach but Synthroid and water for an hour or I don't absorb it. Which usually means that I leave the house for work on an empty stomach every morning. Which leaves me vulnerable to sweets in the office breakroom even though I really don't even like pastry. Completely at a loss as to how to actually manage to eat; I've been in an office job for a year now after working from home for years and I yo-yo between eating junk and starving myself lightheaded.

Constraints:

Can't either wake up earlier or set an alarm in middle of night to take Synthroid then. Already massively struggling with insomnia due to pain and with very long sleep latency. If I eat breakfast but get even less sleep, I don't really have a net benefit.

Nowhere near work that sells anything healthy for breakfast

Food safety in the car is an issue because I live in a very hot climate

Commute is well over an hour, best case scenario

Can't do large-scale meal prep on weekends due to chronic pain, also don't own a big freezer or have room to consider buying one

Help? I'm so tired of starving and/or eating the crappy pastries or candy because I'm so hungry I can't help it even though they don't even taste good.

I've tried asking on the Synthroid site, but all I get is stay-at-home-moms who spend the whole Synthroid Hour waiting on their kids, then eat breakfast once the kids leave and don't have to go to work and leave their kitchens.
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Replies

  • emmies_123
    emmies_123 Posts: 513 Member
    speekee wrote: »
    I just take mine at night. There is usually at least 3 hours between dinner and bedtime. I know they recommend taking it in the morning but I have been taking at night for years and it works for me.

    This. When I was started on medicine I was told I could either take it 1 hours before food OR 4 hrs after food. I understand you can't rearrange your morning to take it earlier, so possibly the evening is best way to go.

    Other suggestion: can you pack breakfast in with your lunch (or second box) and have icepacks to keep it cold? I get the long commute and climate issue, but ice packs should help keep it safe before getting to office.
  • IHateMyThyroid
    IHateMyThyroid Posts: 23 Member
    edited December 2018
    I am on a late schedule at work to dodge traffic, so I eat dinner late enough that my stomach isn't empty by bedtime. 3 hours between dinner and sleep almost never happens, let alone 4. 4 hours before bed I'm still in the office!

    Your second suggestion. . .implies that I succeed in packing lunch. :s I'm a chronic pain patient with a commute of over an hour, severe ADHD, and acquired long QT syndrome that prevents me taking Adderall. Getting out the door on time properly dressed counts as a win. Can't even begin to fathom packing lunch, or what would be in it since my pain prevents me doing weekend meal prep.
  • mph323
    mph323 Posts: 3,565 Member
    I'm at my wit's end with trying to eat. I'm on Synthroid, and I absolutely can't have anything in my stomach but Synthroid and water for an hour or I don't absorb it. Which usually means that I leave the house for work on an empty stomach every morning. Which leaves me vulnerable to sweets in the office breakroom even though I really don't even like pastry. Completely at a loss as to how to actually manage to eat; I've been in an office job for a year now after working from home for years and I yo-yo between eating junk and starving myself lightheaded.

    Constraints:

    Can't either wake up earlier or set an alarm in middle of night to take Synthroid then. Already massively struggling with insomnia due to pain and with very long sleep latency. If I eat breakfast but get even less sleep, I don't really have a net benefit.

    Nowhere near work that sells anything healthy for breakfast

    Food safety in the car is an issue because I live in a very hot climate

    Commute is well over an hour, best case scenario

    Can't do large-scale meal prep on weekends due to chronic pain, also don't own a big freezer or have room to consider buying one

    Help? I'm so tired of starving and/or eating the crappy pastries or candy because I'm so hungry I can't help it even though they don't even taste good.

    I've tried asking on the Synthroid site, but all I get is stay-at-home-moms who spend the whole Synthroid Hour waiting on their kids, then eat breakfast once the kids leave and don't have to go to work and leave their kitchens.

