Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 On October 24th, my family became a part of this extended family as our almost 3 year old son had a seizure for the first time. After being checked out in the ER, they diagnosed him with Febrile Seizures and sent us home. We followed up the next day with his primary pediatrician who suggested we have an EEG as he felt his temperature wasn't high enough to have caused the seizure. The EEG was preformed the next day and showed to be normal. So we took a deep breath and got back to our normal routine. That following weekend, our son had 3 additional seizures and we entered the hospital Halloween. Our son was started on an IV of Dilatin, but it showed no real progress. Our local doctors were coordinating our son's treatment with the pediatric nuerologist we later saw when transferred to his hospital on Tuesday. We preformed another EEG that was now showing seizure activity. We changed his medication to Depakote as that was seen as a more effective med for Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome. We went from a normal almost 3 year old to now a child that has been diagnosed with multi seizure disorder. There is no family history, no explanation, no early signs, etc. It was like he just woke up one morning and now he has it. We left the hospital after 1 week of evaluation and the generalized seizures were under control, but we were still having the stares, atonic and myclonic seizures. At our followup, we chose to switch to Zonagram and slowly wean our son off of the Depakote. Another 10 days went by and the seizure had stopped for almost one week when they started again over the Thanksgiving holiday. We had a checkup that Monday, and decided that the new med was also not showing any effectiveness just giving us a " honeymoon " period, so on Monday, Dec. 6th we entered the hospital again to begin our son on the KETOGENIC Diet. The diet has gone well so far, our son is taking to it. We completely stopped the Depokote on Monday and began to decrease the use of the Clorazapate, therefore our son seems to possibly be going through detox. He has the shakes now and is still having some drop seizure activities. He is not stable enough to rejoin his school because of fear he'll fall and bump his head. We've already lost a front tooth to one of the seizures he had in the hospital. He was sitting in a chair and fell over and hit his tooth on the wooden arm. I was reading some of the archives and wanted to visit with anyone whose on the diet? How long before you saw noticable results from it? Anyone that has a child with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome? What should we expect? Has tried the chiropractic treatments. We've had 2 different people mention this to us but haven't been provided anything from our medical doctors on it. Where did you find the informaiton on the treatment? Is it hard to find a special pediatric chiropracter that does this type of treatment? Thanks, JANA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 Jana, First welcome to the family. We started having seizures at 4 months of age. One one day, one a few days later and then a full blown seizure at the hospital and then they started coming full swing, up to a hundred and fifty a day. We spent four months in the hospital trying to get them undercontrol and at first were on 12 meds. We tried the diet but did not make much progress and were loosing weight and not growing. We got off the diet and are currently on Trileptal and Lamictal. We have finally gotten better seizure control and finally gainign weight and growing. We have no diagnosis and they can not tell us why she has seizures and what is causing them. We do not even know exactly what kind of seizures she is having. She had never ran a fever until after she started having seizures. So many questions and no answers. Ill try to help where I can. Kristi Mann (mom to Wyaema 26 months, Keto Kid March to December 2003) ===== Kristi Mann Smile make everyone wonder what your thinking May God Bless you today, tomorrow and always Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 Any help is greatly appreciated. It hurts but also provides comfort to know we are not the only person out there. The Support Group is a place I turned to add value to what I receive from the doctors. They are all very intelligent people but unfortunately even with all their degrees, they have no hard fast answer nor fix for this illness. It isn't like getting the flu, ear infection, etc. They have answers, can say why, etc. Epilepsy their is not always a reason or explanation and with my personality of always wanting to know why something is, this has been extremely hard. Thanks again for sharing your experience. If nothing else it reminds me we are not in this alone. JANA > Jana, > > First welcome to the family. We started having > seizures at 4 months of age. One one day, one a few > days later and then a full blown seizure at the > hospital and then they started coming full swing, up > to a hundred and fifty a day. We spent four months in > the hospital trying to get them undercontrol and at > first were on 12 meds. We tried the diet but did not > make much progress and were loosing weight and not > growing. We got off the