Guest guest Posted September 17, 2002 Report Share Posted September 17, 2002 Holly - I am , the RSS division consultant. Just as an FYI in case there is any confusion, the role of the Periactin isn't to actually increase height, per se (so it isn't to be in place of, etc. the GH). RSS and SGA children are too thin, and are unable for whatever reasons (metabolism combined with GI problems) to take in enough calories (most just don't have good appetites and even those that do can't gain weight). Periactin is an antihistamine whose side effect is an increased appetite. Dr. Harbison has written a very comprehensive document detailing complete info on this if you want it. It is MAGIC library document #127-B. Anyway, the Periactin helps the RSS/SGA child achieve what we call their " catch-up growth " PRIOR to starting GH. What we mean by this is that IF the child's height was being suppressed at all by a caloric insufficiency, then when the Periactin stimulates the child to eat more, then what you will see is a sudden weight gain followed by a slight surge in height. Once that height plateaus again (usually after a couple months or sometimes as long as 6 months), AND if the weight proportion to height was pretty good (probably above 10-25%'tile), (and of course the child was older than 2 years old, etc). then it would be the ideal time to start GH. What you might NOT want to do is start GH and Periactin at the same time (unless the child is older and time is of essence) because when/if the height surges, it would be difficult to know if it was due to the caloric repletion or GH (making it difficult to manage the dosage adjustments). Also, re PEriactin. The most important thing to know is that if you begin it (and it is a very benign, short-acting antihistamine), we STRONGLY recommend several things: a) the child have no history even as an infant of reflux, because Periactin does seem to " bring back " reflux if the child has or had reflux, a simply dose of Zantac combined with the Periactin usually does the trick quite easily c) implement the breakfast and dinner doses SLOWLY. FOllOW these steps: a) Week 1: give 50% of the dinner dose 30-45 minutes before dinner, each night Week 2: give 100% of the dinner dose ..... c) Week 3: give 50% of the breakfast dose 30 minutes before breakfast, each morning, AND continue with the 100% of the dinner dose... d) Week 4: give 100% of breakfast dose and 100% of dinner dose If your child has too many tantrums during the day with the Week 3 dose, simply scale back the amount (try 25%) and move up from there. Most antihistamines make a child sleepy, and hence, for toddlers and preschoolers (and elem.) that can result in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde episodes!!! This all being said, I will tell you that from my own personal experience and that of at least 85% of the people I have spoken with who have tried Periactin, IT WORKS!!! Even if it doesn't appear that your child is eating much more, give it one month and get your child weighed again on the same scale. For a 4-year-old, one extra Saltine cracker a day at 11 calories over one year is one pound!!! Salem > Hello. > > My name is Holly and we are in the process of > deciding weather to start with > GHT or give periactin a try first. I am on > both the RSS and GHD listserv and > have been reading several emails. Just taking > it all in, not responding to > much at the time because we have nothing to > compare. I do need some > information that was posted days ago and I > accidentally deleted. Do not > remember if it was on this site or the RSS but > I have added it the both. > Someone wrote in the regimen that Dr. H had > given them and it went something > like.....start periactin at 2/3yrs for the > first months/year then onto GHT. > If anyone can be of any help this is for our > doctors office to give Sadie a > try on periactin before starting GH. I talked > with our nurse and told her > that I had read an email about a child taking > periactin before GH and most of > the time both together. Also explained that > Dr. H was very well know among > the RSS families. > > Thanks for any of the help. > > Holly > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been > removed] > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2002 Report Share Posted September 17, 2002 Holly - I am , the RSS division consultant. Just as an FYI in case there is any confusion, the role of the Periactin isn't to actually increase height, per se (so it isn't to be in place of, etc. the GH). RSS and SGA children are too thin, and are unable for whatever reasons (metabolism combined with GI problems) to take in enough calories (most just don't have good appetites and even those that do can't gain weight). Periactin is an antihistamine whose side effect is an increased appetite. Dr. Harbison has written a very comprehensive document detailing complete info on this if you want it. It is MAGIC library document #127-B. Anyway, the Periactin helps the RSS/SGA child achieve what we call their " catch-up growth " PRIOR to starting GH. What we mean by this is that IF the child's height was being suppressed at all by a caloric insufficiency, then when the Periactin stimulates the child to eat more, then what you will see is a sudden weight gain followed by a slight surge in height. Once that height plateaus again (usually after a couple months or sometimes as long as 6 months), AND if the weight proportion to