Guest guest Posted February 19, 2005 Report Share Posted February 19, 2005 HI Joan, I think that if your gut is telling you something that you should look into it and probably go with it. Have you been able to bring in an LBD brochure for the medios to look at? Courage joansteveh1 wrote: > > Two weeks ago my mothers seroquel was increased from 37.5-75mg > (nightly dose). After 10 days a morning dose of Celexa 20mg was > added. Did not question psychiatrist about adding new drug so soon > after increasing seroquel- now I am. My mother has been > acting " random " at times, not the usual behavior we are accustomed to > seeing. Last night she was really " off " , conversation all over the > place. The nurse tried to get in touch with the DR. but no returned > call, so I told the nurse no Celexa this am until we talk with him. > i know medication can do a job on people- my mother had an adverse > reaction to Zyprexa after just a few dosages- which at the time, the > staff said " oh no, the medicine could not react so quickly " well we > all know that the neuroleptic meds are brutal to a Lewy person. > Seroquel is considered an typical neuroleptic, have had okay results > when she was on 37.5, could 75 be too much, everyone is different I > know that. But I am also annoyed that my observations of my mother > are often poohooed. The one thing I know, is that I know more about > Lewy Body D than many in the medical or I should say > Alzheimer/dementia care world. It's one thing to help level the > paranoia that my mother has, but not to contribute to it. Any > comments welcome. I read in other posts that Seroquel helped some, > and not others. I really think i need to trust my gut instinct and > take her off the Celexa (for depression) and go back to the 37.5. > After rereading lots of info on Lewy, I wonder if it is best to just > let the disease run its course. The reason we had increased my > mothers seroquel was because she was becoming more verbal with her > sexual stories and were afraid that she would scare off the friends > that she has made. Enough babbling, I'm off to the pharmacy to talk > with the pharmacist about drug interactions. > > > > > > Welcome to LBDcaregivers. > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------- > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 19, 2005 Report Share Posted February 19, 2005 joan, go with your gut feeling, lbd patient have a hard time with almost any medication, andone thing our neuro said here was slow slow slow, he had to add and change things very slowly and give dad a chance to 'get used ' to the medicine changes. as far the medical world, one hting i miss here versus in tennessee at vanderbilt univ. med center is thta there the doctos value my input about my own case, they thrive on knowing how i feel, what i think but here i am suppose dto value their opinions but to them i am just wasting there time, they do not seem eager to learn from me. they already know it all, so i ndertan your feeelings about teaching the medical system anything new. sigh, maybe some day. hugx sharon Date: 2005/02/18 Fri AM 09:16:36 EST To: LBDcaregivers Subject: increase in seroquel Two weeks ago my mothers seroquel was increased from 37.5-75mg (nightly dose). After 10 days a morning dose of Celexa 20mg was added. Did not question psychiatrist about adding new drug so soon after increasing seroquel- now I am. My mother has been acting " random " at times, not the usual behavior we are accustomed to seeing. Last night she was really " off " , conversation all over the place. The nurse tried to get in touch with the DR. but no returned call, so I told the nurse no Celexa this am until we talk with him. i know medication can do a job on people- my mother had an adverse reaction to Zyprexa after just a few dosages- which at the time, the staff said " oh no, the medicine could not react so quickly " well we all know that the neuroleptic meds are brutal to a Lewy person. Seroquel is considered an typical neuroleptic, have had okay results when she was on 37.5, could 75 be too much, everyone is different I know that. But I am also annoyed that my observations of my mother are often poohooed. The one thing I know, is that I know more about Lewy Body D than many in the medical or I should say Alzheimer/dementia care world. It's one thing to help level the paranoia that my mother has, but not to contribute to it. Any comments welcome. I read in other posts that Seroquel helped some, and not others. I really think i need to trust my gut instinct and take her off the Celexa (for depression) and go back to the 37.5. After rereading lots of info on Lewy, I wonder if it is best to just let the disease run its course. The reason we had increased my mothers seroquel was because she was becoming more verbal with her sexual stories and were afraid that she would scare off the friends that she has made. Enough babbling, I'm off to the pharmacy to talk with the pharmacist about drug interactions. Welcome to LBDcaregivers. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 19, 2005 Report Share Posted February 19, 2005 > >Two weeks ago my mothers seroquel was increased from 37.5-75mg >(nightly dose). After 10 days a morning dose of Celexa 20mg was >added. Did not question psychiatrist about adding new drug so soon >after increasing seroquel- now I am. It is always a good idea to question the wisdom of the medications. Medications were the cause of a huge decline in my mother. I joined the list this past December when my mother had ended up in the hospital in an unresponsive state. Her medication regimen began many years ago when she was being evaluated for dementia. Zoloft was started because the doctors thought she might get depressed. Then different brain chemical type drugs like exelon , aricept etc were tried and she continued on with the aricept, eventually they also added reminyl. She had significant hallucinations in the middle of this and antipsychotics were added when they became scary and elaborate. She didn't tolerate these well after a while but they remained and eventually a study drug was also added by the Memory Clinic. Then she started not sleeping and falling. A psychiatrist was called in. Lots of frequent changes were made on a weekly basis. It all kept getting worse and then she crashed. She was in the hospital for 4 days and then the nursing home for 4 weeks. The first nine days she received only IV fluids and no food because she couldnt wake up. Now she is the best she has been in a long time and is only taking reminyl. She can walk independently without falling and her sleep is great (although borderline - I think that problem is going to reappear). She hallucinates but very manageable non distressing stuff. Because of this her diagnosis has been changed from Alzheimers to Lewy Body. Any way my point is, that over time the medications that my mom was taking became unimportant to her well being and harmful to her as well. She was having side effects or effects of the meds interacting. Looking back I wish I had insisted that medication changes were made much more slowly and conservatively by the psychiatrist. But really the decline actually benefited her in the long run because she got off everything but the reminyl. Best wishes to all Deb Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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