Guest guest Posted June 18, 2001 Report Share Posted June 18, 2001 Joyce, I was offered Provigil by a neurologist I had been seeing who is reads a lot but is in my book, drug happy. I didn't take it after reading up on it because drugs that give me false energy ( a term I use to mean energy like from strong coffee--uppers) inevitably either make me feel crazy or ultimately wear me out big time because I'm working on energy my basic metabolism, which is undone by this illness, cannot afford. Since some people on the list seem to be okay with it depending on your reactions to uppers (I think it can be considered that, frankly) you might want to try it. I wish I had more info on the " brain frying. " What specifically does Cheney mean? Why does he claim it? What evidence or basic science reasoning? It's obviously important yet hard to " carry " to other docs. And many ME/CFS patients are on SSRIs for depression, which untreated doesn't exactly help ME or any illness. What does Cheney do/recommend? Anyway, fry or no, re the brain I would be very cautious trying Provigil. I have heard of others (not on the list) who felt nuts from it or got overly fatigued ultimately. Judith W On Sat, 16 Jun 2001 22:01:43 -0500 " SIEVERLING " <lsieverl@...> writes: Provigil was one of the stimulants that Cheney lumped together with SSRI's when he was talking about drugs that may provide some benefit in the short run, but " fry your brain cells " over a period of years. See the article (Cheney on SSRI's & Stimulants: " Frying the Brain " ) in the Cheney section at www.virtualhometown.com/dfwcfids Take care. Carol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 18, 2001 Report Share Posted June 18, 2001 It doesn't work like uppers, such as ritalin, and dexadrine. It's totally different. It won't make you do too much and then get sicker. I take it.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 19, 2001 Report Share Posted June 19, 2001 And for what Dr, Cheney really recommends, be sure to look at the Klonopin section of the dfwcfids site, which is: http://virtualhometown.com/dfwcfids/medical/cheney.html The SSRI brain frying info is one of the Cheney topics here too, along with many others.. Mort Caldwell CFS since 1994 ---------- From: Judith F Wisdom[sMTP:judithwisdom@...] Reply Sent: Monday, June 18, 2001 4:28 AM Subject: Re: Provigil - Cheney says it " fries your brain " Joyce, I was offered Provigil by a neurologist I had been seeing who is reads a lot but is in my book, drug happy. I didn't take it after reading up on it because drugs that give me false energy ( a term I use to mean energy like from strong coffee--uppers) inevitably either make me feel crazy or ultimately wear me out big time because I'm working on energy my basic metabolism, which is undone by this illness, cannot afford. Since some people on the list seem to be okay with it depending on your reactions to uppers (I think it can be considered that, frankly) you might want to try it. I wish I had more info on the " brain frying. " What specifically does Cheney mean? Why does he claim it? What evidence or basic science reasoning? It's obviously important yet hard to " carry " to other docs. And many ME/CFS patients are on SSRIs for depression, which untreated doesn't exactly help ME or any illness. What does Cheney do/recommend? Anyway, fry or no, re the brain I would be very cautious trying Provigil. I have heard of others (not on the list) who felt nuts from it or got overly fatigued ultimately. Judith W On Sat, 16 Jun 2001 22:01:43 -0500 " SIEVERLING " <lsieverl@...> writes: Provigil was one of the stimulants that Cheney lumped together with SSRI's when he was talking about drugs that may provide some benefit in the short run, but " fry your brain cells " over a period of years. See the article (Cheney on SSRI's & Stimulants: " Frying the Brain " ) in the Cheney section at www.virtualhometown.com/dfwcfids Take care. Carol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 21, 2001 Report Share Posted June 21, 2001 Being someone who has enormous respect for Cheney and also having read the site you mention, I still feel there remains the question as to what reasons he has for saying it fries the brain and even what that term really means. Besides that, what he feels patients should substitute for SSRIs since so many of them are taking them and getting presumably some relief. Provigil I have reason from reading about it and hearing some stuff not to trust, but that's not as essential for the bulk of ME/CFS patients as are his comments about the SSRIs. Judith W On Tue, 19 Jun 2001 04:01:45 -0400 caldbio <caldbio@...> writes: And for what Dr, Cheney really recommends, be sure to look at the Klonopin section of the dfwcfids site, which is: http://virtualhometown.com/dfwcfids/medical/cheney.html The SSRI brain frying info is one of the Cheney topics here too, along with many others.. Mort Caldwell CFS since 1994 ---------- From: Judith F Wisdom[sMTP:judithwisdom@...] Reply Sent: Monday, June 18, 2001 4:28 AM Subject: Re: Provigil - Cheney says it " fries your brain " Joyce, I was offered Provigil by a neurologist I had been seeing who is reads a lot but is in my book, drug happy. I didn't take it after reading up on it because drugs that give me false energy ( a term I use to mean energy like from strong coffee--uppers) inevitably either make me feel crazy or ultimately wear me out big time because I'm working on energy my basic metabolism, which is undone by this illness, cannot afford. Since some people on the list seem to be okay with it depending on your reactions to uppers (I think it can be considered that, frankly) you might want to try it. I wish I had more info on the " brain frying. " What specifically does Cheney mean? Why does he claim it? What evidence or basic science reasoning? It's obviously important yet hard to " carry " to other docs. And many ME/CFS patients are on SSRIs for depression, which untreated doesn't exactly help ME or any illness. What does Cheney do/recommend? Anyway, fry or no, re the brain I would be very cautious trying Provigil. I have heard of others (not on the list) who felt nuts from it or got overly fatigued ultimately. Judith W On Sat, 16 Jun 2001 22:01:43 -0500 " SIEVERLING " <lsieverl@...> writes: Provigil was one of the stimulants that Cheney lumped together with SSRI's when he was talking about drugs that may provide some benefit in the short run, but " fry your brain cells " over a period of years. See the article (Cheney on SSRI's & Stimulants: " Frying the Brain " ) in the Cheney section at www.virtualhometown.com/dfwcfids Take care. Carol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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