diet and are currently on > Trileptal and Lamictal. We have finally gotten better > seizure control and finally gainign weight and > growing. We have no diagnosis and they can not tell us > why she has seizures and what is causing them. We do > not even know exactly what kind of seizures she is > having. She had never ran a fever until after she > started having seizures. So many questions and > no answers. Ill try to help where I can. > > Kristi Mann (mom to Wyaema 26 months, Keto Kid March > to December 2003) > > ===== > > Kristi Mann > > Smile make everyone wonder what your thinking > > May God Bless you today, tomorrow and always Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 ----- Original Message ----- From: jcb_ag97 On October 24th, my family became a part of this extended family as our almost 3 year old son had a seizure for the first time. After being checked out in the ER, they diagnosed him with Febrile Seizures and sent us home. We followed up the next day with his primary pediatrician who suggested we have an EEG as he felt his temperature wasn't high enough to have caused the seizure. The EEG was preformed the next day and showed to be normal. So we took a deep breath and got back to our normal routine. That following weekend, our son had 3 additional seizures and we entered the hospital Halloween. Our son was started on an IV of Dilatin, but it showed no real progress. Our local doctors were coordinating our son's treatment with the pediatric nuerologist we later saw when transferred to his hospital on Tuesday. We preformed another EEG that was now showing seizure activity. We changed his medication to Depakote as that was seen as a more effective med for Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome. We went from a normal almost 3 year old to now a child that has been diagnosed with multi seizure disorder. There is no family history, no explanation, no early signs, etc. It was like he just woke up one morning and now he has it. We left the hospital after 1 week of evaluation and the generalized seizures were under control, but we were still having the stares, atonic and myclonic seizures. At our followup, we chose to switch to Zonagram and slowly wean our son off of the Depakote. Another 10 days went by and the seizure had stopped for almost one week when they started again over the Thanksgiving holiday. We had a checkup that Monday, and decided that the new med was also not showing any effectiveness just giving us a " honeymoon " period, so on Monday, Dec. 6th we entered the hospital again to begin our son on the KETOGENIC Diet. The diet has gone well so far, our son is taking to it. We completely stopped the Depokote on Monday and began to decrease the use of the Clorazapate, therefore our son seems to possibly be going through detox. He has the shakes now and is still having some drop seizure activities. He is not stable enough to rejoin his school because of fear he'll fall and bump his head. We've already lost a front tooth to one of the seizures he had in the hospital. He was sitting in a chair and fell over and hit his tooth on the wooden arm. I was reading some of the archives and wanted to visit with anyone whose on the diet? How long before you saw noticable results from it? Anyone that has a child with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome? What should we expect? Has tried the chiropractic treatments. We've had 2 different people mention this to us but haven't been provided anything from our medical doctors on it. Where did you find the informaiton on the treatment? Is it hard to find a special pediatric chiropracter that does this type of treatment? Thanks, JANA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 Woops - hit send last time without writing anything Hi Jana, Similar story here with my son - completely normal development up to age 3, then the seizures hit and life changed literally overnight. If you have recently stopped the depakote, and are also weaning clorazepate (tranxene?) you will probably still be seeing fallout from that - so until any withdrawal seizures have settled, you may be waiitng for a while to see just how effective the diet will be seizure wise. Clorazepate is a benzodiazepine med, so you are quite right about a possible detox process happening, they are all very addictive meds and very difficult to wean. The longer they have been on them, the harder this process is, but it sounds like it has only been fairly short term so far, hopefully this will make the wean a bit easier than it otherwise would be. You are fortunate to have Drs who rcommended the diet so early on in the course of your son's epilepsy, we waited a long 18 mths with many toxic med cocktails before starting keto - our biggest regret is not starting sooner into the seizure nightmare. Is he still on the zonegran? If so, watch his blood gases - this is one of the meds that can cause metabolic acidosis when used in conjunction with keto - both are acid inducing treatments, as are topomax, diamox, and to a lesser extent, depakote. Re his LGS diagnosis - was given this one as well when his seizures first started, but it was changed shortly afterwards to Doose Syndrome (Myoclonic Astatic Epilepsy), which is a similar childhood syndrome (as in a