    How about protein bars instead of candy bars? You can buy them by the box and leave them at work, and there are so many out there that I'll bet you can find one that you like. I have a Quest bar for breakfast every day (I'm a creature of habit) and it's like having a guilt-free candy bar everymorning :)
  • AmyC2288
    AmyC2288 Posts: 386 Member
    Grab a granola/protein bar on your way out and call it a day? Should be simple enough to eat in the car but if not just keep a box at your desk for when you get there- that way you don't even have to make your way to the breakroom.

    Also, for what it's worth, I take my synthroid at night like some of the posters above.
  • kd_mazur
    kd_mazur Posts: 569 Member
    Could you take the pill before you leave work to go home? That would take care of the hour you are unable to eat.
  • IHateMyThyroid
    IHateMyThyroid Posts: 23 Member
    edited December 2018
    Taking pill before commute means trying to drive without coffee! Not gonna happen--unsafe! Granola bars have so much sugar there's hardly any difference between that and the junk in the breakroom, and practically all protein bars are soy-based (too much soy is not recommended for Hashimoto's) as well as sugary. I think maybe I implied that I'm eating junk in the breakroom every day. I'm not. Usually there's no junk to be eaten. Most days I'm fasting all workday and trying to stay coherent. It's only maybe one day a week that there's a sugary thing that tempts me.

    I probably sound terribly picky, but there are two additional problems in here that are making life impossible. I am autistic with sensory integration disorder, and I have raging ADHD. So: with ADHD, packing lunch in the morning is simply not going to happen. Ever. I've tried every year of my career that I wasn't working from home and I can probably count my successes on one hand. (I can't take Adderall because I have long QT, so we're talking raging unmedicated ADHD!)

    The sensory integration disorder is a really tough one too. Autistic people with that have certain sensations that are, completely honestly, unbearable. Not just unpleasant, more like no effort of will can get you past the revulsion. My two strongest ones in any sense are both food-related: anything rubbery, and anything paste-like and bland. So anything like dehydrated beans or lentils, oatmeal (I've tried to force myself to eat oatmeal SO many times!), shelf-stable rice and beans, etc. It's not that I'm a "picky eater"; it's that the autism actually makes it physically impossible to choke those textures down, so that I will consistently choose to starve. I manage snacks with dried fruit, etc., but snacks aren't a meal. My co-workers would probably feed me to the alligator if I brought tuna to the office.

    So, SO frustrated. This started as a thread about breakfast but it's really a thread about eating at all, with this particular disability cluster and a long commute and an office I can't leave until I clock out. Not trying to shoot everyone down. Genuinely dealing with a super unfortunate constellation of disorders on top of each other.

    P.S. One more person to respond to: I don't eat candy bars. I don't even like them. That's another one where, even if/when my only option is the gas station, I end up choosing not to eat at all.
  • mph323
    mph323 Posts: 3,565 Member
    Taking pill before commute means trying to drive without coffee! Not gonna happen--unsafe! Granola bars have so much sugar there's hardly any difference between that and the junk in the breakroom, and practically all protein bars are soy-based (too much soy is not recommended for Hashimoto's) as well as sugary. I think maybe I implied that I'm eating junk in the breakroom every day. I'm not. Usually there's no junk to be eaten. Most days I'm fasting all workday and trying to stay coherent. It's only maybe one day a week that there's a sugary thing that tempts me.

    I probably sound terribly picky, but there are two additional problems in here that are making life impossible. I am autistic with sensory integration disorder, and I have raging ADHD. So: with ADHD, packing lunch in the morning is simply not going to happen. Ever. I've tried every year of my career that I wasn't working from home and I can probably count my successes on one hand. (I can't take Adderall because I have long QT, so we're talking raging unmedicated ADHD!)

    The sensory integration disorder is a really tough one too. Autistic people with that have certain sensations that are, completely honestly, unbearable. Not just unpleasant, more like no effort of will can get you past the revulsion. My two strongest ones in any sense are both food-related: anything rubbery, and anything paste-like and bland. So anything like dehydrated beans or lentils, oatmeal (I've tried to force myself to eat oatmeal SO many times!), shelf-stable rice and beans, etc. It's not that I'm a "picky eater"; it's that the autism actually makes it physically impossible to choke those textures down, so that I will consistently choose to starve. I manage snacks with dried fruit, etc., but snacks aren't a meal. My co-workers would probably feed me to the alligator if I brought tuna to the office.

