Guest guest Posted December 18, 2001 Report Share Posted December 18, 2001 Amy, My son does verbal stims and other motor stims. Because when they occur they are so overt, I have difficulty ignoring them. I am easily distracted by them, especially the sounds, so I can relate to your concern. What I know so far is: When he first started the enzymes, the stimming decreased dramatically. Gradually, it built back up, I believe because I now give some phenols and because I think once the opioid drugged effect was gone, the phenol problem was unmasked and he is just super sensitive to phenols. If I give phenols, the stimming definitely increases. We had sauteed yellow and orange bell peppers a few nights ago and he was out of control that evening (but no " drugged " effect - just stimming). I think adding calcium/magnesium has helped, although not as much as I initially noticed. It seems everything I've tried helps for the first few days, then drops off - can anyone explain this? Like you are seeing, the stimming is the worst part of all this - in our case, it is the only negative thing remaining. I still observe a high-pitched voice at times, sometimes slow speech, and sometimes eye contact could be a bit better, but his teachers think it has improved significantly and have NO concerns. Interestingly, he does NOT stim at school since the enzymes, only at home. Before enzymes, he stimmed at school, too. > Folks, > > I started my Sammy (4) on Houston enzymes three weeks ago. Since then he has > been humming constantly. I can't take it anymore!!! Is it the enzymes? If > so, is there something I can do other than stop the enzymes? > > Please help. > > You know what? I just realized that the humming was one of the worst things > right now. Well, howdy doody. Has been much worse around here. I guess > humming isn't as bad as temper tantrums but I am hoping for the loss of both! > > Thanks, > Amy > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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