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Posted by rainy on June 21, 2005, at 9:58:14
In reply to Re: Kat and everyone » headachequeen, posted by ed_uk on June 20, 2005, at 21:02:38
For Kat--Thanks, Kat--At first I was horrified because my husband learned of this rumor at a minister's meeting and "problems with alcohol" have been the bane of this congregation's life wiith its religious leaders. Then I thought it was sort of funny and completely understandable.
Last year we went through the discovery that Topamax can cause instability and make us stagger around and crash into things. I'm just tired of explaining. It was only a rumor of a rumor anyway, but you're right. Wasn't it Bambi's mom who advised not to say anything if you can't say anything nice? (What a dull world that would be!)
rainy
Posted by bridgey1128 on June 21, 2005, at 14:45:22
In reply to Re: Kat and everyone, posted by rainy on June 21, 2005, at 9:58:14
I didn't realize that was a side effect of the Topomax. I have been Mrs. Dropsy Fingers when I have been taking it and trip over my own feet. Fall over for no reason and I have ALWAYS had good balance! It's interesting that you said Phentermine is a stimulant. I had never heard that it was a stimulant, only an appetite suppressant. When I took it a number of years ago I never felt hyped up. It never did anything much, but then again, I didn't take it long. I wasn't very patient. The Xenical works well but my insurance won't pay for it and it is rather punishing when you eat too much fat. I think I am just going to go off drugs and if I feel too bad then I will find something different. I was hoping that the Topomax would work for me, but I was wrong. It helped for some time but then it dulled me and made me apathetic, not to mention the brain f*rts that just DID NOT go away, and it keep me from sleeping well. I have just been plain ol grouchy since I went back on it and it has depressed me more than anything...oh well
Posted by iris2 on June 22, 2005, at 13:46:25
In reply to Re: Incentives for meds and Amineptine » iris2, posted by ed_uk on June 19, 2005, at 10:37:23
> Including TCAs such as nortriptyline? I vagely remember that you tried Cymbalta but it didn't help - I might be getting mixed up though.
Not sure about the TCA's as I tried them years before being diagnosed with "Interstitial Cystitis" Cymabalta only made me extremnely nervous Did nothing else.
> What effect do you get from noradrenergics such as reboxetine?I tried to look up noradreneergics not sure. If I could have taken Effexor I am absolutely sure it would have helped a lot. For the first five weeks i took it I wa calmer and more at ease than I have ever been in my entire life before or since. But I have tried to take it several times again and now cannot even take one pill without flare up. Reboxetine helps me a little , I usually took it in conmbination with Parnate, Marplan or Moclobimide. Parnate and Marplan helped me a lot for several years until they "pooped out" which is why I was adding other things to them and alternating them.
>
>
> I'm glad to hear your pain is under control. What dose of OxyContin do you take? Does the OxyContin affect your depression? Interestingly, a few babblers (eg. Elizabeth) have taken buprenorphine for chronic pain + depression and found it helpful. Ever tried it?The oxycontin is prescribed by my p-doc who wants me to take it even if I do not have pain as an antidepressant. It does help some but just enough to maybe help me get through a day without being too emotional or something. No I never heard of buprenorphine I will look it up and discuss it with my p-doc. Thanks.
>
> >The stupid surgicl proceedure got rid of most of the pain ( which was somewhat controlable with oxycontin) but made the frequency/urgency much worse and I have almost no control over that.
>
> Have you tried solifenacin (Vesicare)??I might have I have tried many and do not remember or even know them all. I just tried Sanctura and it was horrible. It made it all worse.(Similar drug)
Take care,
irene
Posted by iris2 on June 22, 2005, at 13:56:15
In reply to Re: Kat and everyone » rainy, posted by headachequeen on June 20, 2005, at 20:39:31
> then the psychiatrist who admitted me to hospital told me that the lithium would have wiped out my personality completely....
> just a thought
> katI have known many people on Lithium including my best friend. I do not know whay your psychiatrist was talking about. I have never read nor ovservered nor heard anyone taht was taking it complain of personality changes.
irene
Posted by ed_uk on June 22, 2005, at 14:55:15
In reply to Re: Incentives for meds and Amineptine » ed_uk, posted by iris2 on June 22, 2005, at 13:46:25
Hi Irene,
>Not sure about the TCA's.....
How would you feel about trying a TCA? How did they affect you when you tried them before?
