About Me

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I'm a mom, a wife, a best friend. Sick with CFIDS/ME/CFS and Fibromyalgia since 1975 as a result of a nasty flu while still in grad school, it wasn't until the late '80's that I received a diagnosis. Until that flu I'd never really been ill before. With each year I get progressively worse and add to the bucket load of symptoms I'm living with. I've been blessed with an incredible family and best friend who've stayed with me through my struggles as we continue to find a way out of this monstrous illness and its complications. We've tried seemingly every approach to find my way back to health. Often I think our best weapon in this undesirable and unasked-for adventure has been laughter.
Showing posts with label medications. Show all posts
Showing posts with label medications. Show all posts

Friday, July 12, 2013

Friday Tidbits: "Paradoxical" Reactions to Meds




My favorite gal: somewhere between childhood and adulthood on the monument to Alice in Wonderland.

One of the most curious and mysterious medication effects I've encountered is how Ritalin affects the nervous systems of children so much differently than those of adults.  Ritalin is famous (or infamous) as a frequently prescribed medication for ADD/ADHD in children because it tends to have a calming effect on the immature central nervous system.  Yet in adults it has a stimulatory effect, often helping with depression and fatigue.  

What's going on here?  Clearly, the immature brain and the mature brain are affected much differently by the same medication. But when does the switch, from one type of brain to another, occur?  No one really knows, but obviously, it happens.  

Patients with CFIDS/ME/CFS and fibromyalgia often have dysfunction of the central nervous system which causes such problems as difficulty concentrating, memory loss, and/or difficulties in "switching gears" from one task to another.  For example, when interrupted it's incredibly difficult for some of these patients to get back on track and resume the original task at hand. (Understatement, anyone?)

I've often noticed, in myself as well as in others, that medications designed for a particular effect have much different properties in patients with CFIDS/fibro.  Many years ago, sleeping medications actually kept me awake - the opposite of the desired effect. This is what doctors call a "paradoxical effect" of the medication. Why this happens is unclear.  However, I have a few thoughts on this subject.  (And seriously, would you expect less?)

As most of us already know, before the FDA approves a medication for sale to the public at large, it has to review clinical trials performed by the pharmaceutical companies. These often involve two or three thousand people and if a medication is safe and effective, for a particular problem, it gets approval. Once approved, however, it can be prescribed for patients with more than the one problem it was designed to treat.  

However. 

Typically, those medications tested by the pharmaceutical companies are given to healthy people who only suffer from one medical problem.  But once it is approved, the medication is often prescribed for patients who are far more complex than the original test subjects.  Furthermore, complicating the issue is that the studies are usually conducted on subjects of European ancestry.  These are just two reasons why new side effects are discovered once the medications are approved and used by tens of thousands of patients.  This may also go a long way in explaining why my mom, an Eastern European, has had incredibly horrid luck - in fact, been disasterously unlucky - with any medication she's taken since she came to the States in 1950.  

Therefore.

We shouldn't be surprised if some medications have undesired - and even the opposite - effect when given to complicated patients.  We with CFIDS and fibro know this from experience and from discussing our problems with fellow sufferers.  I'm not so sure if this is accepted by the medical community at large - though my rheumy/immunologist sees this in his practice every day. 

Have any of you been greeted with skepticism when you reported that a medication either didn't work or had an unreported side effect?  Were you treated as if you were making it up or had some sort of mental problem because you did not have the desired effect which was clearly shown to be obtainable by the studies submitted to the FDA?  But of course you have!  If not, consider yourself extremely lucky!

Bottom line.

This is why meds too often work differently on those with CFIDS/fibro.  Initially, they weren't tested on people like "us."  The anti-depressants, the pain meds, the sedatives - they were all tested on people with one sort of problem only - and we all know that the CFIDS/fibro world is a heck of lot more complicated than the "norm." Don't get upset or surprised if the meds that are seen on TV or which your doctor prescribed don't work the way they are "supposed" to.  Keep trying different meds until you find what works for you! 

