L-thyroxine, also known as levothyroxine sodium, is a prescription medication used for certain thyroid conditions. L-thyroxine is sold under the brand names of Levothroid, Levoxyl, Synthroid, Tirosint and Unithroid. If you have Diabetes, L-thyroxine may affect your blood sugar. Consult your physician if you have concerns about high blood sugar while taking your thyroid medications.
Read more at the related link.
Yep.
NO.
All of the others in the same row of the Periodic Table as sodium.
why sodium & hydrogen ions do not diffuse at the same rate?
Natrium is another name for sodium (thats where Na comes from)... so it will be the same as sodium oxide not sodium perocide.
Yep.
Yep.
Yes, there are no drug interactions.
In my experience, nothing happens. I take Levothyroxine and Prestiq together, at night, and have for 6+ months. That's just my opinion, not to sat that it will or will not work for you, but it works fine for me.
No, salt is not the same as sodium. Salt is sodium chloride, not just sodium by itself.
0.05 is the same as 0.050 which is 50/1000 and 0.025 is equivalent to 25/1000, hence 0.05mg of levothyroxine is greater than 0.025mg
i too am taking the same medication i have hashimotos thyroidtitus i am hypo thyroid
Levothroid and Synthroid are both T4 replacement for hypothryoidism. While prescribed for the same use, with the same dosage, if you follow any blogs on the subject you'll see they aren't exactly the same. "It's in the fillers."
The (yellow) sodium color is the same in all.
Yes
NO.
No. Sodium carbonate is Na2CO3. Sodium bicarbonate is NaHCO3. Sodium carbonate is a stronger base.