mixed seizure disorder, onset most commonly age 2-4 yrs) but with some subtle differences. These are - always normal development prior to seizures starting, TCs often the presenting seizure type which then get taken over or joined by myoclonics, absences and drops. Lack of tonic seizures (unless as a paradoxical seizure response to benzodiazepine meds as happened with , but that didn't happen till he had been on them for quite a while) at onset is one of the differentiating factors, and there are usually no focal seizures at that point either. The EEG has some differences too - no typical LGS pattern of 1.5-2.5 hz spike and wave (Mae is usally 3 hz instead) with background activity usually reverting to normal in between seizures (unless affected by medications). Unlike LGS, MAE also a fairly high rate of remission of seizures 1-3 yrs after seizure onset, so although still one of the nasty syndromes, it can have a benign outcome. Has this been mentioned as a possible diagnosis? It is even rarer than LGS, so unless a ped neuro has had a case before, it is often mis-diagnosed. This is important in that some meds that can help with LGS actually worsen MAE seizures - these are phenytoin, phenobarb viagbatrin and tegretol. The keto diet is now listed as the first line MAE treatment, then secondly ACTH (steroids) then 3rdly the traditional AEDs. Good luck with the diet, and as I said above, withdrawal seizures (and/or meds fullstop) can affect the level of control, so patience and perserverance is a neccessity, as I'm sure many others on here would agree with ----- Original Message ----- From: jcb_ag97 On October 24th, my family became a part of this extended family as our almost 3 year old son had a seizure for the first time. After being checked out in the ER, they diagnosed him with Febrile Seizures and sent us home. We followed up the next day with his primary pediatrician who suggested we have an EEG as he felt his temperature wasn't high enough to have caused the seizure. The EEG was preformed the next day and showed to be normal. So we took a deep breath and got back to our normal routine. That following weekend, our son had 3 additional seizures and we entered the hospital Halloween. Our son was started on an IV of Dilatin, but it showed no real progress. Our local doctors were coordinating our son's treatment with the pediatric nuerologist we later saw when transferred to his hospital on Tuesday. We preformed another EEG that was now showing seizure activity. We changed his medication to Depakote as that was seen as a more effective med for Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome. We went from a normal almost 3 year old to now a child that has been diagnosed with multi seizure disorder. There is no family history, no explanation, no early signs, etc. It was like he just woke up one morning and now he has it. We left the hospital after 1 week of evaluation and the generalized seizures were under control, but we were still having the stares, atonic and myclonic seizures. At our followup, we chose to switch to Zonagram and slowly wean our son off of the Depakote. Another 10 days went by and the seizure had stopped for almost one week when they started again over the Thanksgiving holiday. We had a checkup that Monday, and decided that the new med was also not showing any effectiveness just giving us a " honeymoon " period, so on Monday, Dec. 6th we entered the hospital again to begin our son on the KETOGENIC Diet. The diet has gone well so far, our son is taking to it. We completely stopped the Depokote on Monday and began to decrease the use of the Clorazapate, therefore our son seems to possibly be going through detox. He has the shakes now and is still having some drop seizure activities. He is not stable enough to rejoin his school because of fear he'll fall and bump his head. We've already lost a front tooth to one of the seizures he had in the hospital. He was sitting in a chair and fell over and hit his tooth on the wooden arm. I was reading some of the archives and wanted to visit with anyone whose on the diet? How long before you saw noticable results from it? Anyone that has a child with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome? What should we expect? Has tried the chiropractic treatments. We've had 2 different people mention this to us but haven't been provided anything from our medical doctors on it. Where did you find the informaiton on the treatment? Is it hard to find a special pediatric chiropracter that does this type of treatment? Thanks, JANA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 Thank you so much for the helpful information. It helps to hear from others who are experiencing similar situations. I also appreciate the heads up on the MAE. I will definitely ask our Dr. on Monday at our followup appointment. > Woops - hit send last time without writing anything > > Hi Jana, > Similar story here with my son - completely normal development up to age 3, then the seizures hit and life changed literally overnight. > If you have recently stopped the depakote, and are also weaning clorazepate (tranxene?) you will probably still be seeing fallout from that - so until any withdrawal seizures have settled, you may be waiitng for a while to see just how