Guest guest Posted July 19, 2005 Report Share Posted July 19, 2005 Start with 9 mg nightly. Check levels in 2 weeks and adjust accordingly. Best guess says that is about where he will end up. Bruce Guilmette, Ph.D. Survive Cancer Foundation, Inc. http://www.survivecancer.net From: low dose naltrexone [mailto:low dose naltrexone ] On Behalf Of Kathie ArnoldSent: Tuesday, July 19, 2005 5:04 PMlow dose naltrexone Subject: Re: [low dose naltrexone] Re: Melatonin & Parkinson's This discussion about melatonin is timely. We just had a phone check-in with our naturopathic physician today for my husband with Parkinsons. She had gotten back the results of a melatonin test on Rick and his level tested out at just under 7, when normal is 25 to 60. She is going to try and figure out the right melatonin supplementation for his situation. Research on PubMed shows a relationship between melatonin and Parkinsons. If anyone has any related suggestions / info, I'd appreciate hearing them. Kathie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 20, 2005 Report Share Posted July 20, 2005 Dr. Guilmette, Good morning. To start I am 53 year of age and have been diagnosed with " MS " since April of '02. I recently noticed in another e-mail that a " MS " patient had the situation of generally not being able to go to sleep till around 2AM. I have the same situation, however, as I have always been a night person the late nights are not a big problem for me. I am curious about this and am wondering if many " MS " patients have this late night internal clock and if so is it maybe significant. Any thoughts on this? Thank you and have a good day, Mike Stuckey Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 20, 2005 Report Share Posted July 20, 2005 Until cancer hit, I never went to bed before midnight and never stayed in bed past 4 AM. Now I force myself to sleep more because the body needs to regenerate. When you sleep is probably not as important; but rather how much rest is the factor. Six hours is a minimum, 8 is better. So, the question arises, how much sleep, not when? Melatonin when used is also a cyclical thing (body clock issue). The pineal gland kicks in roughly at 3 in the morning, whether or not you are asleep. Same as the thymus does its thing between 2 and 4 in the morning, whether or not you are asleep. That is why it is important when you take these supplements because whether or not your body is at rest, your body clock still runs its maintenance cycles on time. If you are asleep, so much the better as more energy is devoted to rebuilding the house. If you are working or up for some other reason, than the cycle still happens, its just that your body fights for a share of the energy needed and so less rebuilding goes on than if you were asleep. Bruce Guilmette, Ph.D. Survive Cancer Foundation, Inc. http://www.survivecancer.net From: low dose naltrexone [mailto:low dose naltrexone ] On Behalf Of Stuckey Sent: Wednesday, July 20, 2005 1:41 PM low dose naltrexone Subject: Re: [low dose naltrexone] Re: Melatonin & Parkinson's Dr. Guilmette, Good morning. To start I am 53 year of age and have been diagnosed with " MS " since April of '02. I recently noticed in another e-mail that a " MS " patient had the situation of generally not being able to go to sleep till around 2AM. I have the same situation, however, as I have always been a night person the late nights are not a big problem for me. I am curious about this and am wondering if many " MS " patients have this late night internal clock and if so is it maybe significant. Any thoughts on this? Thank you and have a good day, Mike Stuckey 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.