Guest guest Posted April 13, 2004 Report Share Posted April 13, 2004 Yes, the benzodiazepines were the most obvious ones though - I could set my watch for the seizure after 's oral diazepam and keto lunch were given together. The very first day I split them up, we waited for the usual 1.32 pm one - and it didn't come! I had been researching back then about the rebound effect that can occur if benzodiazepines are given with a fatty meal (er - warning bells rang obviously considering a keto meal content....) - I had asked our hospital pharmacist to contact the author of a paper I had found where caution was mentioned if the 2 were given together (from a dentistry anaethetist journal paper - had recently been on a midaz infusion and I had been keying in various search words and that had come up). He managed to contact the anaethetist concerned, (no easy task as the search for him was from here in NZ all the way to the US) but he was unable to cite his original source, so we never managed to get a definite 'medical' answer as to why.... My theory was that all benzodiazepines are fat soluble, so when given with a lot of caloric fat content, there would be a big 'boost' of the med going through initially, meaning toxicity as the dose peaked, but also a lower than usual trough before the next dose was due, as the med had been more rapidly absorbed than it was supposed to be when given with fat. With a benzo, where it is especially important to keep the blood levels as even as possible due to the potential for toxicity and also inter-dose withdrawal seizures at the other end of the scale, this seemed to me like a dangerous mix. I emailed a lot of folk back then asking if this was a medical possibility, cos if so, then warning of this should be given to parents who were starting their kiddies on the diet with a benzo as part of their med cocktail, but I didn't get a definite affirmative reply from any of them. Quite a few 'yes it is possible, but there are no studies to back this up' blah blah type replies, which is what our pharmacist had initially answered as well. His advice to me in the end was to follow my own instinct and judge according to 's response - which I did, and it seemed to work for him. Remember though, that he was borderline toxic most of the time he was on these meds, they were just bad, bad AEDs for him fullstop. And any of the measures I took like changing the dose, times, etc only seemed to last for a short while, then back would come the wooziness, drooling, cloudiness, and eventually, the seizures. Hence the need in the end for the cold turkey removal of the benzos, it was almost like they had become an actual poison to him, and I couldn't keep one step ahead any more of the resultant toxicity The depakote when at a mediocre dose used to see a similar reaction (this is one that is stored in fat tissues as well) but more of the 'away, zoned' probably sub clinical stuff, not pushing him to an actual clinical seizure as regularly as the benzos did when given with keto food, more so when ketones were higher late aft/evening with this one, as opposed to the benzo/keto mix seizures which used to come regardless of his ketone level at the time. However, when 's depakote dose was boosted early last yr (bad move, should never have been done) to 800 mgs, so at a 'toxic' dose for him, he would have his morn dose at 9 am, drop attack would follow at 10.30 am - no variance really ever. One weekend we went away to a hotel and as happens when on hol, his depakote dose was late, by about half an hr - and instead of the 10.30 am drop attacks that had crept in since that depakote hike, the drop came at 11 am instead. Did this for 2 days in a row, same thing happened, moved the dose back to the original time - drop was at 10.30 am. When I showed our neuro my diary with that kind of irrefutable evidence, he agreed that we had to reduce, which we did, and those seizures went away too. Bascially - med toxicity is as far as I am concerned, is highly under-rated on the diet, be it from the med dose itself, from the combination of ketosis and the the med, or the timing of when each one is given, if a definite pattern of seizures arises that can tied onto meds or meals, I think you have to experiment a bit to make sure this is the cause then take action - either by reducing to a level that can be tolerated, splitting the meds and meals, etc etc. Time consuming and can be a long process, I used to write anything and everything down, even what he had been doing prior to a seizure, cos even a high level of activity in to my mind could have resulted in some body fat being burnt, stored benzo and depakote released from fatty tissues - toxic - seizure. Poss a bit single-minded, but that's me when it comes to what some of the drugs have (unfortunately found out in hindsight most of the time) done to him... ----- Original Message ----- > would you see seizures when giving medicine at the same time as a meal? several times i have given medicine then 30 minutes later a seizure. would this decrease if you spread out keto meal and meds? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 2004 Report Share Posted April 15, 2004 Keep in mind that 's reactions to these meds were pretty extreme though Donna, both to any of the benzos and also to the depakote - well when on doses above 500 mgs of this one anyhow... The splitting of the meals and meds is not something our hospital told us to do, and from what I can gather, no one else seems to have been told this either, but as long as it is not a med that 'needs' to be taken with meals (like for gastric upset reasons or somehting along those lines) I think it is worth trying, especially if you suspect a reaction after each med dose when given with a meal. ----- Original Message ----- > wow. i had no idea! thank you thank you for your long and very informative response!!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 2004 Report Share Posted April 15, 2004 Keep in mind that 's reactions to these meds were pretty extreme though Donna, both to any of the benzos and also to the depakote - well when on doses above 500 mgs of this one anyhow... The splitting of the meals and meds is not something our hospital told us to do, and from what I can gather, no one else seems to have been told this either, but as long as it is not a med that 'needs' to be taken with meals (like for gastric upset reasons or somehting along those lines) I think it is worth trying, especially if you suspect a reaction after each med dose when given with a meal. ----- Original Message ----- > wow. i had no idea! thank you thank you for your long and very informative response!!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 2004 Report Share Posted April 15, 2004 Keep in mind that 's reactions to these meds were pretty extreme though Donna, both to any of the benzos and also to the depakote - well when on doses above 500 mgs of this one anyhow... The splitting of the meals and meds is not something our hospital told us to do, and from what I can gather, no one else seems to have been told this either, but as long as it is not a med that 'needs' to be taken with meals (like for gastric upset reasons or somehting along those lines) I think it is worth trying, especially if you suspect a reaction after each med dose when given with a meal. ----- Original Message ----- > wow. i had no idea! thank you thank you for your long and very informative response!!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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