Kind regards
~Ed
Posted by Chairman_MAO on June 22, 2005, at 15:52:22
In reply to Re: Incentives for meds and Amineptine » iris2, posted by ed_uk on June 22, 2005, at 14:55:15
Buprenorphine is useless for chronic pain, mostly, due to its "ceiling effect". Moreover, it stimulates the ORL1 receptor, which significantly undermines the analgesia induced by its partial mu-agonistic action.
Posted by iris2 on June 22, 2005, at 17:51:34
In reply to Re: Incentives for meds and Amineptine » iris2, posted by ed_uk on June 22, 2005, at 14:55:15
Ed,
One I was alergic to and the other as I recall had a lot of side effects.
irene
Posted by ed_uk on June 22, 2005, at 18:03:44
In reply to bupe, posted by Chairman_MAO on June 22, 2005, at 15:52:22
Hi Chair,
>Buprenorphine is useless for chronic pain, mostly, due to its "ceiling effect".
It's sometimes useful for patients who only require low opioid doses.
>Moreover, it stimulates the ORL1 receptor, which significantly undermines the analgesia induced by its partial mu-agonistic action.
True :-(
Here's some info about the Transtec patch.......
Expert Rev Neurother. 2005 May;5(3):315-23.
Transdermal buprenorphine in the treatment of chronic pain.
Sittl R.
University of Erlangen, Pain Clinic, Krankenhausstr, 91054 Erlangen, Germany. [email protected]
The transdermal matrix patch formulation of buprenorphine has been shown to be effective in managing moderate-to-severe cancer pain and severe pain unresponsive to nonopioid analgesics. Clinical trials have revealed that it is possible to switch from weak opioids or low doses of step III opioids to transdermal buprenorphine without any problems. With buprenorphine patches, the sublingual buprenorphine intake was dose-dependently reduced and was superior to placebo in this respect. The proportion of responders increased with the buprenorphine dose, and a higher proportion of patients receiving buprenorphine patches reported uninterrupted sleep for longer than 6 h compared with those receiving placebo. In a long-term, open, follow-up study in which the mean duration of treatment was 7.5 months, analgesia was rated as at least satisfactory by 90% of patients. Almost 60% of patients could manage their pain with one patch alone or with one additional sublingual tablet a day during the whole period of treatment, indicating a low incidence of tolerance development. The buprenorphine transdermal patch was assessed as user friendly by 94.6% of patients. In a postmarketing surveillance study, pain relief with transdermal buprenorphine was rated as good or very good by 70% of the responders. Postmarketing surveillance studies have shown that transdermal buprenorphine is also effective in the management of nociceptive and neuropathic pain, which some studies have shown to be relatively insensitive to mu-opioid analgesics, such as morphine. Transdermal buprenorphine was well tolerated. Most adverse events were either local reactions to the patch that generally subsided within 24 h or systemic events typical of treatment with opioid analgesics, such as nausea, vomiting and constipation.
~Ed
Posted by ed_uk on June 22, 2005, at 18:10:46
In reply to Re: Incentives for meds and Amineptine » ed_uk, posted by iris2 on June 22, 2005, at 13:46:25
Hi Irene,
>If I could have taken Effexor I am absolutely sure it would have helped a lot. For the first five weeks i took it I wa calmer and more at ease than I have ever been in my entire life before or since. But I have tried to take it several times again and now cannot even take one pill without flare up.
Do you think you might be able to tolerate Effexor if you started at a much lower dose and increased the dose gradually? You could start by taking a few pellets out of a 37.5mg capsule.
~Ed
Posted by headachequeen on June 22, 2005, at 19:52:33
In reply to Re: Kat and everyone, posted by iris2 on June 22, 2005, at 13:56:15
> > then the psychiatrist who admitted me to hospital told me that the lithium would have wiped out my personality completely....
> > just a thought
> > kat
>
> I have known many people on Lithium including my best friend. I do not know whay your psychiatrist was talking about. I have never read nor ovservered nor heard anyone taht was taking it complain of personality changes.
>
> irene
Lithium can change the personality according to my primary and according to the psychiatrists at the hospital especially if given to someone such as myself... It would simply cause my creativity and the bits and pieces that make me who and what I am to flatline and no more creative highs and crashes when things ended or didn't work...
it is like any other drug...
has different effects for different things...the idea had been to give it to me to stop the manic highs that were considered to be manic depressive when the manic highs were actually something that were my creative being simply flying high on success...
and that would have disappeared... I**** would have disappeared so to speak....kat
Posted by headachequeen on June 22, 2005, at 19:58:53
In reply to Re: Kat and everyone » headachequeen, posted by ed_uk on June 20, 2005, at 21:02:38
> Hi Kat,
>
> >until the topomax is eliminated and/or replaced with something that does not make my life chaotic...