effective the diet will be seizure wise. > Clorazepate is a benzodiazepine med, so you are quite right about a possible detox process happening, they are all very addictive meds and very difficult to wean. The longer they have been on them, the harder this process is, but it sounds like it has only been fairly short term so far, hopefully this will make the wean a bit easier than it otherwise would be. > You are fortunate to have Drs who rcommended the diet so early on in the course of your son's epilepsy, we waited a long 18 mths with many toxic med cocktails before starting keto - our biggest regret is not starting sooner into the seizure nightmare. > Is he still on the zonegran? If so, watch his blood gases - this is one of the meds that can cause metabolic acidosis when used in conjunction with keto - both are acid inducing treatments, as are topomax, diamox, and to a lesser extent, depakote. > Re his LGS diagnosis - was given this one as well when his seizures first started, but it was changed shortly afterwards to Doose Syndrome (Myoclonic Astatic Epilepsy), which is a similar childhood syndrome (as in a mixed seizure disorder, onset most commonly age 2-4 yrs) but with some subtle differences. These are - always normal development prior to seizures starting, TCs often the presenting seizure type which then get taken over or joined by myoclonics, absences and drops. Lack of tonic seizures (unless as a paradoxical seizure response to benzodiazepine meds as happened with , but that didn't happen till he had been on them for quite a while) at onset is one of the differentiating factors, and there are usually no focal seizures at that point either. The EEG has some differences too - no typical LGS pattern of 1.5-2.5 hz spike and wave (Mae is usally 3 hz instead) with background activity usually reverting to normal in between seizures (unless affected by medications). > Unlike LGS, MAE also a fairly high rate of remission of seizures 1-3 yrs after seizure onset, so although still one of the nasty syndromes, it can have a benign outcome. Has this been mentioned as a possible diagnosis? It is even rarer than LGS, so unless a ped neuro has had a case before, it is often mis-diagnosed. This is important in that some meds that can help with LGS actually worsen MAE seizures - these are phenytoin, phenobarb viagbatrin and tegretol. > The keto diet is now listed as the first line MAE treatment, then secondly ACTH (steroids) then 3rdly the traditional AEDs. > Good luck with the diet, and as I said above, withdrawal seizures (and/or meds fullstop) can affect the level of control, so patience and perserverance is a neccessity, as I'm sure many others on here would agree with > > > > > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: jcb_ag97 > > > On October 24th, my family became a part of this extended family as > our almost 3 year old son had a seizure for the first time. After > being checked out in the ER, they diagnosed him with Febrile > Seizures and sent us home. We followed up the next day with his > primary pediatrician who suggested we have an EEG as he felt his > temperature wasn't high enough to have caused the seizure. The EEG > was preformed the next day and showed to be normal. So we took a > deep breath and got back to our normal routine. That following > weekend, our son had 3 additional seizures and we entered the > hospital Halloween. Our son was started on an IV of Dilatin, but it > showed no real progress. Our local doctors were coordinating our > son's treatment with the pediatric nuerologist we later saw when > transferred to his hospital on Tuesday. We preformed another EEG > that was now showing seizure activity. We changed his medication to > Depakote as that was seen as a more effective med for Lennox- Gastaut > Syndrome. We went from a normal almost 3 year old to now a child > that has been diagnosed with multi seizure disorder. There is no > family history, no explanation, no early signs, etc. It was like he > just woke up one morning and now he has it. We left the hospital > after 1 week of evaluation and the generalized seizures were under > control, but we were still having the stares, atonic and myclonic > seizures. At our followup, we chose to switch to Zonagram and > slowly wean our son off of the Depakote. Another 10 days went by > and the seizure had stopped for almost one week when they started > again over the Thanksgiving holiday. We had a checkup that Monday, > and decided that the new med was also not showing any effectiveness > just giving us a " honeymoon " period, so on Monday, Dec. 6th we > entered the hospital again to begin our son on the KETOGENIC Diet. > The diet has gone well so far, our son is taking to it. We > completely stopped the Depokote on Monday and began to decrease the > use of the Clorazapate, therefore our son seems to possibly be going > through detox. He has the shakes now and is still having some drop > seizure activities. He is not stable enough to rejoin his school > because of fear he'll fall and bump his head. We've already lost a > front tooth to one of the seizures he had in the hospital. He was > sitting in a chair and fell over and hit his tooth on the wooden > arm. > > I was reading some of the archives and wanted to visit with