height was pretty good (probably above 10-25%'tile), (and of course the child was older than 2 years old, etc). then it would be the ideal time to start GH. What you might NOT want to do is start GH and Periactin at the same time (unless the child is older and time is of essence) because when/if the height surges, it would be difficult to know if it was due to the caloric repletion or GH (making it difficult to manage the dosage adjustments). Also, re PEriactin. The most important thing to know is that if you begin it (and it is a very benign, short-acting antihistamine), we STRONGLY recommend several things: a) the child have no history even as an infant of reflux, because Periactin does seem to " bring back " reflux if the child has or had reflux, a simply dose of Zantac combined with the Periactin usually does the trick quite easily c) implement the breakfast and dinner doses SLOWLY. FOllOW these steps: a) Week 1: give 50% of the dinner dose 30-45 minutes before dinner, each night Week 2: give 100% of the dinner dose ..... c) Week 3: give 50% of the breakfast dose 30 minutes before breakfast, each morning, AND continue with the 100% of the dinner dose... d) Week 4: give 100% of breakfast dose and 100% of dinner dose If your child has too many tantrums during the day with the Week 3 dose, simply scale back the amount (try 25%) and move up from there. Most antihistamines make a child sleepy, and hence, for toddlers and preschoolers (and elem.) that can result in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde episodes!!! This all being said, I will tell you that from my own personal experience and that of at least 85% of the people I have spoken with who have tried Periactin, IT WORKS!!! Even if it doesn't appear that your child is eating much more, give it one month and get your child weighed again on the same scale. For a 4-year-old, one extra Saltine cracker a day at 11 calories over one year is one pound!!! Salem > Hello. > > My name is Holly and we are in the process of > deciding weather to start with > GHT or give periactin a try first. I am on > both the RSS and GHD listserv and > have been reading several emails. Just taking > it all in, not responding to > much at the time because we have nothing to > compare. I do need some > information that was posted days ago and I > accidentally deleted. Do not > remember if it was on this site or the RSS but > I have added it the both. > Someone wrote in the regimen that Dr. H had > given them and it went something > like.....start periactin at 2/3yrs for the > first months/year then onto GHT. > If anyone can be of any help this is for our > doctors office to give Sadie a > try on periactin before starting GH. I talked > with our nurse and told her > that I had read an email about a child taking > periactin before GH and most of > the time both together. Also explained that > Dr. H was very well know among > the RSS families. > > Thanks for any of the help. > > Holly > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been > removed] > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 18, 2002 Report Share Posted September 18, 2002 Thanks for the wonderful information. I do realize that periactin will not give Sadie height but there has not been a specific dx for her so I thought we would go the route of trying periactin for her weight and as you said see if it helps her height any. Her father was 4 " 11 until his sophomore year of high school so it just makes me wonder a lot. Thanks again. Holly Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 18, 2002 Report Share Posted September 18, 2002 The doctors have never mentioned CGD. Sadie has been tested for RSS which came out negative but the genetics doctors was sticking with that due to her IUGR/SGA, her current weight, fontanel opening not closed and her fifth finger only having one crease. Sadie has also been tested for Syndrome and s Syndrome both which came back fine. All the blood work done on Sadie has been normal. It might help if I fill you in on Sadie a little more. She was born at 35weeks by c-section due to IUGR and decrease in the amniotic fluid. Sadie weighed 3#9oz, 16inches long. She was on c-pap for 4 days then stayed in the NICU for two weeks onto the special care nursery for another week. On the fifth day Sadie was dx with a PDA and a VSD. The PDA was closed with medication while the VSD required surgery at 3months old. Sadie's heart is doing great now and we do not go back to see the cardiologist for 3years. On the other hand she DOES NOT eat. She is still on formula/peidasure and only takes about 10-13oz a day. Sadie does continue to gain weight but slowly. She is now at 16#, 27 1/2inches. Sadie will be 2 the end of November. We had also seen a GI doc and nothing came of that, all turned out OK. It almost feels like I am just in the blue. Every test we do is normal. That is why it is so confusing and frustrating as " WHAT TO DO. " As of now i believe we are going to try and see how periactin works with her then in time go on GHT if that is still what she needs. Thanks Again. Holly Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 18, 2002 Report Share Posted September 18, 2002 Holly - I think you are on the right track!!! Especially if your husband has such significant constitutional growth delay!!! Does your daughter's doctor think that she might just be constitutionally growth delayed like your husband? > Thanks for the wonderful information. I do