Our brains may not be as immature as children's brains but they aren't totally normal either.  A cursory look at the recent studies regarding brain function - fMRI, brain SPECT scan - in CFIDS/fibro attest to that. Unfortunately, no one has yet understood what this means, but then again, as I wrote in another post, our brains in general are the "final frontier" as described by many, including Nobel laureate, Dr. Eric Kandel.

Hence. 

Herein lies the problem I had with Cymbalta - sorry, I know I shouldn't bring up the "C" word again.  But those sorts of meds were made for people with primary depression and it was only a side effect that pain seemed to be more tolerable, thus getting the approval by the FDA for pain and fibromyalgia.  Don't be upset when you see you're not helped by these or any other meds.  Again, tell your doctor what is going on and go with something new until you find that magic bullet - or bullets - that work for YOU, regardless of what medical problems you may have.

As always, I hope everyone is doing their very best - only better.  Safe weekend, y'all!  Ciao and paka!



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Friday, June 28, 2013

Friday Tidbits: The Necessity for a Real Doctor


Let's face it.  We with fibromyalgia and/or CFIDS/ME/CFS are complex and have very complicated medical problems. That being the case, we need real medical help and advice from competent and caring doctors. Sound obvious?

Well, not necessarily.  How many of you have made an appointment to see a doctor only to be met by a physician's assistant (PA) or nurse practitioner (NP) instead of the doctor?  

There appears to be a disturbing trend in medicine these days which may possibly be OK for patients with simple problems but absolutely unacceptable for patients who suffer from CFIDS/ME/CFS and fibromyalgia where even the experts differ as to optimal treatment.  I'm not going to go into how this trend began and seems to have overtaken medical care in this country.  But I did want to warn you that if it hasn't happened to you already, it may very well happen to you in the future.  

So, if you don't mind, here are some survival tips to help you navigate the world of modern American medicine:
  • When making an appointment to see a doctor for the first time, make sure you specify that you do not want to seen and treated by either a PA or an NP but the doctor him or herself.  You always want to ask how much time the actual doctor will spend with you, discussing all the relevant problems you believe are important and which are controlling your life. 
  • In most states PA's and NP's need to be supervised by real doctors.  All too often this does not happen in the strictest sense so make sure you have sufficient face time with the actual doctor to insure that your problems are considered seriously and appropriate treatment is initiated.  You need to see the doctor each and every time. We are just too complicated.  Our conditions are in a constant state of flux and the doctor needs to be aware of our condition at each visit.
  • Remember, you and your insurance company are being billed for a doctor visit.  If you do not spend sufficient time with the doctor you are being cheated and your insurance company is being defrauded.

This is very strong language but it is what it is.  Sometimes the truth really hurts. However, this is not the time to be squeamish or excessively polite.  There is simply too much at stake.  

The medications which are commonly used to treat our problems are difficult to prescribe in the first place. Furthermore, they can have numerous, as well as serious, side effects which PA's and NP's are simply not qualified to treat, nor do they have the depth of experience and training to recognize and appreciate many of these problems.  

This evening, I was watching TV with hubs when two commercials for "brain" meds touted their effectiveness during the evening news half hour.  I think you'd have to be living under a rock if you've not seen these commercials.  They mentioned such horrible side effects (at incredible speed) as suicidal ideation and suicidal actions as well as some disturbing side effects, such as weight gain, swelling of the extremities.  Well, the side effects are so numerous that it might be easier to add from Lyrica's website just some of the admitted side effects and I quote:
"These changes may include new or worsening depression, anxiety, restlessness, trouble sleeping, panic attacks, anger, irritability, agitation, aggression, dangerous impulses or violence, or extreme increases in activity or talking.  If you have suicidal thoughts or actions, do not stop LYRICA without first talking to your doctor."  -from Lyrica.com
We don't expect flight attendants to pilot a plane do we?  Do you honestly think PA's and NP's are prepared for incredibly complicated patients who are taking some mighty tricky medications?  I just "loved" it when the "real" person in the commercial was described as having gone to a "medical professional" (code for PA's and NP's) yet when it came to having these dangerous side effects we were told to go to a doctor!  Yes, a doctor we may not have seen in the first place?  