anyone > whose on the diet? How long before you saw noticable results from > it? Anyone that has a child with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome? What > should we expect? Has tried the chiropractic treatments. We've had > 2 different people mention this to us but haven't been provided > anything from our medical doctors on it. Where did you find the > informaiton on the treatment? Is it hard to find a special > pediatric chiropracter that does this type of treatment? > > Thanks, JANA > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 14, 2004 Report Share Posted December 14, 2004 Welcome, Jana. I'm glad you found the group. Lots of experience here with the keto diet. I'm amazed at how quickly your son was started on the diet--it's wonderful. It is also wonderful that you stopped the Depakote and are weaning the benzo so soon. Most AEDs interfere with the diet, so good you are on your way off of them. Sounds like you are getting really good care and things are going well so far!! I am Cammie, mom to , age 8. Her first seizures was at age 6. We did the drug merry-go-round for almost a year before starting the diet. To make a long story short, she had her last seizure the day before she started the diet. We had been decreasing her carbs in preparation for the " fast " . We later found out that she was one who made ketones easily. We, too, stopped depakote during the second day in the hospital and did a quick wean of Felbatol. She was seizure free and Med free 3 weeks after initiating. She was quickly back to her " old self " again. Now no one would ever beleive there was a problem if they hadn't seen it or been a part of it in some way. had many kinds of seizures, too. She most likely had Doose Syndrome (Myoclonic Astatic Epilepsy). She fit the picture perfectly except for her older age at onset. Interestingly enough, her ped. neuro talked about LGS with us, too, but he said her EEG pattern didn't fit LGS--as well as her age. The keto diet is very successful for many kids with epilepsy " syndromes " . It seems the sooner you get on it, the better. Keep us posted on your progress. I think you're gonna do great!! Cammie > > On October 24th, my family became a part of this extended family as > our almost 3 year old son had a seizure for the first time. After > being checked out in the ER, they diagnosed him with Febrile > Seizures and sent us home. We followed up the next day with his > primary pediatrician who suggested we have an EEG as he felt his > temperature wasn't high enough to have caused the seizure. The EEG > was preformed the next day and showed to be normal. So we took a > deep breath and got back to our normal routine. That following > weekend, our son had 3 additional seizures and we entered the > hospital Halloween. Our son was started on an IV of Dilatin, but it > showed no real progress. Our local doctors were coordinating our > son's treatment with the pediatric nuerologist we later saw when > transferred to his hospital on Tuesday. We preformed another EEG > that was now showing seizure activity. We changed his medication to > Depakote as that was seen as a more effective med for Lennox- Gastaut > Syndrome. We went from a normal almost 3 year old to now a child > that has been diagnosed with multi seizure disorder. There is no > family history, no explanation, no early signs, etc. It was like he > just woke up one morning and now he has it. We left the hospital > after 1 week of evaluation and the generalized seizures were under > control, but we were still having the stares, atonic and myclonic > seizures. At our followup, we chose to switch to Zonagram and > slowly wean our son off of the Depakote. Another 10 days went by > and the seizure had stopped for almost one week when they started > again over the Thanksgiving holiday. We had a checkup that Monday, > and decided that the new med was also not showing any effectiveness > just giving us a " honeymoon " period, so on Monday, Dec. 6th we > entered the hospital again to begin our son on the KETOGENIC Diet. > The diet has gone well so far, our son is taking to it. We > completely stopped the Depokote on Monday and began to decrease the > use of the Clorazapate, therefore our son seems to possibly be going > through detox. He has the shakes now and is still having some drop > seizure activities. He is not stable enough to rejoin his school > because of fear he'll fall and bump his head. We've already lost a > front tooth to one of the seizures he had in the hospital. He was > sitting in a chair and fell over and hit his tooth on the wooden > arm. > > I was reading some of the archives and wanted to visit with anyone > whose on the diet? How long before you saw noticable results from > it? Anyone that has a child with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome? What > should we expect? Has tried the chiropractic treatments. We've had > 2 different people mention this to us but haven't been provided > anything from our medical doctors on it. Where did you find the > informaiton on the treatment? Is it hard to find a special > pediatric chiropracter that does this type of treatment? > > Thanks, JANA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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