Guest guest Posted March 12, 2003 Report Share Posted March 12, 2003 Dave, We had a very similar experience with the SSRI's. Kellen was the sweetest, most compliant kid ever and then with the introduction of Paxil he became hyper, aggressive and defiant and no longer the good sleeper he always was. It has been a LONG journey. We moved and I became pregnant during the start of this med and we thought all the change was the cause of all these new behaviors. We switched between paxil, celexa, and zoloft and nothing agreed with him! Long story short: We finally agreed to give Prozac a try and he has been doing remarkably better and we have been pleased to have NO signs of hyperness and he is sleeping much better than with any of the other SSRI'S. His OCD has decreased about 25% and he seems much HAPPIER!! We have just increased the dose (from 1 mg to 2mg) and he seems a bit spacier but has also come down with a fever so time will tell if it is the med or the fever!! Good luck and Hang in there! a Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 12, 2003 Report Share Posted March 12, 2003 Hi Dave, We didn't do well on Paxcil, especially when we increased the doseage. s sleep pattern has inproved overall since starting the protocol. We switched to Celexa about 2 months ago and we are seeing slow improvements. Just recently his sleeping pattern really improved. Down at 9 sharp and up at 7:30. This has happened on the tail end of his AIT. Attention experienced SSRI parents!!!!! Hi Folks, I¡¦d appreciate a little advice on finding the ¡§right¡¨ SSRI ¡K always a tricky subject. Here¡¦s our situation. My son started the protocol last July when he was three years and three months old. From August to December we saw major progress. At first it was in the areas of responsiveness and comprehension. Then it was imitation. And finally, speech in early December. Pretty much every week, there was something noticeably improved. Then in mid-December, started Paxil and immediately began to have sleep problems. He also had a lot of problems focussing on any one activity for very long and became tough to engage because he couldn¡¦t sit on one place for long. He was up every night, bouncing off the ceiling, often until 1 am. After seven weeks (far too long I think, but we were travelling some of that time and weren¡¦t sure of that influence) we stopped Paxil and switched to Celexa. He¡¦s been on that since Feb 1st. He¡¦s not as agitated, has an easier time sitting still but we still are not seeing the same kind of substantial progress each and every week like we were before we started the SSRI¡¦s. We know this could be coincidence or it might not be. now imitates a lot of words and uses some without any prompting. His eye contact is good and he follows along quite responsively most of the time, although seems a little foggy first thing in the morning. There are two areas, however, in which we feel he¡¦s regressed since December. One is his sleep which is still erratic. Most night¡¦s he won¡¦t go to bed before 10 pm ¡K although it seems more defiance and less agitation that is keeping him up since we started Celexa. Still, before SSRI¡¦s, was the PERFECT bedtime kid ¡K every night 7 pm to 7 am with virtually no exceptions. The other area, which concerns us more, is interactive play. A lot of activities which we used to share with : building with blocks, playing with a ball on the stairs, reading a book to him ¡Khe refuses to do anymore. Other activities, that are more high-tempo, he has a better time interacting with but, other than that, he seems to prefer to play alone. Unfortunately, during our recent consultation with Dr. Goldberg, we were not very clear about getting all of this across ¡K but didn¡¦t really realize it until after the call. (It's a good idea to write down notes before the call begins) He suggested we boost the Celexa a bit ¡K and if he doesn't respond well, then move on and try Zoloft. Sooooooooooooooo ¡K My questions to all of you who have been down this road are these: fÞ based on what I¡¦ve described, does it sound like Celexa might still be the right SSRI for if we just give it time?? fÞ Or should we be reading these as signs that it¡¦s not the right one and move on to Zoloft??? fÞ Are there any of you that never did find the right SSRI and just went on without one ¡K this has popped into my mind because was still making great progress before we started SSRI¡¦s and has slowed since they began??? Any and all advice is appreciated. Dave Responsibility for the content of this message lies strictly with the original author, and is not necessarily endorsed by or the opinion of the Research Institute. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 12, 2003 Report Share Posted March 12, 2003 Dave, Having just been through a rough last few months I can tell you that if your child indeed needs an SSRI, until the " RIGHT " SSRI is at the " RIGHT " dose, you may well be frustrated. In the recent course of switching SSRIs (from Celexa to Zoloft), we went through a period of anxiety (dose too low), then " OK " (dose just right), then to a rotten week of " bizarre " behaviors (dose too high) before backing down to the proper dose. Now we see a balance that is looking good. It was not fun getting to this point but it has been worth it. We are blessed that we do not have the going to sleep problem... we have the opposite... ours has a really hard waking up. The other thing to realize is that there are multiple underlying issues in many of our kids. We have had a struggle with focus since last fall where our child (who had been doing gloriously under Dr. Goldberg's care) didn't seem to have the focus he had been enjoying since starting Nizoral. I thought that maybe the Nizoral was losing its effectiveness due to a resistant strain of yeast. We were also at the point where it was time to change anti-fungals anyway. We communicated our concerns to Dr. Goldberg and he did change antifungals (to Nystantin, then Diflucan), but we were very confused because we were seeing some good things mixed with bad. At that point we had our most frustrating phone consult ever, with us trying to give Dr. Goldberg something to go on but feeling lost at the same time. Dr. Goldberg ended up stopping the antifungals just in case they were throwing our son off in some way. Dr. Goldberg had been following our son's strep antibodies for months and we knew there was a possibility that there was a " PANDAS " issue going on. He prescribed an antibiotic and our son started vomiting, but even through the vomiting we could see that he was a little brighter. Dr. Goldberg switched him to a different form of the antibiotic and he felt better, and when he returned to school, his teacher called me at home in the middle of the day to say she couldn't believe the change in his focus. She was thrilled.... but we weren't out of the water yet. Now we are seeing a more focused child, but he is not where he was a year ago. We are about to start back in on antifungals and I think there is a good chance that this time they will help a lot since the issue is not being clouded by underlying infection. I know this is wordy but I hope that you see my point that this is a long, complex process. It is unfortunate but the only way we can figure out if many of these meds will help our kids is by giving them a trial. That is why we need the new immune modulators. Dr. Goldberg told me once that on average it takes him two years to get a child's brain and body functioning the way he would like it to. Hang in there! I wouldn't have my child treated by anyone else. I have seen what Dr. Goldberg can do for my child and I am willing to stick it out... I know he will get him back to that point again (and beyond). Caroline Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 13, 2003 Report Share Posted March 13, 2003 Caroline, thanks for the post. Wow, it must be so hard to go forward and then go back. But it is great for those of us just starting to see a larger picture. Can't believe a year later he's still behind where he was. Is he performing better in other area than he was before, even though attention is off? Or do you kind of step back, treat an underlying issue and take what comes during that time, and then move forward? Re: Attention experienced SSRI parents!!!!! Dave, Having just been through a rough last few months I can tell you that if your child indeed needs an SSRI, until the " RIGHT " SSRI is at the " RIGHT " dose, you may well be frustrated. In the recent course of switching SSRIs (from Celexa to Zoloft), we went through a period of anxiety (dose too low), then " OK " (dose just right), then to a rotten week of " bizarre " behaviors (dose too high) before backing down to the proper dose. Now we see a balance that is looking good. It was not fun getting to this point but it has been worth it. We are blessed that we do not have the going to sleep problem... we have the opposite... ours has a really hard waking up. The other thing to realize is that there are multiple underlying issues in many of our kids. We have had a struggle with focus since last fall where our child (who had been doing gloriously under Dr. Goldberg's care) didn't seem to have the focus he had been enjoying since starting Nizoral. I thought that maybe the Nizoral was losing its effectiveness due to a resistant strain of yeast. We were also at the point where it was time to change anti-fungals anyway. We communicated our concerns to Dr. Goldberg and he did change antifungals (to Nystantin, then Diflucan), but we were very confused because we were seeing some good things mixed with bad. At that point we had our most frustrating phone consult ever, with us trying to give Dr. Goldberg something to go on but feeling lost at the same time. Dr. Goldberg ended up stopping the antifungals just in case they were throwing our son off in some way. Dr. Goldberg had been following our son's strep antibodies for months and we knew there was a possibility that there was a " PANDAS " issue going on. He prescribed an antibiotic and our son started vomiting, but even through the vomiting we could see that he was a little brighter. Dr. Goldberg switched him to a different form of the antibiotic and he felt better, and when he returned to school, his teacher called me at home in the middle of the day to say she couldn't believe the change in his focus. She was thrilled.... but we weren't out of the water yet. Now we are seeing a more focused child, but