    So, SO frustrated. This started as a thread about breakfast but it's really a thread about eating at all, with this particular disability cluster and a long commute and an office I can't leave until I clock out. Not trying to shoot everyone down. Genuinely dealing with a super unfortunate constellation of disorders on top of each other.

    P.S. One more person to respond to: I don't eat candy bars. I don't even like them. That's another one where, even if/when my only option is the gas station, I end up choosing not to eat at all.


    I get that your life is chaotic with the issues you are dealing with, and taking meds on a schedule can be difficult. Is it possible to get a referral to a registered dietician to talk about how you can incorporate your meds into a routine that allows you to manage your food and nutrition within the limits you're forced to work with?

    IF you're fasting all workday anyway, there's a window in there for you to take your pills. If your only objection to a protein bar is that they contain soy, my Quest bars are soy-free. I have celiac disease and I carry them around with me in case I need to eat and there's nothing safe available, it really can be a good solution.

  • IHateMyThyroid
    IHateMyThyroid Posts: 23 Member
    edited December 2018
    Also, I've tried meal delivery from three different sources. Fitlife Foods was delicious but crazy expensive, and Daily Harvest only delivers to my area on Thursday afternoons, which doesn't really work when they religiously clean the office fridge and freezer at 3PM every Friday. Grocery story delivery once made the mistake of speaking to the office receptionist instead of calling my cell, and the receptionist sent an enraged email and cc'd my boss, so that's terrified me out of that otherwise excellent solution.
  • Kathryn247
    Kathryn247 Posts: 570 Member
    Ugh, that sucks. All of it.
    FWIW, I take my synthroid as soon as I get up (it's next to the alarm button) and by the time I'm in the kitchen and have breakfast ready, it's been an hour or pretty close to it. I've also been told that 30 minutes is long enough to wait before eating.
    https://synthroid.com/starting/taking-synthroid-the-right-way
  • FL_Hiker
    FL_Hiker Posts: 919 Member
    edited December 2018
    I'm at my wit's end with trying to eat. I'm on Synthroid, and I absolutely can't have anything in my stomach but Synthroid and water for an hour or I don't absorb it. Which usually means that I leave the house for work on an empty stomach every morning. Which leaves me vulnerable to sweets in the office breakroom even though I really don't even like pastry. Completely at a loss as to how to actually manage to eat; I've been in an office job for a year now after working from home for years and I yo-yo between eating junk and starving myself lightheaded.

    Constraints:

    Can't either wake up earlier or set an alarm in middle of night to take Synthroid then. Already massively struggling with insomnia due to pain and with very long sleep latency. If I eat breakfast but get even less sleep, I don't really have a net benefit.

    Nowhere near work that sells anything healthy for breakfast

    Food safety in the car is an issue because I live in a very hot climate

    Commute is well over an hour, best case scenario

    Can't do large-scale meal prep on weekends due to chronic pain, also don't own a big freezer or have room to consider buying one

    Help? I'm so tired of starving and/or eating the crappy pastries or candy because I'm so hungry I can't help it even though they don't even taste good.

    I've tried asking on the Synthroid site, but all I get is stay-at-home-moms who spend the whole Synthroid Hour waiting on their kids, then eat breakfast once the kids leave and don't have to go to work and leave their kitchens.