Don't be fooled, get real medical advice from a doctor and settle for no less. 

As always, I hope everyone's doing their very best, only better.  Ciao and paka.


(Did you enjoy this post?  Please subscribe to my blog and you'll never miss another one again. It's easy: see the directions on the right hand corner of this page. And BTW: I'll never sell, share or rent your contact information.  I don't even know where to find it, so it's a firm promise!) 


Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Medicine Is an Art, Not a Code Number...

I just need a few tulips in my life today...

I've had a more than a few cruddy days now and am, quite frankly, just trying to hold it together.  I had another appointment with my long-suffering GP the other day and that's always extremely taxing.  I'm not going to give you all the complaints about the stuff going on around me and in me, but did want to write a post, so I'll try to be inspiring even though I'm not feeling too awfully inspired today.  Sorry if I'm not up to par.  Hope you understand. But I think what I have to say is good to keep in mind, even if it is obvious to many.  It's always nice, I find, to have someone confirm what I suspect or think.  Validation is so sweet, no?


Today I'm going to dispense some advice about any doctors whom you might see, especially those that are consultants.  These are the doctors whom you may see once or only once in a while.  They are the specialists in their given fields and all too often we are apt to take everything they say as gospel, especially since we have done a lot of research into finding that doctor, have often traveled long distances to see that doctor, have invested quite a few bucks into the venture, not to mention a lot of "health credits."   And let's face it, we're tired and exhausted and in pain and no matter how much we tell ourselves we will NOT get up any hopes about finding the magic bullet during this appointment, realistically, we do get our hopes up, no matter what.


I've been to more specialists than I can ever remember, from large medical centers to small places.  Some have been great, others have been much worse than any charlatan I might have found if I'd looked for one deliberately. Some were ignorant, some were brilliant.  Some were idiots, others were geniuses.   


However, no matter what category of doctor you may be seeing, one piece of advice I would like to put out there is about medications your doctors prescribe for you.  Everything you ever take should be reviewed, but especially medications the specialists give you.  Oftentimes they are not aware of every aspect of your history, be it because you did not mention what seems to be an unimportant minor tidbit or because they didn't factor something into the equation, and so you need to know everything about the drug before taking it.  


Before I go any further, I want to say that "poop happens."  (I'm trying to keep it clean here, people!)  My daughter was prescribed a medication for which she was even given a trial test before they put her on said medication to make sure she was safe with it.  She took a very low dose of the medication and after only two doses she developed pancreatitis and almost died, all within two days.  We aren't about to blame any of her doctors.  In this case, everyone was on top of everything and she happened to be the one in a million that this could happen to. Actually, no one had seen anything like this before, certainly not at her dosage and for the small amount of time she'd been on it.


On the other hand, there are the times where you see a doctor and he is either just not on the ball or somehow no one is on the same page, but you simply don't realize it.  


One sleep specialist put me on a medication that sounded so good in theory.  But two months later I realized that I was experiencing yet another kind of headache in the midst of all the headaches I have going on all the time.  Two months!  How stupid am I?  When I mentioned it to hubby - not even realizing I was complaining, just my mouth talking! - he looked up the contraindications for the medication and MIGRAINE sufferers were not supposed to ever go on this medication.  So from now on, I check on every medication. Migraines are a huge part of my history...I've even had those lumbar punctures, remember?


Medicine is not a science, it's an art.  An awful lot of doctors whom I respect an awful lot have said this over and over to me.  The best doctors, I am sure, feel things instinctively.  And don't laugh at that.  If you're a mom, you know that there have been times when you just knew instinctively that something was wrong or up.  If you're anyone at all, you know that there have been times when the hairs on the back of your head have stood up.  That's instinct.


There is a reason you are a "patient."  You need to be patient, to practice "patience," not to be too obvious here.  But there is also a reason that it is the "practice" of medicine and that a physician has a "practice."  


Hopefully, my next installment will be a bit more inspired!