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dar's avatar

super stuff, prof Robyn...cheers...A thought- if we mechanics fixed cars like mds 'fix' humans,

we'd all end up walking...but since the human body is so resilient, the medicalmafia get away with it

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Robyn S's avatar

Don't forget how these 'ranges' are decided.

Women often seem to have 'low' iron on their blood tests - because the path labs are using a range that would be better suited to a male! And don't forget that most women bleed each month. Women are going to have lower iron levels on a blood test than a male, in general. I've seen SO many blood tests where the woman supposedly has low iron, but she's fine, has loads of energy, isn't anaemic, and it in fact made me start to question routine blood tests as well - especially their 'ranges'. If you don't have the right markers for that patients, then they're pretty useless tests.

And sometimes the pathology labs change the range of something because, well, they feel like it (I'd like to say that it has a lot to do with science, but it often doesn't!). I've had this done before and I was in the normal' range with iron, but then they changed the range and suddenly I was 'low' even though I felt fine and nothing had changed in me - just an arbitrary range on my results!

If you have NO symptoms then it's not much to worry about. For example, my TSH runs at the lower end of 'normal' - and it always has. My Mum's also runs relatively low. It's probably genetic. BUT, mine bordered on hyperthyroidal for a bit there. Long story cut short, I got my Coeliac under control by making all my own food and stopped eating out and lo and behold my TSH went back to 0.92 instead of 0.51. I started putting on a little bit of weight again and I felt fantastic. Amazing what happens when you're not getting poisoned! :-D

So yes, tests CAN be useful - but my symptoms also explained what was going on. Eating right got me right. I never needed medications or blood tests in the end - just the right food! Still, at the time, I was feeling pretty rotten, and so I thought bloods would help me understand things. I guess the only thing they helped with was that I could see my numbers changing (my TSH dropping) over time, and THAT concerned me. However, the doctor wasn't concerned because he said my TSH was still in the 'euthyroid' (AKA 'normal') range. It was 0.51. Low TSH was considered 0.50 and below. So I had a 0.01 difference, quite a few symptoms and he said I was normal. He didn't even bother checking my changes through time. Ha! No wonder I took my health into my own hands. I know so much more useful stuff than medical practitioners!

I've also seen blood tests where everything looked fine - but if the patient went for a run around the block they'd drop dead! And one patient I am thinking of now DID end up dropping dead! Blood tests are sometimes so very useless. They CAN be useful, but in many cases, I think we could do without them. I can't be bothered having any more tests. I've had enough to know my baseline. And my body tells me if I'm having issues. If I listen to my body, I know what I need to do. Maybe people are too lazy to listen to their bodies, who knows. But really, if you're not getting symptoms, on the whole, how problematic IS it?!?! And one test tells you very little. You need to have them through the years so you can see the PATTERNS emerging. Once you know your patterns, in many cases, you probably don't need any more blood tests - or rarely, anyway.

I also don't see why we need a 'test' for everything when a thorough history will determine about as much as a blood test, anyway. The added bonus is that there are no nasty invasive tests during the history! :-D

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