    I completely relate, I’m a huge breakfast person and I always wake up starving. I’ve found that running curbs my appetite, so I run first thing in the morning after taking my pill. It completely kills that hunger for a good hour (and it burns some of that hyperactivity so I can be more productive throughout the day). If you’re like me a structured schedule can help a lot, I’m less likely to forget something when I’m on a routine and the running really clears my head. By the time I get back I can eat 😊. Before this I used to take my pill at night, my endocrinologist said it wasn’t ideal... but if it really bothers you maybe it’s something to consider? I also eat cookies for breakfast, I just make sure I get some protein too so I don’t crash. Find a good protein that works for you since you have unique preferences, perhaps hard boiled eggs? Protein shake? Yogurt? I like Greek yogurt mixed with protein powder, it keeps me full for hours. And make room in your calorie allowance for those goodies at work! After a run you should be able to fit one or two in anyways.
    Ps: I’m hashimotos and ADHD too 😉 I also don’t take meds for the ADHD, I’ve found the running helps more.
  • bellaa_x0
    bellaa_x0 Posts: 1,062 Member
    edited December 2018
    This is why I set my alarm an hour before I actually have to wake up, take it and go back to sleep for an hour.

    I eat breakfast when I get to work.

    ETA - I either pack my breakfast or pick up oatmeal from Starbucks on the way to the office (plus protein powder that I bring).
  • IHateMyThyroid
    IHateMyThyroid Posts: 23 Member
    edited December 2018
    Kathryn247, I'm curious--what do you do in 30 minutes between gulping your pill (I use the shot-glass-on-the-nightstand method from synthroid.com so I can do it practically asleep) and eating? I'm such a zombie without my coffee that I seriously can't do anything but glance at Twitter until the Synthroid Hour ends! And for me it is an hour; I've experimented with half an hour and the difference was overwhelming. I think absorption speed can differ person to person.

    Wow, FL_Hiker, another actual person with both Hashi's and ADHD? (Though not the trifecta.) Didn't think that would ever happen! Feels great to be a bit less alone in this weird mess.

    Only trouble is (I swear my health problems emerge like clowns out of a VW Bug), hard-boiled eggs fall firmly into my other massive autistic sensory aversion (rubbery stuff), AND I haven't been able to run or do any other high-impact anything since I was 13. Hideous nearly-severed leg, took almost two years and three surgeries to heal and any impact sends shooting Level-10 pains through it! I also have five herniated spine discs and a torn meniscus, among other injuries. So cardio in the morning isn't an option: the only cardio I can do safely is ballroom dance (because the footwork creates almost zero impact, only problem is you need a room the size of an average pro yoga studio to break a sweat!) or elliptical (if I go to the gym then, whoops, there's no food because I left the kitchen!) So while I do enjoy Greek yogurt and smoothies with non-soy proteins (pea, hemp, chia, etc.), the challenge is making them with no coffee and no cardio wake-up. And no medication! Hopefully you at least get to take ADHD meds.

    There just HAS to be a way. I'm not actually a negative person. I've just...been trying to solve this literally since New Year's and I've gotten nowhere, except with meal deliveries I can't afford except in crisis weeks of the production schedule.
  • IHateMyThyroid
    IHateMyThyroid Posts: 23 Member
    Wish I could do bellaa_x0's alarm clock trick, but my sleep latency is 30-45 minutes. So if I set my alarm early, that's the same as waking up an hour early! Grr.
  • Keto_Vampire
    Keto_Vampire Posts: 1,670 Member
    speekee wrote: »
    I just take mine at night. There is usually at least 3 hours between dinner and bedtime. I know they recommend taking it in the morning but I have been taking at night for years and it works for me.

    This is a good option...synthroid has a long half life & does not need to be taken in the morning necessarily. Night time dosing is perfectly fine; just stay consistent with time of day dosing
  • deannalfisher
    deannalfisher Posts: 5,600 Member
    Can you keep oatmeal (the instant stuff at your desk)

    I’ve been on synthroid for 5yrs - I get up at 5:15; take pill, let dog out; rummage in laundry basket to find clothes; iron them, shower and dress - by then I’m at about 40min of putzibg around
  • Lounmoun
    Lounmoun Posts: 8,423 Member
    I am not a breakfast food for breakfast person. I tend to eat things like dinner leftovers, a sandwich, fruit, or a granola bar. I like soup for breakfast. I don't work away from home but pack food for my dh every day. I usually put in 2 pieces of fruit, a granola bar, yogurt or cheese, a sandwich or dinner leftovers in an insulated bag with a reusable ice pack. It takes 5 minutes or less to pack. This is for breakfast, lunch, snack for him. It is limited options but that probably makes it faster to pack.

