Not that I know of. She wasn't sure what all they tested. Said her thyroid was low and brain hormone (?) was high. I'll see about those tests. Thank you!
Now I have to neg myself for bringing too much seriousness to the thread!
Generally speaking, they'll only test TSH and possibly T4 (whether it's total or free can be a toss up). The takeaway is that they have a really poor method of checking things and never check the important stuff (a lot of factors are in play). Hashimoto's is the leading cause for hypothyroidism and is much more prevalent in women than men (yet, I'm lucky enough to have it...*sigh*). That said, she'll want to look at the following, at a minimum:
TSH
Total T4
Free T4
Free T3
TPO-Ab
Tg-Ab
That will give a pretty clear picture of what's going on. If either of the antibodies are elevated, that means Hashimoto's and an autoimmune disorder -- body is attacking its own thyroid. If that's the case, she'll have to work on finding the source of the inflammation/autoimmune trigger and try to correct it (decrease intake of iodine, thus slowing down the body's own production of TSH to allow inflammation to subside; avoid gluten, etc.).
There are a bunch of other factors that can play roles, too, but that is a good starting point. If one of the antibodies comes back as high, she has Hashimoto's and that's a "for life" thing. You can lower the antibodies and make things better, but it will always be there and need to be remembered.
If not, she's lucky, and you're just lucky at correcting other issues.