>
> Topamax makes your life chaotic?
>
> ~EdI meant to say Tegretol...
argghhhhh all these t words...
topomas is what holds my life together some days....and just back by the way....
he has no problem with the no tegretol....
and suggested a new drug to replace it...
has no side effects....
maybe he will even prescribe it for mewhen he sees me again in six months.....
I have had it....
I will not go back in six months....
tomorrow I am explaining to my primary why I am through with the whole thing
this has taken me six months to find out that there is a drug to replace tegretol that is safe to take but we will try it in december....I am trying so hard to remember the Just for today I will not be angry of my reiki practitioner's vows....
and it is not working
kat
Posted by ed_uk on June 22, 2005, at 20:21:23
In reply to Re: Kat and everyone, posted by headachequeen on June 22, 2005, at 19:58:53
Hi Kat,
What drug did he suggest to replace Tegretol?
~Ed
Posted by bridgey1128 on June 22, 2005, at 20:38:36
In reply to Re: Kat and everyone » headachequeen, posted by ed_uk on June 22, 2005, at 20:21:23
Kat, manic highs and then crashes would indicate bipolar. People who are bipolar tend to be very creative and get much of their creativity from their manias. Then you get bored or it doesn't work fast enough, or onto another project that gets half done. It's usually about the excitement of newness and starting something and then the crash comes when it doesn't work like expected or takes too long...etc. That is one reason why I just hated taking my meds. I felt like my creativity was being sucked out of my brain along with my sense and sense of balance. If taking a med to "even me out" means that I will lose that part of me then I don't want be on anything. I have felt like doody every time I have taken something and I don't like it. Effexor was HOOOOORRRRIIIDDDDDD. Oh man, I wouldn't recommend that unless you are planning on staying on it forever! The withdrawl from it is unbelieveable. Even when you miss a single dose or are late..you usually start up with the brain shivers. I had a constant headache for about a month before I finally said NO MORE. That was before I was diagnosed with bipolar. Other than having a really CRAPPY day today, unrealated to coming BACK off the Topomax, I have slept like a baby and had SO much more energy! I couldn't believe how tired I was all the time until I stopped taking the Topomax.
Posted by iris2 on June 22, 2005, at 22:23:23
In reply to Re: Incentives for meds and Amineptine » iris2, posted by ed_uk on June 22, 2005, at 18:10:46
Ed,
THanks for the advice. But the four or five times I tried it after my first experience I began at very small doses. I believe 37.5 is the smallest dose. I was not able to take that anymore as my Interstitial Cystitis had developed much more. Inishally I had increased the dose fast because I was in the hospital where they were first begining trials of it and I wanted to get out. So I did not have problems at the smaller doses but I ended up at around a rediculous amount(cannot rmember but I do recall no one takes that much) Anyway they did not believe me that I had urinary problems because it was not a "side effect" Sent me in a taxi to the urology quack I was seeing at the time who just dialated my urethra as he had been doing for 3 years and sent me on my way. I told them all to go to hell and they suggested shock treatments. I had had two sets prior with no response. What idiots!!!!I left.
Thanks I do wish I could take it and if I do something drastic like have my bladder removed I might take it,
Irene
Posted by iris2 on June 22, 2005, at 22:27:34
In reply to Re: Kat and everyone » iris2, posted by headachequeen on June 22, 2005, at 19:52:33
Kat,
Okay if one is speaking of manic personallity or manic depression than yes of course Lithium would have an effect. Call it what you want"flatlining"I think you mentioned. But for those that "manic"phase is not complimentary to their lives but interfering or perhaps making it disfunctional than taking a moo stabiliser such as Lithium or several others would be a rather good idea.
irene
Posted by ed_uk on June 23, 2005, at 13:36:37
In reply to Re: Incentives for meds and Amineptine, posted by iris2 on June 22, 2005, at 22:23:23
Hi Irene,
Have you ever tried Lamictal for your depression?
~Ed
Posted by headachequeen on June 23, 2005, at 22:20:22
In reply to Re: Kat and everyone » headachequeen, posted by ed_uk on June 22, 2005, at 20:21:23
> Hi Kat,
>
> What drug did he suggest to replace Tegretol?
