Guest guest Posted October 17, 2004 Report Share Posted October 17, 2004 There are some references to benign CPK/CK elevations in PubMed, a database of medical journals. You can search PubMed from this page: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed Here are two quotes from a case of drug-induced CPK elevations: 1. " Nonetheless, none of the 16 patients with the CPK elevations developed severe conditions such as rhabdomyolysis despite an absence of therapeutic intervention, and their CPK elevations were proven to be benign. " 2. " Patients engaging in more physical activity or receiving higher neuroleptic doses are at greater risk of developing such CPK elevations. However, most of these increases are benign, and it is not considered necessary to treat them. " There are also references to benign CPK/CK elevations in patients following heart surgery. In these papers, one- to five-fold increases in CPK/CK were considered benign. Generally that would mean under 1,000. Just to add that the label " benign " as applied to muscle disease is at least partly in the eye of the beholder. When I first went to the NIH in 1985, Dr. Dalakas told me that CPT deficiency is a " very benign " disease and he repeated this on several occasions. Another CPT researcher, Dr. Vladutiu, strongly disagrees. She says: " The disorder [CPT deficiency] has even been called " benign " in some scientific reports which could not be farther from the truth among individuals who have experienced life-threatening kidney failure following a severe episode of rhabdomyolysis (trigger-induced muscle breakdown). " Quote from: http://www.fodsupport.org/cpt2.htm Sometimes it takes time to find a doctor who understands. I had symptoms for 19 years before I had a diagnosis. Most people don't have to wait that long now because there is more awareness of these disorders. I sure hope this happens sooner rather than later for you! Take care, Barbara Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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