he is not where he was a year ago. We are about to start back in on antifungals and I think there is a good chance that this time they will help a lot since the issue is not being clouded by underlying infection. I know this is wordy but I hope that you see my point that this is a long, complex process. It is unfortunate but the only way we can figure out if many of these meds will help our kids is by giving them a trial. That is why we need the new immune modulators. Dr. Goldberg told me once that on average it takes him two years to get a child's brain and body functioning the way he would like it to. Hang in there! I wouldn't have my child treated by anyone else. I have seen what Dr. Goldberg can do for my child and I am willing to stick it out... I know he will get him back to that point again (and beyond). Caroline Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 2003 Report Share Posted March 14, 2003 , >Wow, it must be so hard to go forward and then go back It is frustrating to " go back " , but one thing I wish I had mentioned in my previous post is that my son has never regressed back past where he was when he first STARTED with Dr. Goldberg. It is hard to tell if he doing better in other areas because right now he can't keep his focus long enough to do much of anything. I believe that there is something holding him back and when we " hit " on it, we are going to see some excellent improvement. We have seen him doing much better than this before (under Dr. Goldberg's care) and we know that he has that capability. > Can't believe a year later he's still behind where he was. Is he performing > better in other area than he was before, even though attention is off? When we went through a " bump " changing SSRIs (Celexa to Zoloft), that was a rough time, but we are now probably better in that area now than we were with Celexa... conversation seems a little more " normal " and he is a little more able to get what he wants to say out. On Celexa, he would sometimes start a sentence over three or four times before he could finish it. It's hard to tell how he is doing with such poor focus right now, but we do think we see the above things. Last year he had strep right before his initial appointment with Dr. Goldberg and was on antibiotics then... that may be why he was doing better. He was on antibiotics again last winter for various issues, and each time he had a round of antibiotics, it probably knocked the underlying infection back a bit. Somewhere along in there, he gave us a clue by having of his best days ever right after starting an antibiotic (but he came down with a virus after starting the antibiotic, which muddied things). Then over the summer he was " healthy " (no antibiotics) and I think that gave the underlying infection a chance to take hold... we saw his focus slipping away but didn't know why. No other Dr. we know would have figured out the connection, but Dr. Goldberg carefully worked it out. It took a while, but we appreciate Dr. Goldberg's extreme care in changing variables slowly. One other thought... when we see a regression after stopping or changing a med, it is one way for us to tell that the meds really are helping and that our son's improvement cannot just be chalked up to maturity. It isn't fun, but it has given us confidence that we are on the right path. > ... it is great for those of us just starting to see a larger picture. Thanks... I have learned so much from this group that I wonder sometimes how the patients' parents cope who are not members. It helps me immensely to know what others have been through. Our kids are very different but there are a lot of us and we can often get answers here. It has helped me to get a grip on what we are trying to accomplish with our child. We have to keep the " big " picture in mind. > do you kind of step back, treat an underlying issue and take what comes during > that time, and then move forward? I think the way we have done it is to work with Dr. Goldberg in going after the symptom which is most obvious or problematic at that time. Clues from our son's lab work have been crucial in deciding his path of treatment. In our phone consults, we try to be very clear about what the present struggles are and prioritize them. Our son was having focus problems, but when he was spending class periods crawling under a table and refusing to come out and screaming and crying every day, the focus took a back seat (he wasn't getting any schoolwork done anyway). The first two problems were more likely to be solved by getting the SSRI under control (and we hoped we were part way there), so we got that straightened out first. Now that he has come out from under the table, and the anxiety has reduced dramatically, we'll work on the focus. We had a great phone consultation with Dr. G last night and will be re-trying the antifungal and starting Kutapressin very soon. I feel enthusiastic about where we are headed. It is hard to be patient but we just keep thinking about the long-term goal. Best of luck to you. Caroline Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 2003 Report Share Posted March 14, 2003 Caroline, Thank you for taking the time with such a detailed reply. I am getting ready to broach the whole idea