Guest guest Posted October 4, 2005 Report Share Posted October 4, 2005 Hi Your postings have been a daily source of encouragement and information for us. Thank you! My daughter had her first grand mal seizure when she turned 10 years old. After her second seizure, she was placed on Phenobarbital. However, when that proved to be too sedating, she was put on Tegretol, then Tegretol XR. She has complex partial seizures, which occur without an aura, approximately 4 times a year. Whenever she would have a seizure, the neurologist would up her dose of Tegretol XR until he " maxed out " on that drug and added Keppra to her regimine. Until I began reading your postings, it had not occurred to me to question his judgment. We changed neurologists recently. Although he asked what it was we were hoping to achieve, he completely ignored my daughter's statement that were hoping to reduce the amount of medicine so that she could be on a monotherapy once again. The only thing he would hear of was changing her dose of Tegretol XR to an equivalent dose of Carbatrol. S0, she is now taking 600 MG Carbatrol [(1) 300 mg. tablet twice a day] and 3000 mg Keppra [(3) 500 mg tablets twice a day]. She has taken to heart your suggestions on diet and vitamins, and now wants to take the next step of at least reducing her medications. But how is it possible to do this safely with these " extended release " medications? The tablets are prescribed in high dosages, so it's not as if we have the option of reducing her meds by 1 tablet a day, or of splitting the tablets. It's a " Catch-22 " – the more meds you take, the more you become dependent upon them, the harder and more dangerous it is to withdraw. What a mess! Any suggestions? We value all of your postings. Thank you all again. Judy Z Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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