Guest guest Posted August 29, 2010 Report Share Posted August 29, 2010 #1 - Advice for anyone who is concerned about the manufacturer of their medication and whether it is has an FDA-approved equivalence evaluation. The US Food and Drug Administration ( " FDA " ) provides drug information, including equivalence evaluations, on its " Orange Book " website. You can search for a specific drug at this page: http://www.accessda ta.fda.gov/ scripts/cder/ ob/docs/queryai. cfm for Approved Drug Products with Therapeutic Equivalence Evaluations Active Ingredient Search Results #2 - Information from the PBC 2010 conference dietitian " -s, Registered Dietitian at the University of Texas Transplant Center in San , spoke on August 10th. sent me some information and asked me to share it with everyone: " We had a wonderful speaker today talking about hepatic encephalopathy (HE). It was with Dr. Guy Neff from Cincinnati, Ohio. During his presentation he made some interesting points: - He focused on the issue of muscle wasting and stressed not to limit protein intake. In my talk I discussed not limiting the amount of protein but rather the type of protein (i.e. fat). He said his center does not limit protein intake. The diet I provided is a good guideline but I would recommend aiming for the 80 grams rather than the 40 grams if it's tolerated. - To aid in reducing encephalopathy he reminds us that muscles also metabolize ammonia. That physical exercise will reduce ammonia and reduce fatigue and provide a better candidate for transplant. I stated that muscle and strength development was critical with PBC. It is worth fighting through the fatigue if the person is able. And anything is better than nothing. - He also said that studies show a HE patient is more at risk for lower metabolism and muscle wasting via the starvation-cycle. Normal livers activate the starvation cycle (where the body turns to muscle for energy) at about 72 hours but HE patients will turn at 18-24 hours. This makes eating small frequent meals important so that the body doesn't try to use the muscles. He says he recommends a can of Ensure or other protein rich nutritional supplement before bed every night so not to trigger the starve state during the evening. This is new information for me but it makes absolute sense and works the same for diabetics. So I think a protein type snack or supplement would be ideal before bed. - And lastly he was talking about future research studies looking into adding a topical testosterone for HE patients to improve the uptake of protein. Men metabolize protein better because they have a higher level of testosterone. Supplementing the testosterone might allow the body to absorb and utilize protein better. Again this is future research and NOT to be done now. I just wanted yall to keep an eye out for the studies. " KayK_TX, AIH/PBC Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.