realize that periactin will not > give Sadie height but there has not been a specific dx for her so I thought > we would go the route of trying periactin for her weight and as you said see > if it helps her height any. Her father was 4 " 11 until his sophomore year of > high school so it just makes me wonder a lot. > > Thanks again. > > Holly > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 18, 2002 Report Share Posted September 18, 2002 Hi Holly, I know how difficult it is to be without a diagnosis...I am curious, though. you said that Sadie had been tested for RSS, but " came out negative " . There really is no test for RSS. RSS is diagnosed by multidisciplinary approach: looking at the constellation of behaviors, growth factor levels, medical history and the look of the child. (www.magicfoundation.org lists the characteristics). There is a genetic test that looks fore uniparental disomy of chromosome #7, which basically means the Mom gave the child both chromsome 7s, instead of one from Mom, one from Dad. But, even if the test comes out negative, meaning that a child is getting a chromosome from each parent, the child could still have RSS. Only 10% or so of RSS children show the UPD. For some RSS kids, the diagnosis is obvious, for others, it seems to rely on a very insightful ped endo or geneticist who just " sees " what other doctors can't.. I do have an important question for you: Does Sadie sweat during the night? The nighttime sweating can be a sign of hypoglycemia, and this is far more critical than height or weight gain...It needs to be agressively treated with frequent feeds and caloric intake. Untreated hypoglycemia under the age of 3 can lead to learning disabilities. so, you're doing the right thing by focusing on her eating right now! Katy Re: Re: [MAGIC_list] Periactin before GHT > The doctors have never mentioned CGD. Sadie has been tested for RSS which > came out negative but the genetics doctors was sticking with that due to her > IUGR/SGA, her current weight, fontanel opening not closed and her fifth > finger only having one crease. Sadie has also been tested for > Syndrome and s Syndrome both which came back fine. All the blood work > done on Sadie has been normal. > > It might help if I fill you in on Sadie a little more. She was born at > 35weeks by c-section due to IUGR and decrease in the amniotic fluid. Sadie > weighed 3#9oz, 16inches long. She was on c-pap for 4 days then stayed in the > NICU for two weeks onto the special care nursery for another week. On the > fifth day Sadie was dx with a PDA and a VSD. The PDA was closed with > medication while the VSD required surgery at 3months old. Sadie's heart is > doing great now and we do not go back to see the cardiologist for 3years. On > the other hand she DOES NOT eat. She is still on formula/peidasure and only > takes about 10-13oz a day. Sadie does continue to gain weight but slowly. > She is now at 16#, 27 1/2inches. Sadie will be 2 the end of November. We > had also seen a GI doc and nothing came of that, all turned out OK. > > It almost feels like I am just in the blue. Every test we do is normal. > That is why it is so confusing and frustrating as " WHAT TO DO. " As of now i > believe we are going to try and see how periactin works with her then in time > go on GHT if that is still what she needs. > > Thanks Again. > > Holly > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 18, 2002 Report Share Posted September 18, 2002 Hello Katy, The answer to your question is yes and no. there are times that is sweats and others times that she does not. She will usually sweat if have fallen asleep in her carseat. Sadie has had her blood levels tested several times and all were fine. One time it did come back low but the GI doc had it redone stat and came back OK. With your concern to hypoglycemia do you think maybe we should have her blood drawn again to be sure? Thanks for the info. on RSS. I did know that the test is not 100% accurate. Our genetics doctors explained it exactly as you did. Holly Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 18, 2002 Report Share Posted September 18, 2002 Katy, I'll be sure to ask the doctor about it at her two year check up in Nov. to see what he thinks. Thanks Again. Holly Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 18, 2002 Report Share Posted September 18, 2002 hi Holly, I don't know about the blood tests.. (no reason to put her through more pricks!) but, at least keep an eye out for it..prevention is the best cure, so if you can, try to feed her frequently. I mention it because I've been learning that some doctors concentrate so much on the height/weight they don't ask the simple question about the night sweats! Katy Re: Re: [MAGIC_list] Periactin before GHT > Hello Katy, > > The answer to your question is yes and no. there are times that is sweats > and others times that she does not. She will usually sweat if have fallen > asleep in her carseat. Sadie has had her blood levels tested several times > and all were fine. One time it did come back low but the GI doc had it > redone stat and came back OK. > > With your concern to hypoglycemia do you think maybe we should have her blood > drawn again to be sure? > > Thanks for the info. on RSS. I did know that the test is not 100% accurate. > Our genetics doctors explained it exactly as you did. > > Holly > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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