Levothyroxine dosage Health

Discussion in 'English Setter' started by Bow-wow-now, May 29, 2018.

  1. Bow-wow-now

    Bow-wow-now New Member

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    Levothyroxine dosage

    I have been struggling to get the thyroxine dosage correct for my 9-10 year old English Setter female. We adopted her 2 months ago after a lifetime in a shelter. Her blood tests showed that she has hypothyroidism (5.55 nanomoles/L on the thyroid test, where 13-53 is the normal range).

    After a couple of weeks on Forthyron 400 mcg (3/4 tab in the morning & 1/2 in the evening), she was responding positively but seemed to be panting excessively, and the next blood test showed 6.84 nanomoles/L; the vet told us to increase to 1 tablet in the morning and 1 at night. After a few days at the higher dose (which we were told is the min. recommended amount for her weight), she developed diarrhea, which did not subside despite charcoal and anti-diarrhea medicines, and then she developed an intestinal infection (mucous diarrhea). This was over a couple of weeks, and she lost a lot of weight. Treatment with Flagyl, as well as stopping the thyroxine, completely fixed the diarrhea problem. However, after a week or so without the thyroxine medicine, her skin became extremely flaky and itchy, her eyes started to get irritations and mucous again, she was lethargic and retaining water around her belly.

    Four days ago, we started with 200 mcg levothyroxin per day, and she immediately was revived and seemed happier. I still had the feeling she was a little excited, so I reduced her dose today to 100 mcg. A few hours after her tablet, the mucous and completely liquid diarrhea returned.

    I am trying to find out how to modulate the dosage. On one hand, the vets (and the Forthyron leaflet) tell me that 2 tablets per day (ie 10 mcg per kg of body weight, and she was 35 kg) each 12 hours is correct. That would make 800 mcg of levothyroxine per day. One vet informed me I could use human levothyroxine, as it is the same medicine. In the human leaflet, the total recommended dosage is 12.5-50 mcg per day total for a child, and up to 200 mcg for an adult. While I understand that the thyroid in humans and dogs is certainly different, it seems like a massive difference in dosage.
    Dog’s dosage: http://www.vmd.defra.gov.uk/productinformationdatabase/spc_documents/spc_252335.doc
    Human’s dosage: http://www.ies.org.il/PL_Levothyroxine_EN_2010Sep.pdf

    My understanding is that instead of following the first vet's advice, I should slowly ramp up the dosage, starting at a fraction of the daily dosage instead of the full dose. Does anyone have experience with finding the correct dosage, especially when levothyroxine is definitely causing diarrhea?

    Thanks for any advice.
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  3. My bear Yoji

    My bear Yoji Member

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    Sorry I can’t help you
    I hope you get sorted
  4. CaroleC

    CaroleC Member

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    Sorry I have no experience to help with your problem. My Beagle dog had a very positive response to dosage with Thyforon 200mcg twice daily. He weighs in at 17k +, and does have other bowel problems, but thankfully not diarrhoea! He instantly swung from 6 - 52 nm/l, and has stayed on the same dose for almost three years now - usually testing at somewhere around 35 - 46 nm. He does have conjunctivitis as a side effect, so I use over the counter sodium hyaluronate drops for his comfort.
    Have you read, The Canine Thyroid Epidemic by Jean Dodds and Diana Laverdure? If not, Google it. Highly recommended. You may already know that Diana Laverdure was the person engaged to research this condition by the English Setter breed club - I think she was/is at Manchester University. Dr. Dodds is in the US, and is the director of Hemapet. She is the world authority on thyroid conditions, and has a very informative website. She seems to be prepared to deal with queries, - with your own vet's authority.
  5. Malka

    Malka Member

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    If it is possible to send a blood sample to Dr Dodds, she will check it and advise the correct medication and dose. A lot of people on the Epi List trusted her - I believe it cost ~$50 for the testing and advice.
  6. zoe79

    zoe79 New Member

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    Hi
    It seems we might have the same problem with levothyroxine. My dog is 60kg and gets 600mg but has bad diarrhea since we started. How did you manage?
    Thanks

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