    What foods can you eat? What did you have before starting this medication?

    If I were you I'd pack food before you go to bed, prepare meals for the week on the weekend or see if you can leave food at your workplace. If you live with someone or have a friendly co-worker maybe you can make an arrangement where they'd help you out by packing some food.

    Eating something less than nutritionally ideal is probably better than just not eating all day. Toast or crackers might be better than nothing. If tuna is the only thing you can stand eating then your co-workers can deal with it.
  • yirara
    yirara Posts: 9,944 Member
    I take my thyroid meds when I leave the house. It's just 30 minutes until my breakfast but it's good enough for me, plus the brand I have causes reflux if I wait too long with eating. Sometimes those recommendations just don't work for individual people. I could take it right after waking up but there's a bit risk of it going into my lungs, and I tend to forget it. My pills are right next to my keys.

    Morning routine:
    wake up, surf the net for 20 minutes (or a bit longer if I wake up earlier). go to loo, step on scale, wash, get dressed, brush teeth.
    Switch on computer, take electricity/gas meter readings and jot into spreadsheet.
    Make sandwiches and oats/skyr concoction if I forgot that the previous evening.
    Take pill, grab keys, pack bag, grab bike, check for keys again. Leave. Cycle to work.
  • IHateMyThyroid
    IHateMyThyroid Posts: 23 Member
    edited December 2018
    Thanks everyone for your help! It does look like the vast majority of people here are WAY more functional than I am within the first hour of waking up with no coffee, eat dinner significantly earlier such that they have empty stomachs by bedtime, and, most of all. . .well, don't have ADHD. That would be SO NICE. And the idea about taking it later in the day since I'm fasting anyway would be great. . .except it's not my only medication, and I can't absorb it at the same time as any of the others. I took a Claritin too early once by accident and it felt like I'd skipped the Synthroid.

    This has slightly morphed into a discussion of "How do you succeed in eating at all with an office job and unmedicated ADHD?" And so far, the answer seems to be "Either get expensive meal delivery, or don't eat". Ugh. I really appreciate everyone's help, but maybe this challenge would be better sourced out to ADDitudemag.org or wrongplanet.net.

    Thanks everyone for attempts to help. :)
  • Crafty_camper123
    Crafty_camper123 Posts: 1,440 Member
    I'm not sure about the synthoid thing, but I can relate to the ADHD and breakfast thing. I was just recently diagnosed with Hashi's too, but it's too early to do anything just yet. (It's super early stages). I can imagine this will be interesting once I have to remember a pill pre-caffiene. I also have ADHD that until very recently has been unmedicated for as long as I can remember. And if I decide (or remember) to take my adderall for the day it's not kicked in until I get to work. So, dragging myself out of bed to prep lunch or breakfast is hard to do sometimes.

    One of the things I do is I have a non-perishible food stash at my desk for just in case type situations. If I forget my lunch, or if I forget to grab breakfast on my way out the door I'll always have something to eat. So things like nuts, trail mix, protien or fiber one bars, instant oatmeal, portable peanut butter cups, instant noodles, canned goods with easy open tops (no need to remember the can opener). These types of things won't spoil if you leave them in your car accidentally. Heck they could just live there actually. When I buy them, they stay in my car instead of bringing them inside so I won't forget to take them to work the next day. If you have a bit of time in the evenings (and your pain can handle it) you could make ahead things like sandwiches or overnight oats for the next day. You could also make extra dinner so you have leftovers. If it's non-perishable hang it in a sack on your door knob so you can't forget it. If it is something that is refridgerated, set an alarm (or three) on your phone, and then a sticky note on your bedroom door, the refridgerator, and on the front door (or wherever it's in your face and you can't ignore it) as a reminder to grab your food and ice packs from the fridge. I hope you find something that works! Best of luck!
  • IHateMyThyroid
    IHateMyThyroid Posts: 23 Member
    I'm not sure about the synthoid thing, but I can relate to the ADHD and breakfast thing. I was just recently diagnosed with Hashi's too, but it's too early to do anything just yet. (It's super early stages). I can imagine this will be interesting once I have to remember a pill pre-caffiene. I also have ADHD that until very recently has been unmedicated for as long as I can remember. And if I decide (or remember) to take my adderall for the day it's not kicked in until I get to work. So, dragging myself out of bed to prep lunch or breakfast is hard to do sometimes.

