Guest guest Posted March 8, 2004 Report Share Posted March 8, 2004 Hi , When we decided to explore the keto diet as treatment for our daughter's seizures, I read Dr. Freeman's book and lots of other information about using the diet alone as well as with meds. I was convinced that it made sense to us to try it without meds. We met with 3 keto teams and found that two of them were not in favor of reducing meds until some improvement in seizure control was achieved. I learned that even s-Hopkins doesn't usually wean meds until the diet is " in place " and a good degree of improvement in seizure frequency is achieved. This was very disheartening, but we decided to talk to the third keto team anyway, and see if we could convince them to let us try the diet without meds. Lo and behold, that is generally their recommendation, too. They feel very strongly that the only way to know if the diet will work is to not have any interference from drugs. They asked us to commit to at least 3 months, preferably 6 mo. to allow for fine tuning. We had been messing with meds for almost a year, so we were happy to agree to that. Truly, we couldn't image that things could get any worse. Besides, with all the other variables in the diet... ratio, calories, protein, etc... how would we know if our best efforts at fine tuning were bein sabotaged by drugs on board? The drugs had not been our allies before. Why would we that to change if the diet was added to them? We stopped Depakote after 12 hours of ketosis in the hospital at initiation. Our daughter was one of the lucky ones who had seizure control immediately and permanently... so far. Obviously, because of our experience I believe that getting rid of the meds. is step #1. I think your toleration for seizures fits in there, too. I don't think there is the same " right " answer for everyone but I will say this... our team told us that their success rate was about the same as reported by Hopkins and others who do the diet... 1/3 greatly improved, 1/3 improved enough to stick with the diet, and 1/3 not helped enough to stick with it. However, our success along with many other success stories our team has told us anecdotally with no statistics attached, it surely SEEMS like their success rate is higher than they report. Cammie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 9, 2004 Report Share Posted March 9, 2004 Thanks for the responses. First, I wanted to clarify that all changes have been made one at a time and waiting two weeks to report back in with what had been going on. She had been sick twice in the first month and most of those seizures were explainable by illness. Thats when we began having problems being 80 - 160 with Ketones. Secondly, we initiated at Hopkins. I am just looking for others experiences. My dream, like everyones is seizure free and med free. I will hold to it. My gut tells me the meds have only made her worse, new seizures with more frequency ove the past year. My biggest lesson is patience with the slow changes, which I do unerstand why and think it is important, just hard to watch this sweet child go through this, seems so unfair to her. > Hi may name is and my daughter, (4), started the > diet in January. I've been reading here since August knowing > that this was the path we were on. She has improved greatly > on the diet and know that it is doing something. She is still > having seizures . We have changed from 3:1 to 4:1 and now > we just dropped 120 calories. She has grown 1 1/8 inch and her > weight is still above norm (she should be at 36 lbs according to > charts). They dropped her Phenobarbital by a little more than half > at initiaion and left the Lamictal were it was. (32.4 mg for P and > 125x's 3 for L). > > With all of that here is my question - Is it more important to get > rid of meds and then fine tune or vice a versa? I'm sure there is > not an easy answer to this question. Just looking for advice. I > am not willing to give up - feel as though we really won't know > how well it works until off all meds! > > TIA for any info, it really means alot to me to be able to read here! > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 9, 2004 Report Share Posted March 9, 2004 Thanks for the responses. First, I wanted to clarify that all changes have been made one at a time and waiting two weeks to report back in with what had been going on. She had been sick twice in the first month and most of those seizures were explainable by illness. Thats when we began having problems being 80 - 160 with Ketones. Secondly, we initiated at Hopkins. I am just looking for others experiences. My dream, like everyones is seizure free and med free. I will hold to it. My gut tells me the meds have only made her worse, new seizures with more frequency ove the past year. My biggest lesson is patience with the slow changes, which I do unerstand why and think it is important, just hard to watch this sweet child go through this, seems so unfair to her. > Hi may name is and my daughter, (4), started the > diet in January. I've been reading here since August knowing > that this was the path we were on. She has improved greatly > on the diet and know that it is doing something. She is still > having seizures . We have changed from 3:1 to 4:1 and now > we just dropped 120 calories. She has grown 1 1/8 inch and her > weight is still above norm (she should be at 36 lbs according to > charts). They dropped her Phenobarbital by a little more than half > at initiaion and left the Lamictal were it was. (32.4 mg for P and > 125x's 3 for L). > > With all of that here is my question - Is it more important to get > rid of meds and then fine tune or vice a versa? I'm sure there is > not an easy answer to this question. Just looking for advice. I > am not willing to give up - feel as though we really won't know > how well it works until off all meds! > > TIA for any info, it really means alot to me to be able to read here! > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 9, 2004 Report Share Posted March 9, 2004 Thanks for the responses. First, I wanted to clarify that all changes have been made one at a time and waiting two weeks to report back in with what had been going on. She had been sick twice in the first month and most of those seizures were explainable by illness. Thats when we began having problems being 80 - 160 with Ketones. Secondly, we initiated at Hopkins. I am just looking for others experiences. My dream, like everyones is seizure free and med free. I will hold to it. My gut tells me the meds have only made her worse, new seizures with more frequency ove the past year. My biggest lesson is patience with the slow changes, which I do unerstand why and think it is important, just hard to watch this sweet child go through this, seems so unfair to her. > Hi may name is and my daughter, (4), started the > diet in January. I've been reading here since August knowing > that this was the path we were on. She has improved greatly > on the diet and know that it is doing something. She is still > having seizures . We have changed from 3:1 to 4:1 and now > we just dropped 120 calories. She has grown 1 1/8 inch and her > weight is still above norm (she should be at 36 lbs according to > charts). They dropped her Phenobarbital by a little more than half > at initiaion and left the Lamictal were it was. (32.4 mg for P and > 125x's 3 for L). > > With all of that here is my question - Is it more important to get > rid of meds and then fine tune or vice a versa? I'm sure there is > not an easy answer to this question. Just looking for advice. I > am not willing to give up - feel as though we really won't know > how well it works until off all meds! > > TIA for any info, it really means alot to me to be able to read here! > > 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.