Guest guest Posted December 31, 2004 Report Share Posted December 31, 2004 Judith, You asked: > What has been studied in children other than Prozac? The best resource is the child meds page on www.ocfoundation.org. It will give you the details of each med. Essentially, I believe it is Anafranil, Prozac, Paxil, Celexa, Luvox, Lexapro And Zoloft. Zoloft seems to be the first choice for many because of its effectiveness and reduced chances of bad side effects. In the ongoing saga... We gave our daughter some anti-bacterial hand lotions which will help her with her germ obessions, but will also do some good for her red chapped hands. We had hoped the lotion, as oppposed to the gels we had given to her before, would keep her from using it inappropriately, like in her hair and on her clothes, and on her mouth. Sad to say, she now smells like Wild Cherry all the time, and she said that the lotion won't stain the clothes, it just rubs in, and she doesn't eat it, she just puts it on her lips. Geeze, the desires are so strong they will find any way, no matter how illogical to try to tell their brains that they need that reassurance of being germ free. On meds, in therapy, and still looking forward to ANY sign of progress, FD > Is this customary dosage for depression? Because for OCD it is usually > prescribed in slightly higher dosages...also the variety my son is on is a long > acting one. I don't have the bottle, but now I am worried as he takes 1 1/2 > of the 25 mg. > > His new doctor isn't an OCD specialist...although he is a well respected > child psychiatrist. The OCD specialists seem to be trained in the meds, however > other psychiatrists do have knowledge and experience. I did speak to an OCD > specialist from UCLA, now in their own private practice, and she said Paxil > would not have been her first choice, but she has not met with my son, and > doesn't know about his anxiety. > The anxiety seems to be his greatest issue. It is sad that the brightest > kids are the ones who seem to have the learning disabilities and other anxiety > disorders. This is very true of my son. While he has never been thoroughly > tested as gifted, he was 'identified' as gifted by our school district when > he was in the 3rd grade. He has always done well enough in school, and > brilliantly in anything history or politically related. He is in honors and AP > classes in English, history, French. But he isn't doing well at all this year. > I don't think it is because the classes are more challenging, I think it is > because this drive for perfectionism just got the better of him. > > You are fortunate that your son is open with you. Do talk to him to see if > the OCD is getting in the way of the freedom he has when approaching his art. > It could be that this is a national contest, and so the stakes are higher, > and if he was only doing art for art's sake, it could be different. I have > to think that this is a mountain we didn't know was around the bend, and > somehow we will find a way around it. He may not go to college on schedule, he > may not head to the college of his choice in the beginning, he may live at home > or at our apartment in NYC...where my husband commutes from. It may just > have to be a different road, but my greatest hope is that the road will lead > him to his dreams, which is Washington, D.C., political activism, think tank, > history teacher, who knows. > > Now, I am wondering if the dose should not have been increased. We did it > at my suggestion, yet the doctor thought it was worth a try. From anything I > have seen he has not had any side effects. And I will not allow him to come > off quickly. You are right, though, the doctor probably has used this > successfully for depression in children and adults, and that's why he chose to use > it. I will give him a call. Neurotic, me????? > YES! What has been studied in children other than Prozac???? > > Judith > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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