    One of the things I do is I have a non-perishible food stash at my desk for just in case type situations. If I forget my lunch, or if I forget to grab breakfast on my way out the door I'll always have something to eat. So things like nuts, trail mix, protien or fiber one bars, instant oatmeal, portable peanut butter cups, instant noodles, canned goods with easy open tops (no need to remember the can opener). These types of things won't spoil if you leave them in your car accidentally. Heck they could just live there actually. When I buy them, they stay in my car instead of bringing them inside so I won't forget to take them to work the next day. If you have a bit of time in the evenings (and your pain can handle it) you could make ahead things like sandwiches or overnight oats for the next day. You could also make extra dinner so you have leftovers. If it's non-perishable hang it in a sack on your door knob so you can't forget it. If it is something that is refridgerated, set an alarm (or three) on your phone, and then a sticky note on your bedroom door, the refridgerator, and on the front door (or wherever it's in your face and you can't ignore it) as a reminder to grab your food and ice packs from the fridge. I hope you find something that works! Best of luck!

    Thanks for ideas! Just a note for you (besides sympathy in advance given that eventually you'll be joining the ranks of No Caffeine OR Adderall For the First 30 to 60 Minutes of the Day For the Rest of Your Life). . .consider looking for a second opinion endo. I don't know what exact numbers "too early to treat" means, but based on my experience, many endos won't consider giving you your first teeny Synthroids until the disease has already been making you miserable for years. Starting low-dose Synthroid based on presence of thyroid antibodies plus symptoms, even if the TSH is still "normal", is within the bounds of mainstream licensed endocrinology--no need to go see some expensive questionably qualified private doctor who's into natural hormones etc. Just need to shop around for endos who take your insurance who "treat on symptoms". Worth considering, if you have symptoms already.

    Hoping that maybe I can manage some of the ideas you list. If you imagine your whole day with no Adderall, you might have an idea of the degree of challenge here!
  • deannalfisher
    deannalfisher Posts: 5,600 Member
    i would recommend seeing a professional who can maybe help you develop some coping skills to deal with all this various conflicting needs - i don't have ADHD - but i have talked to people before about issues when i've felt overwhelmed and its been beneficial to me (be it making lists; prepping ahead of time what i can)

    you need to come up wiht a plan - because obviously this is causing significant life issues - if you are needing to fast all day or can't focus in the am without a stimulant (which coffee is) - are you on the right dose of meds?
  • emmies_123
    emmies_123 Posts: 513 Member
    I wish I could help you more, I can hear the struggle in your writing and it can be exhausting trying to solve something that seems to throw up new issues with every idea.

    With the compounding medical issues, narrow timeline, and food requirements the only things I can think of are:

    1. Get permission to work from home for all/part of your workday, site medical reasons. Fasting and trying to stay functional mean you would be more likely to be productive if they let you work remotely. I know not all jobs are open to this, but you have good reason to ask for it.
    2. If #1 fails, look for either a new job or a new home so commute becomes less restrictive. Again, extremely hard to do I know. But your health is important, you cannot continue as you have been long term or you will crash and burn your health.
    3. Speak with your doctor and explain the exact issues you are having. If you can't go to a nutritionist/dietitian the doctor should be able to provide some suggestions on how to handle your medications. Maybe they have different scrips you can try that would fit your life better.