>
> ~Ed
Hi EdI am trying to remember, I think it is Limictil or similar sounding name... and if the lack of tegretol and reduced dose of topomax (as I am now getting more benefit from it!!!!! duh) don't make a difference, he will try that when I see him on the follow-up visit in January...
another of those 24 hour sleep deprived eeg tortures booked for 26 July and I get to hear what they find out in January...
I am truly fed up....kat
Posted by ed_uk on June 24, 2005, at 10:08:47
In reply to Re: Kat and everyone, posted by headachequeen on June 23, 2005, at 22:20:22
Hi Kat!
>I am trying to remember, I think it is Limictil or similar sounding name...
Lamictal (lamotrigine)
~Ed
Posted by stresser on June 24, 2005, at 17:02:56
In reply to Re: Kat and everyone » headachequeen, posted by ed_uk on June 24, 2005, at 10:08:47
I think it's strange how the topomax works so well for me, and not for others. Is there a medication to take the "Bi-polar" out of "Bi-Polar"? If you can understand that. I have a friend who has a daughter who is Bi-Polar, and I think she is more type I. She's very impulsive, with typical BP1 symptoms. She is driving my friend into a nervous breakdown, and is now on medication herself. She shows signs just like my daughter, but not nearly as bad. What is the best thing for that? -L
Posted by stresser on June 24, 2005, at 17:04:10
In reply to Re: Kat and everyone, posted by stresser on June 24, 2005, at 17:02:56
Sorry, I mean she is worse..far worse than my daughter! -L
Posted by iris2 on June 25, 2005, at 0:57:52
In reply to Re: Incentives for meds and Amineptine » iris2, posted by ed_uk on June 23, 2005, at 13:36:37
Ed,
No. Thought about it but it ws at time I was not willing to try anything again.
Irene
Posted by iris2 on June 25, 2005, at 1:14:11
In reply to Re: Kat and everyone, posted by stresser on June 24, 2005, at 17:02:56
Stresser,
boy would it not be nice if this were a much more exact science. A doc can take two people brought up similarly at the amed age with the same diagnosis and symptoms and one it might be magic for the other poison. It is very archaic as most of meicine is. Take this or that particular poison and see if it provides for an objective feeling of not having some particular symptom (at least as far as depression is) forget what it could be doing to all the other systems in your body whether you feel that efect or not. Consider the rather simplistic example of your liver . HOw it all has to go through your (or most) liver and puts stress on it and after years could have damamging effects. And of course the others we call "side effects" whch they ae not. They ae effects of the cheicals we are putting into our bodies just not the effects we are wanting!!Oh well I am on my high horse . It is not like I never take medications. But I myself and try to persuade others to go the natural route first and try it for a whie as it can take longer. You I would thnk would feel this way as you are a physical instructor, something about as natural a healing in your body as one can get.
Irene
Posted by ed_uk on June 25, 2005, at 15:48:12
In reply to Re: Incentives for meds and Amineptine, posted by iris2 on June 25, 2005, at 0:57:52
Hi Irene,
Since 'normal' ADs seems to make your IC symptoms worse, I thought it might be useful to try a non-classical AD such as Lamictal.
Kind regards
~Ed
Posted by stresser on June 25, 2005, at 17:09:55
In reply to Re: Incentives for meds and Amineptine » iris2, posted by ed_uk on June 25, 2005, at 15:48:12
You would think I would feel that way. Not so. I'm just too tired of not having a so called "normal" life, that if medication is what is needed, then WE SHALL TAKE IT. I am certainly not opposed to medication, and never have been. It changes lives for the better, and it saves lives. It must be used correctly, and not abused, but sometimes it falls into the wrong hands, or gets out of control in the right hands. Never say "Never". (I'm a very open minded person) You might me suprised how many people involved in fitness, abuse controlled medications, and/or illegal steriods. It turns my stomach. -L
Posted by iris2 on June 26, 2005, at 13:59:57
In reply to Re: Incentives for meds and Amineptine » iris2, posted by ed_uk on June 25, 2005, at 15:48:12
> Since 'normal' ADs seems to make your IC symptoms worse, I thought it might be useful to try a non-classical AD such as Lamictal.
>
> Kind regards
>
> ~EdED,
Thanks for the advice. Right now I am beginning to see a naturopath so lets see how that goes first. Why is Lamactil so different? Even drugs like flexeril cause terrible flare ups?
irene
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