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Valium and Fibromyalgia

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Joy, a long time ago Dr. Bill wrote a message about tricyclic

anti-depressants and Valium. Both help fibromyalgia pain. However, a lot of

Doctors have concerns about Valium. The other anti-anxiety drugs do help as

well, but of all of them, Valium is the most effective for Fibro pain.

However, I did try the tricyclics first and the reason I had to stop is

because they give me tachicardia. I think many people have stopped taking

tricyclics is because of the various side-effects, regardless whether they

are taking them for depression or for some other condition. ly, for me

Valium has been a blessing. Matt

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  • 2 weeks later...

Matt, I just saw your mail on Valium, and I just took some last night, and

it helped me a lot. I wonder what it is doing that the pain pills aren't? I

am going to see how I feel for a few more days then take another one, and see

if it has the same effect, then talk to my doc about it. Let me know what

you know about the difference between them are, ok? EFD Oregon

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EFD, as far as I know, Valium acts as anti-spasmatic - I don' t know if that

is a word, but it stops the process of small muscle spasms which some

scientists and doctors believe cause fibromyalgia. As Liz said, it isn't for

everybody. However, I get bad side effects from muscle relaxants and no

side-effects from Valium. I guess it just depends. Nor have I found it to

be addictive, I have been off it several times with no cravings for it

whatsoever. It does have a long half life and eventually you have to have

the doseage raised in order for it to remain effective, so as with anything,

there is a downside. I started at 5 mgs, I am now at 10, I think the

absolute highest is 50, but I am not sure. Also, valium makes the effects of

alcohol stronger. If you do drink, ask your Doctor about it if you have to

cut back or stop.

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I would be scared to take valium. I took a little bit for a while when my

first husband was sick with cancer and I was up in the hospital staying

with him. I was so stressed out. But i t was doing weird things to me.. I

was not thinking too straight---kinda starey eyed---taking a very low dose

too.. like 5 mg. One day I found myself wandering through the library

staring at the books and could'nt even think to pick one out. I kept

thinking, Yes these are books... nice... hmmm... So I quit the

valium...even though I didn't sleep as well. Before nothing woke me up

except once when a nurse dropped a mental bedpan on the tile floor.. After

i quit tking valium i was awake for everything.

Liz

~~~~~~

" Do what you can, for who you can, with what you have, and where you are. "

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

EMAIL: juliette@... **ICQ 49746198** MSN-LizKP1952@...

PERSONAL HOMEPAGE PAGE http://members.tripod.com/~LizK

ADDult HOME PAGE: http://members.tripod.com/~LizK/addult.htm

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In a message dated 2/13/03 2:14:08 PM Eastern Standard Time, paco1@...

writes:

> They really believe that Valium can cause FMS

Dawn, I believe Matt said that some doctors feel that muscle spasms can cause

FMS...not that Valium can cause it. Valium sometimes is used for muscle

spasms. If Valium is used over an extented period of time...it should be

discontinued gradually or you may get withdrawal symptoms and even seizures.

Anyone who is taking Valium for long periods of time, be sure and have your

doctor follow you on a gradual withdrawal of the drug. Connie

<<Valium is used in the treatment of anxiety disorders and for short-term

relief of the symptoms of anxiety. It belongs to a class of drugs known as

benzodiazepines. It is also used to relieve the symptoms of acute alcohol

withdrawal, to relax muscles, to relieve the uncontrolled muscle movements

caused by cerebral palsy and paralysis of the lower body and limbs, to

control involuntary movement of the hands (athetosis), to relax tight, aching

muscles, and, along with other medications, to treat convulsive disorders

such as epilepsy.

Side effects due to rapid decrease in dose or abrupt withdrawal from Valium:

Abdominal and muscle cramps, convulsions, sweating, tremors, vomiting>>

http://www.healthsquare.com/newrx/VAL1473.HTM

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Valuim-

With its strong affinity for opiod binding receptors you don't feel the pain

and it may lessen muscles spasms as well as Matt said. However, for some

people it can be addicting and the literature indicates that.

<A

HREF= " http://www.addictionca.com/FAQ-valium.htm " >http://www.addictionca.com/FAQ-\

valium.htm</A>

Its like everything else addiction varies by person, but with a benzo you can

have addiction.

Regards,

Dave in NC

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<<but it stops the process of small muscle spasms which some scientists and

doctors believe cause fibromyalgia.>>

Hi Matt,

I was shocked to read this. They really believe that Valium can cause FMS?

Do you know what their reasoning is for this? This really interests me!

Thanks,

Dawn

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In a message dated 2/13/03 7:24:17 PM Eastern Standard Time, paco1@...

writes:

> I'm really not with it

Dawn, I don't think any of us are " with it " ...with all the meds we have to

take. It is a wonder that we get through the day. I wake up bright and alert,

but by 5:00 PM my mind just doesn't work anymore. Indocin fog, vicodin brain

freeze and old timers disease takes its toll. Almost all the meds we have to

take have these type of side effects. Add the stress that come with added

flares....and you wonder why we aren't in the nut house. Best regards, Connie

AS/IBD/Bilateral Uveitis

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I'm sorry, all, I'm really not with it, but I thought that is what Matt

wrote. Sorry about that. I do know about Valium as I've been on it...guess I

didn't read it correctly.

Dawn

<< Dawn, I believe Matt said that some doctors feel that muscle spasms can

cause FMS...not that Valium can cause it.>>

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Hi Connie,

What you have written is true, about not being with it, but I'm still having

a VERY hard time dealing with the death of my best friend.

I re-read what Matt wrote and I think what he meant was that the ~spasms~

cause the FMS, not the Valium. Matt, could you please explain? The more I

think of it, the more confused I'm getting! lol

Take care,

Dawn

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Hi Dawn, Valium has proved by several scientific studies to be an

anti-spasmodic and it is an effective pain reliever for FMS. I find it helps

me a lot and it is by far the best pain reliever for FMS that I have ever

tried. I take it with time-released morphine and for the first time in my

life my overall pain level has gone down instead of up. May God bless you

during this time and give you comfort over the loss of your best friend, in

Jesus' name. Matt

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