  • Crafty_camper123
    Crafty_camper123 Posts: 1,440 Member
    Also, what about non-stimulant ADHD meds like Strattera, Intuniv & welbutrin? Have you talked to your doctor about those? If you can take those, maybe they might help bring back some focus? If not, I personally have found taking fish oil supplements to help with my focus a little. (talk to your doc). And my doctor recommended I take selenium to prevent my antibodies from getting too high. I have found that since I started taking it, I have less brain fog and better focus. Something to bring up to your doc too? Also here's a website I stumbled on a few months ago I found so many helpful things in it to help manage my ADHD even without meds. There's a ton of good info here written by people with ADHD. https://additudemag.com/
  • deannalfisher
    deannalfisher Posts: 5,600 Member
    emmies_123 wrote: »
    I wish I could help you more, I can hear the struggle in your writing and it can be exhausting trying to solve something that seems to throw up new issues with every idea.

    With the compounding medical issues, narrow timeline, and food requirements the only things I can think of are:

    1. Get permission to work from home for all/part of your workday, site medical reasons. Fasting and trying to stay functional mean you would be more likely to be productive if they let you work remotely. I know not all jobs are open to this, but you have good reason to ask for it.
    2. If #1 fails, look for either a new job or a new home so commute becomes less restrictive. Again, extremely hard to do I know. But your health is important, you cannot continue as you have been long term or you will crash and burn your health.
    3. Speak with your doctor and explain the exact issues you are having. If you can't go to a nutritionist/dietitian the doctor should be able to provide some suggestions on how to handle your medications. Maybe they have different scrips you can try that would fit your life better.

    the different formula of synthroid could be considered - for some reason i react to the generic (levothyroixine) MUCH better than i do to synthroid (the brand - which made my levels go haywire)
  • Crafty_camper123
    Crafty_camper123 Posts: 1,440 Member
    edited December 2018
    I'm not sure about the synthoid thing, but I can relate to the ADHD and breakfast thing. I was just recently diagnosed with Hashi's too, but it's too early to do anything just yet. (It's super early stages). I can imagine this will be interesting once I have to remember a pill pre-caffiene. I also have ADHD that until very recently has been unmedicated for as long as I can remember. And if I decide (or remember) to take my adderall for the day it's not kicked in until I get to work. So, dragging myself out of bed to prep lunch or breakfast is hard to do sometimes.

    One of the things I do is I have a non-perishible food stash at my desk for just in case type situations. If I forget my lunch, or if I forget to grab breakfast on my way out the door I'll always have something to eat. So things like nuts, trail mix, protien or fiber one bars, instant oatmeal, portable peanut butter cups, instant noodles, canned goods with easy open tops (no need to remember the can opener). These types of things won't spoil if you leave them in your car accidentally. Heck they could just live there actually. When I buy them, they stay in my car instead of bringing them inside so I won't forget to take them to work the next day. If you have a bit of time in the evenings (and your pain can handle it) you could make ahead things like sandwiches or overnight oats for the next day. You could also make extra dinner so you have leftovers. If it's non-perishable hang it in a sack on your door knob so you can't forget it. If it is something that is refridgerated, set an alarm (or three) on your phone, and then a sticky note on your bedroom door, the refridgerator, and on the front door (or wherever it's in your face and you can't ignore it) as a reminder to grab your food and ice packs from the fridge. I hope you find something that works! Best of luck!

    Thanks for ideas! Just a note for you (besides sympathy in advance given that eventually you'll be joining the ranks of No Caffeine OR Adderall For the First 30 to 60 Minutes of the Day For the Rest of Your Life). . .consider looking for a second opinion endo. I don't know what exact numbers "too early to treat" means, but based on my experience, many endos won't consider giving you your first teeny Synthroids until the disease has already been making you miserable for years. Starting low-dose Synthroid based on presence of thyroid antibodies plus symptoms, even if the TSH is still "normal", is within the bounds of mainstream licensed endocrinology--no need to go see some expensive questionably qualified private doctor who's into natural hormones etc. Just need to shop around for endos who take your insurance who "treat on symptoms". Worth considering, if you have symptoms already.

