Guest guest Posted August 6, 2004 Report Share Posted August 6, 2004 Bobbi, I have to agree wholeheartedly with Cammie about the Depakote. Oh how I wish our first keto team had been Cammie's--they were of the mindset to keep all the med's (my daughter was on Depakote, Lamictal and Zonegran) in place until we had control. But I felt so strongly that the drugs were making her worse that I weaned them anyway (not in any way advising that you do this) and that is when control started to come. The depakote was a long tough wean and we've had many ups and downs. It's hard to say if the wean was responsible for a couple really rough patches, but after one of them, I did end up introducing keppra (kinda wish we'd toughed it out a while longer, until the depakote was gone for awhile to see if the diet could stand alone). At any rate, my little girl has her quality of life back--we still struggle with sleep activity, but overall she is sooooo much better. A short awake eeg two weeks ago was nearly normal. We aren't out of the woods, but I'm so glad I opted for the diet over the depakote that left her barely able to function (she was on much too high a dose for her)--one of the first things our new neuro said was that depakote and the diet aren't a good combination (which I'd read over and over, but her first neuro " never heard that " -yikes!). Do you feel that the depakote ever helped? In our case it only did for a very brief time at the beginning--other than that, for my daughter it was a very bad choice. How about the diet--have you seen any response at all? We had a very brief initial response but, again, nothing lasting until the weans. Re: the osteoporosis--couldn't the depakote be as much the culprit as the diet? Good luck, Barbara cammie562003 wrote: > Bobbi, > > You've been at this longer than I, so I'm not sure I should be giving > advice but here's my thoughts for whatever they're worth. > > Both the Depakote and the diet can be hard on kidneys. It's hard to > say if it is one or the other or both that might be the culprit for > your son. It would be my guess that if it's one or the other, the > Depakote is doing more harm than the diet. Has he any kidney > function tests done? What is your medical team saying about this? > > My daughter was on Depakote alone and in combination with several > other drugs for about 10 months. In hindsight, we know that it > didn't help her seizure activity much. It caused lots of other > issues, but for us, kidneys weren't affected. When we first met with > our keto team, they said they wanted to drop the Dep. when we > initiated the diet. We had talked to other keto teams that wanted to > wait to wean meds until seizures decreased significantly or stopped. > OUR team said that often doesn't happen. Our daughter has been > seizure free since initiating the diet a year ago. I really believe > that stopping the Depakote made a huge difference for her. > > I would talk with your medical team about weaning the Depakote and > giving the diet a chance to work alone. It may be that you have > reached the point where the two cannot be on board at the same time. > 2 1/2 years of both is a long time. It's likely that you will see > withdrawal seizures if you do decide to wean... but, maybe not. I > think it would be worth it to see if the diet can control seizures on > its own. If not, then you know for sure that the diet's ability to > work wasn't being messed up by Depakote. It seems that the diet is > doing something since his seizures are better now than pre-diet. You > will probably have to do some adjusting of the diet as he comes off > Depakote. If you were to do the diet alone for a while without > success, you could add back a more " keto friendly " med in a small > amount and see if that would help. If that didn't help, and you > decided to stop the diet you would know that you had given it a good > try. > > Is he taking a chelated or highly absorbable form of calcium? I'm > assuming you are supplementing adequate magnesium and phosporus (but > not too much of this) and all of the trace minerals. Is he having > problems with acidosis at all? Some kids get too acidic on the diet > and that can be very hard kidneys, too. > > I wish you well in your decision making. > > > > > > > > > Hi, > > I haven't posted in a long time. My son has been on the diet for 2 > > 1/2 years today. He is having trouble with his kidney's now. He > > already has osteoporosis due to not absorbing the calcium > > supplements. I am starting to worry that I'm harming him by keeping > > him on the diet. He is 5 years old. He is still having 6-8 > seizures > > a week give or take. Still much better than pre-diet. He has > > remained on depakote and we have had to increase 2 times in the > last > > 6 weeks. I am so scared to stop the diet but also scared of how > much > > more his little body can take. He is mostly non verbal so he can't > > tell me what he wants. He understands though, that's the hard > part. > > I am so depressed and worried about him. I feel like I'm stuck > > between a rock and a hard place. Any advice would be welcome. I > just > > want what's best for my little boy. > > Thanks, > > Bobbi > > > > " The Ketogenic Diet....a realistic treatment option, NOT just a last > resort! " > > List is for parent to parent support only. > It is important to get medical advice from a > professional keto team! > Subscribe: ketogenic-subscribe > Unsubscribe: ketogenic-unsubscribe > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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