to my husband and this post has a lot of good info in it. Yes, think you are right. No other doctor would have taken the time to figure out what was going on with your son's focus and determine that there was an underlying infection. My husband and I had an argument just this morning because I said our peditrician doesn't care. He said she does. Well, ok, yes, if our son has an ear infection. Beyond that, no. She told me she doesn't even think she can support and that yeast treatment is very " fringe. " She can just write it off because it is not her 7 yr. old son or her 9 yr. old daughter. Anyway, sorry to vent, but I am very anxious for our May appt. so someone will finally take a look at what is going on with my child. He has been diagnosed autistic, and he is not, it is something else, and all the " professionals " just think I'm crazy. I hope that after May I will no longer be crazy. Re: Attention experienced SSRI parents!!!!! , >Wow, it must be so hard to go forward and then go back It is frustrating to " go back " , but one thing I wish I had mentioned in my previous post is that my son has never regressed back past where he was when he first STARTED with Dr. Goldberg. It is hard to tell if he doing better in other areas because right now he can't keep his focus long enough to do much of anything. I believe that there is something holding him back and when we " hit " on it, we are going to see some excellent improvement. We have seen him doing much better than this before (under Dr. Goldberg's care) and we know that he has that capability. > Can't believe a year later he's still behind where he was. Is he performing > better in other area than he was before, even though attention is off? When we went through a " bump " changing SSRIs (Celexa to Zoloft), that was a rough time, but we are now probably better in that area now than we were with Celexa... conversation seems a little more " normal " and he is a little more able to get what he wants to say out. On Celexa, he would sometimes start a sentence over three or four times before he could finish it. It's hard to tell how he is doing with such poor focus right now, but we do think we see the above things. Last year he had strep right before his initial appointment with Dr. Goldberg and was on antibiotics then... that may be why he was doing better. He was on antibiotics again last winter for various issues, and each time he had a round of antibiotics, it probably knocked the underlying infection back a bit. Somewhere along in there, he gave us a clue by having of his best days ever right after starting an antibiotic (but he came down with a virus after starting the antibiotic, which muddied things). Then over the summer he was " healthy " (no antibiotics) and I think that gave the underlying infection a chance to take hold... we saw his focus slipping away but didn't know why. No other Dr. we know would have figured out the connection, but Dr. Goldberg carefully worked it out. It took a while, but we appreciate Dr. Goldberg's extreme care in changing variables slowly. One other thought... when we see a regression after stopping or changing a med, it is one way for us to tell that the meds really are helping and that our son's improvement cannot just be chalked up to maturity. It isn't fun, but it has given us confidence that we are on the right path. > ... it is great for those of us just starting to see a larger picture. Thanks... I have learned so much from this group that I wonder sometimes how the patients' parents cope who are not members. It helps me immensely to know what others have been through. Our kids are very different but there are a lot of us and we can often get answers here. It has helped me to get a grip on what we are trying to accomplish with our child. We have to keep the " big " picture in mind. > do you kind of step back, treat an underlying issue and take what comes during > that time, and then move forward? I think the way we have done it is to work with Dr. Goldberg in going after the symptom which is most obvious or problematic at that time. Clues from our son's lab work have been crucial in deciding his path of treatment. In our phone consults, we try to be very clear about what the present struggles are and prioritize them. Our son was having focus problems, but when he was spending class periods crawling under a table and refusing to come out and screaming and crying every day, the focus took a back seat (he wasn't getting any schoolwork done anyway). The first two problems were more likely to be solved by getting the SSRI under control (and we hoped we were part way there), so we got that straightened out first. Now that he has come out from under the table, and the anxiety has reduced dramatically, we'll work on the focus. We had a great phone consultation with Dr. G last night and will be re-trying the antifungal and starting Kutapressin very soon. I feel enthusiastic about where we are headed. It is hard to be patient but we just keep thinking about the long-term goal. Best of luck to you. Caroline Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2003 Report Share Posted March 15, 2003 , Glad to be of some help. I was lucky in that our pediatrician already had a couple of other