Guest guest Posted March 23, 2005 Report Share Posted March 23, 2005 Hi ……..I became acutely ill 4 years ago. By acute, I mean literally, I was absolutely fine one day & unable to walk the next & this was at the ripe age of 41. Getting out of bed & getting dressed caused extreme pain. I knew I wasn’t dealing with the achiness of the regular flu. Every single joint in my body was about 10X it’s normal size and with every movement, there was so much crepitus, it could be heard across the room. I was in BAD shape. At first they thought I had parvo virus & then my ANA came back 1:320, a week later 1:640 and a week later too high to read. I was literally bed bound for nearly 5-6 months. Of course, mainstream’s answer was steroids and lots of them to the point where I was nearly induced into a psychotic state. I had no presence of mind how to advocate for myself. The only thing I knew to do was go to Mayo Clinic. I do give Mayo credit for diagnosing my Prednisone induced psychosis. THey also started me on a loading dose of HCQ at 800 mg per day. HCQ takes a very long time to reach therapeutic levels (some literature suggests up to 18 months) that they wanted to get me therapeutic as fast as possible. I did have baseline vision testing (as HCQ RARELY causes retinal toxicity) & all vision tests since then have been absolutely normal. In fact, it’s hard to find an Opthamologist less than 60 years old that has ever seen HCQ retinal associated toxicity b/c of them using hydroxycloroquine vs. cloroquine (much more likely to cause problems). Within several weeks, the pain became much more bearable. And with each passing month, it just got better and better. I eventually weaned from steroids all together without difficulty. Subsequent follow ups at Mayo have always been met with the advice of “whatever you do, don’t go off of the HCQ.” They claim that people start to feel so much better with the HCQ that they think they don’t need it anymore. Going off of it eventually throws them in the flare of their life. HCQ is considered an acceptable DMARD by the Rheumatologic people & they dish it out like candy. Ironically, they know it works, but I’m not sure many of them are scientifically curious enough to figure out why. They literally stumbled upon it by accident by military personnel reporting improvement in their rheumatologic conditions while on it. It also helps with energy. I was officially diagnosed with Mixed Connective Tissue disease at Mayo Clinic as evidenced by a very high ANA titer and an extractable nuclear antigen called anti RNP that is very specific for MCTD. MCTD was once thought of as a disease you got diagnosed with when something rheumatic was going on, but the doctors don’t know what. Now, they realize it is it’s own disease entity with very hallmark features. Mine are joint pain (although well controlled with HCQ), Raynauds (not well controlled) & unfortunately most people do develop complications of esophageal dysmotility issues and pulmonary fibrosis. It’s sometimes referred to as lupus/scleroderma overlap syndrome. While in my heart I feel like I’m accurately diagnosed, I am also working with a very progressive Infectious Dz. Dr. who is exploring every angle with me. My IGENEX test came back very strikingly positive with many positive bands strongly positive. However, it is my understanding that some of the rheumatological antibodies can cross react with these bands causing false positives. Barb, I’d be interested in your take on this. So, I am hitting this with a freight train by taking HCQ, Diflucan 200mg daily, Minocin 200 mg. daily AND Vantin twice daily. I figure if I’m going to herx, I might as well go full throttle ahead. So far, no herx. None to speak of anyway. Sometimes it’s hard to distinguish the disease from a “herx.” My ID Dr. is one of the ones experimenting with the Diflucan tx. for Lyme. Even though I’m not convinced I have Lyme, I figure that there probably is some sort of pathogen responsible for my illness & so I might benefit regardless of whether we’re targeting the right pathogen or not. I’m about day 32 or 33 into the Diflucan. My ID Dr. wants at least 2 months, probably more. It’s all a crap shoot I guess. I agree with Barb that you certainly should be working with a Dr. if you’re going to consider HCQ, but the way the Rheumatologists dispense it like candy, there’s enough data out there to substantiate that it’s pretty safe and effective therapy. I don’t ever intend on stopping it. From: Schaafsma [mailto:compucruz@...] Sent: Tuesday, March 22, 2005 4:59 PM infections Subject: [infections] HCQ Exeperiences - Patrice Thanks for that feedback, Patrice! When you get a chance, maybe you can tell us a little more specifically about how its been helpful. It would be great to hear from anyone on the list who's used this, with good, bad or indifferent results. Barb's posted quite a bit here, and in the first I & I, about HCQ potentiating antibiotics and now, more recently, Diflucan as well. I'm also interested in therapeutic effects of HCQ on inflammatory immune responses - it's a potent immune modulator and seems to help some patients in this respect as well. Cheers, > > I can't do it quickly- as other than my initial stint with Doxy, > it was combined with almost every thing I took (or was in my tissues > from preloading). > Barb > > > > > Barb, what is your opinion on how related HCQ is to quinolone antibiotics? I > am still really scared of HCQ, even though I let my son go on it with > Zithromax. I would like to do something similar myself, however I am one of > the ones who reacted badly to Samento in the tendons. I have never taken a > fluoroquinolone antibiotic, and probably never will. My son's LLMD and our > pharmacist told us that HCQ is quite different from the quinolone > antibiotics and doesn't have the same side effects, but I'm still worried > and watching my son carefully (making him nervous with inquisitions about > his reactions!). > > - Kate D. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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