Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

noncommunicative children

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

At 09:44 AM 2/14/01 +0000, you wrote:

The difficulty of living with her is

>pushing me over the edge. I'll probablyl have to start meds soon. Her

>therapist has suggested that we leave OCD management strictly up to

> unless she asks for help. It's hard for me to sit by and watch

>rituals and tics multiply, but I guess we've come to the point where

> either needs to learn to cooperate with us, or we need to learn to

>accept her oddness if it doesn't interfere with life outside the home.

>

>Can anyone else relate?

>Betsy in Wisconsin

Betsy -- I cried buckets when a dr first prescribed meds for one of my

kids. It seemed so extreme & such a last resort kind of thing. But I'm glad

we tried them. It arrested some behaviors that were over the top and gave

us a chance to get things under control. Now my son - who was on Anafranil

for a year and then Luvox for another year - is med-free and doing well

right now.

My daughter is currently on Luvox and Risperdal, and the Risperdal

especially has done wonders for her life, I think. I do worry about her

being on meds though. For instance, she had 4 wisdom teeth removed at one

time a couple months ago. We went into that knowing that sedation would not

be an option, because of the Risperdal. This time it wasn't necessary --

but what if she ever needs surgery? What will happen if she wants to have a

baby someday? She is 18 now, so I hope that decision will be a few years away.

But we have to take things one day at a time, and for today, the meds are a

good thing. I'm gonna let God take care of Later.

-- Vicki in Montana

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Vicki,

>>We went into that knowing that sedation would notbe an option, because of the Risperdal.<<

I didn't know this. Why would sedation not be possible?? What about the Risperdal makes this so??

My son in not on Risperdal but I always like to try to learn all I can now so I will be aware if I need to be later.

Are there any other meds that sedation can not be used with?

Thanks and take care,

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Tell me more about this..My son is on Resperdal, ritalin & prozac...Joy

Vince & wrote:

> Hi Vicki, >>We went into that knowing that sedation would not

> be an option, because of the Risperdal.<< I didn't know this. Why

> would sedation not be possible?? What about the Risperdal makes this

> so?? My son in not on Risperdal but I always like to try to learn all

> I can now so I will be aware if I need to be later. Are there any

> other meds that sedation can not be used with? Thanks and take

> care,

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Betty,

I thoroughly relate to what you are saying. We don't push to

share. When she is doing well, she sometimes shares on her own. I

guess we are fortunate in that seems to be willing to talk

openly with her therapist and psychiatrist.

I think we, too, have come to the conclusion that has to make

the decisions on how hard she will fight this. We continue to try to

provide a calm, supportive and non-judgmental home where she is free

to be herself, within normal guidelines of respect. Often that means

ignoring her when she is in one of her " owly " moods and not

pressuring her to talk unless she chooses.

As for " parent meds " , I'm in the group is on them (10 mg. Paxil

daily). And I sure don't know how I would be coping without. I need

that little bit of help to stay calm when I have so little control of

what goes on around me.

Greta in Oregon

> We're very proud of her. We're at a crossroads where she appears to

> function pretty well away from home, but miserably in our house. How

> hard should we push a child whose grades are excellent, makes

> friends easily, and participates successfully in afterschool

> events? Even for a normal child, this is pretty good. The

> difficulty of living with her is pushing me over the edge. I'll

> probably have to start meds soon. Her therapist has suggested that

> we leave OCD management strictly up to unless she asks for

> help. It's hard for me to sit by and watch rituals and tics

> multiply, but I guess we've come to the point where either

> needs to learn to cooperate with us, or we need to learn to accept

> her oddness if it doesn't interfere with life outside the home.

>

> Can anyone else relate?

>

> Betsy in Wisconsin

Link to comment
Share on other sites

-- I'm really not up to speed on these things, as I should be. All I

know is that I told the oral surgeon what meds Chrystal was taking, and he

looked it up. He said sedation shouldn't be used with the Risperdal -- but

I don't know how serious the risk is, or what the reaction might be. Maybe

there are other types of anesthesia that could be used that weren't

available in his office... I haven't studied it yet.