kids who were under Dr. Goldberg's care when we started the whole thing. He has been very supportive and we are grateful. He does not, however, attempt to treat any kids in his care. He just doesn't have enough information to go on. He watched the December videoconference and even looked things up on Dr. Goldberg's website. He said he can order the blood work but when it comes back he just doesn't know what to do with it. I can understand about broaching the subject with your husband. I talked about for months without my husband seeming to take much interest. I think he thought I was grasping at straws, but I kept asking around at different medical facilities and positive good reports about Dr. Goldberg. Finally, one day I got up the nerve to call Dr. Goldberg's office and ask for the paperwork to be sent for an appointment. I sat on that paperwork for several months stressing over it (I reorganized the whole medical history, indexed it according to tests run, chronologically, you name it!). I finally sent it in. When we got the call for the appointment I told my husband, and I think he still thought that it was months away and I'd get over it. About two weeks before the appointment he started reading the information I had compiled. At that point I think he got more curious and also gave up! After seeing our son's improvement, my husband is totally on board and more picky about the diet than I am! He never misses a phone consultation if he can help it and is in on every update. >I hope that after May I will no longer be crazy. I know that " crazy " feeling... for me it was stress over having the world on my shoulders. It has lifted a great burden from our lives to go from hopelessness to the possibility of a very bright future for our child. It also feels great to know that there is someone helping us to make sound medical decision about our child's care. I love knowing that Dr. Goldberg has a lot of absolutely top notch people advising him. You might want to call around and ask other pediatric practices in your area if any of the doctors there have kids seeing Dr. Goldberg. I am very surprised at the number going from this smallish town in Indiana (Kokomo). If your pediatrician could talk to another doctor who is " friendly " it might soothe her a little bit. Hang in there! Caroline > On 3/14/03 5:47 PM, " susan wald " <susanwald@...> wrote: > Caroline, > > Thank you for taking the time with such a detailed reply. I am getting ready > to broach the whole idea to my husband and this post has a lot of good > info in it. > > Yes, think you are right. No other doctor would have taken the time to figure > out what was going on with your son's focus and determine that there was an > underlying infection. My husband and I had an argument just this morning > because I said our peditrician doesn't care. He said she does. Well, ok, > yes, if our son has an ear infection. Beyond that, no. She told me she > doesn't even think she can support and that yeast treatment is very > " fringe. " She can just write it off because it is not her 7 yr. old son or > her 9 yr. old daughter. > > Anyway, sorry to vent, but I am very anxious for our May appt. so someone will > finally take a look at what is going on with my child. He has been diagnosed > autistic, and he is not, it is something else, and all the " professionals " > just think I'm crazy. I hope that after May I will no longer be crazy. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2003 Report Share Posted March 15, 2003 HI, I have been lurking for some time, rarely speaking, because I opted not to take the trip to cal. for my teenager who has a tic disorder. But , I did try to get the bloodwork done here in the ny area. However, my doctor sent me directly to a Quest lab. they said they couldnt do it! I want to know if anyone in the ny area knows of a lab or docotor who will do it? I am still interested to do testing, even if we dont opt for the protocol. thanks B lief Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2003 Report Share Posted March 15, 2003 new york area Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2003 Report Share Posted March 15, 2003 in elmsford they were totally unhelpful, never got back to me after telling me that they didnt think they could do these tests Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2003 Report Share Posted March 15, 2003 Hi, What area are you in? bonniedanphil@... wrote: HI, I have been lurking for some time, rarely speaking, because I opted not to take the trip to cal. for my teenager who has a tic disorder. But , I did try to get the bloodwork done here in the ny area. However, my doctor sent me directly to a Quest lab. they said they couldnt do it! I want to know if anyone in the ny area knows of a lab or docotor who will do it? I am still interested to do testing, even if we dont opt for the protocol. thanks B lief Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2003 Report Share Posted March 16, 2003 Hi I wonder if you could let me know, by email, who your doctor was- since mine sent me directly to this dumb lab(quest) where they were not helpful. thanks -Bonnie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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