    Hoping that maybe I can manage some of the ideas you list. If you imagine your whole day with no Adderall, you might have an idea of the degree of challenge here!

    Not to go off topic, but just for info sharing: TSH, T3 and T4 are all *normal , with TPO's elevated being the only sign. I get symptoms, but they are so inconsistant that my doctor is worried synthroid would throw me into hyper while I'm not having a flare up. So I dunno. Since they're not consistantantly bothering me and selenium seems to be taking care of the symptoms I do get, I'm in wait and see mode for now.

    And I am on caffiene only today.. Which reminds me I should probably get back to work now actually... :laugh:

    ETA: *Normal, as in within current guidelines not the guidelines of yesteryear.
  • IHateMyThyroid
    IHateMyThyroid Posts: 23 Member
    edited December 2018
    Thanks everyone again!

    deannalfisher: No, I'm not on the right dose of meds. :'( But I can't take the right dose of meds. I have acquired long QT syndrome because, like many females with adult ADHD who weren't diagnosed as children, I was misdiagnosed as bipolar for years, and those meds have left me with long QT for life even though they were for a disease I don't have.

    Likewise Crafty_camper, Strattera and Intuniv are also not permitted with long QT, and Wellbutrin causes freaky emotional side effects and no good effects for me. I'm on a way-off-label fourth-tier regimen of guanfacine and low-dose Provigil so that I'm getting at least some help, and trying to get cardiac clearance to up the Provigil from a titration dose to a therapeutic dose. But that's as good as it's realistically gonna get. Unfortunately, acquired long QT doesn't often go away. :/ I do take selenium and have done for years, along with ginseng and lion's mane for the ADHD. It's probably as good of a cocktail as I can manage without cardiac clearance. . .but I can't have any of that stuff until after I digest the danged Synthroid lol!

    Back to deannalfisher: #1: I've already requested work from home on ADA grounds and been denied. When I had a doctor's note saying I couldn't drive immediately post-accident. I was told that I could Uber to work (60 miles, one way, no public transit exists) or be fired. It's idiotic but there it is. No one in the history of this company has ever been allowed to telecommute. :s #2: I can't move house because I own it, but I am both actively looking for a different job and sending out feelers to pain docs and neurologists about whether it's time to consider just going on disability (my insurance policy won't pay out for more than 2 years on mental health, so it would have to be on basis of injury to have a chance). But no firm solutions on either front yet. #3 I see my psychiatrist again on Monday, and my endocrinologist in early January. (Just to add to the black comedy, I've been without an endo all through 2018 and getting my Synthroid written by my PCP since my long-term specialist's partner moved to Texas, she couldn't afford the rent on their office alone, and she only just found a new job! She found a new job before I found a new endo on my insurance and taking new patients! I think once I see her that may help some.)

    33gail33: I think it's complicated more because of having all three of Hashimoto's, ADHD, and autism together. I totally see how it's bafflingly uncomplicated if you're neurotypical! :)

    I should try to get back to work too. Not even the ADHD--I just don't get enough work to fill 8 hours at my usual rate of productivity and the boss grades on presenteeism, so Looking Busy is one of my core activities each day.
  • deannalfisher
    deannalfisher Posts: 5,600 Member
    i'm making the assumption you are seeing a cardiology for your long QT syndrome? I highly recommend you get them, your endo, your psychiastrist and your PCM on a conference call together to figure out a cohesive treatment plan - each one tends to treat in a silo and not the larger picture.

    beyond a psychiatrist - i would recommend a behavior therapist - someone certified in CBT (cognitive behavioral therapy) to help - sometimes solutions are beyond medical intervention (and there are CBT folks who work with ADHD diagnoses)