I am thinking I need to get her a MedicAlert bracelet. Do others of you

have them for your kids? -- Vicki in MT

At 01:02 PM 2/14/01 -0600, you wrote:

>Hi Vicki,

>

>>>We went into that knowing that sedation would not

>be an option, because of the Risperdal.<<

>

>I didn't know this. Why would sedation not be possible?? What about the

Risperdal makes this so??

>

>My son in not on Risperdal but I always like to try to learn all I can now

so I will be aware if I need to be later.

>

>Are there any other meds that sedation can not be used with?

>

>Thanks and take care,

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi

My son is on Luvox and Risperdal and is scheduled to have oral surgery next week

under sedation in a surgical center affiliated with Lutheran General Hospital (a

very BIG hospital and very well respected in our area). When I saw your post

about the inadvisability of sedation I called the pediatric dentist and asked

about the risk of risperdol and sedation. He had to call the medical director

of the surgical center and ask, but said that the medical director says sedation

of someone taking risperdol is OK in a hospital setting with an anesthesiologist

but is not O.K. in an oral surgeon's office or non hospital setting with just a

dental anesthesiologist present.

If anyone knows or learns anything to the contrary please let me know because my

son needs A LOT of baby teeth removed and the dentist would like to remove 4

impacted secondary teeth and we don't know how our 10 year old would get through

this without sedation.

Thanks

(NanF22@...)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Betsy:

OCD that is causing this level of disruption in the home is still at the

level of a disorder. When has done enough E & RP to be able to

function better at home, she will have reduced her OCD to a level where she

can function in all realms. Until then I disagree with the idea of just

letting her be. OCD is greedy and will not be satisfied by taking over

just at home but will encroach on school, social life, etc.

Your child is asking for help, just not in a way that is obvious to all. I

hope that Prozac will free up to get pants on more easily and boss

back at home. Home is where our beloved kids feel most at home, and the

more comfortable they feel, the more the OCD bosses them around.

As hard as it is learning how to function as a contributing family member

in spite of their OCD is a very important life lesson for our kids.

is doing very well functioning well in several arenas and cheering her on

for this will help her be encouraged to boss back at home too. Good luck,

take care, aloha, Kathy (h)

kathyh@...

At 09:44 AM 02/14/2001 +0000, you wrote:

>Greta,

>I can relate closely with what you're going through. My 12-year old

> shares almost nothing about her suffering. She won't open up to

>me, her dad, her therapist or her psychiatrist. We're encouraging her to

>keep a journal because she occasionally will write about her OCD.

> " Encouraging " however, is a euphemism for pressuring her under duress.

>We're at a difficult time right now where the rituals are multiplying

>rapidly and we don't know what obsessions are driving them. It takes her

>ten minutes to put on her underpants each morning. New tics have

>appeared. she's belligerent when we try to discuss this with her. We're

>in the process of switching meds from Paxil, which gave her diarrhea, to

>Prozac. But her dose isn't high enough yet to do much good. Like ,

> loves drama and she has a small part in her school's musical.

>We're very proud of her. We're at a crossroads where she appears to

>function pretty well away from home, but miserably in our house. How

>hard should we push a child whose grades are excellent, makes friends

>easily, and participates successfully in afterschool events? Even for a

>normal child, this is pretty good. The difficulty of living with her is

>pushing me over the edge. I'll probablyl have to start meds soon. Her

>therapist has suggested that we leave OCD management strictly up to

> unless she asks for help. It's hard for me to sit by and watch

>rituals and tics multiply, but I guess we've come to the point where

> either needs to learn to cooperate with us, or we need to learn to

>accept her oddness if it doesn't interfere with life outside the home.

>

>Can anyone else relate?

>Betsy in Wisconsin

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Kathy H , Lesli and Carolynn,

Thanks for your insight into 's problems at home. We've started

doing E & RP with her dressing and bedtime rituals. Next, we hope to

tackle her eating rituals. The threshhold rituals baffle me, though.

She's doing well, and she's earned a trip to the mall. We hope to

increase her dose of Prozac next week.

Betsy

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...