Guest guest Posted August 31, 2006 Report Share Posted August 31, 2006 I've been on 3mg of LDN for 12 days now. I found an LDN friendly doc, through this site, who does (and did in my case) phone consults. I got my prescription filled through Skip's, so I know it was compounded properly. The main thing I am after, of course, is to halt progression of my MS. I have only recently been diagnosed with MS, a little over 2 months ago. It was very hard to diagnose. The MRIs, even with contrast, were not definitive. It's only on the cervical that any demyelimation shows up and with no intensification with the contrast. My brain scan shows some white specs, but more the type that's consistent with the aging process, as I am 59. It wasn't till I got the LP that a diagnosis of MS was given. I'm one of the lucky one's; the only symptoms I have is drop foot (Right foot), spasticity in the legs, mainly right leg a little in the left, but not enough to cause any impairment and paresthesia (pins and needles) in both feet. I do have some difficulty with gait, due to my right leg, and have a pronounced limp, but that's it. I'm not bothered my the heat or getting overheated; I don't have the " Hugs " ; no problems with my eyesight, no cognitive impairment, nothing else at all just my right leg and that's it. This is why it was so important to me to halt progression; if I could just stop its progression I could live out my life just fine. May be my skiing and dancing days were over, but I wouldn't be limited by anything else. However, I am happy to report that the paresthesia in my right foot is gone totally and it's been reduced in my left foot by 80 or 90 percent. Also my gait has improved. I can lift my foot in and out the car much easier than I could and climbing stairs has gotten easier. Hopefully I will continue to improve. I had an appointment with my neuro this past Monday. I asked him if her were familiar with LDN. He smiled and said he was. When I asked him why he was smiling he told me that he had been at a conference recently and had just asked a couple of the leading MS neuros in our area (Philadelphia) their opinion about LDN. One of them being Dr. Leist, who is the director of the MS clinic at the Jefferson University Hospital. They did not dismiss LDN out of hand. Although they weren't prescribing it, they are taking a wait and see attitude, with all the turn arounds that have occurred lately. My own neuro has an even more open attitude. He told me a story that helps explain his open attitude. When he was in Med School there was a doctor, just a GP, in Australia who came up with the theory that Peptic Ulcers were not cause by over acidity, as what was the conventional wisdom of the day, but by bacteria from evidence gathered during autopsies that he had preformed. He was dismissed out of hand; after all, the experts in the field said he was wrong and who was he as a mere GP to refute their beliefs. 10 years later he was proven to be 100% correct. Doctors now know that it is caused by the corkscrew-shaped bacterium Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori). He said this was a very valuable lesson learned early in his medical career; never discount anything just because it may go against current conventional wisdom. Today's wild theory may be tomorrow's conventional wisdom. I asked him if he'd be willing to write a prescription for me. He said he might, but wants to do a little more research first. The next day I dropped off the following documents at his office: 1. An email that references the grant that the National Multiple Sclerosis Society (NMSS) funded to Dr. Ian Zagon to research LDN. 2. The webpage from the NMSS site that shows the reversal of opinion where they now encourage clinical trials be conducted on LDN. 3. The Article written by Y.P. Agrawal, MD, PhD, (Med Hypotheses. 2005;64(4):721-4), where Dr. Agrawal proposes that LDN reduces disease activity in MS by reducing the destruction of oligodendrocytes, the cells that manufacture myelin. 4. Frequently Asked Questions about LDN that I found on the net. 5. Survey of 267 Patients Using Low Dose Naltrexone for Multiple Sclerosis. Once he's digested these documents. I'll give him a call. Also today I had an appointment with my Primary care physician for my routine check up. During the exam he asked me how I was doing and I told him I was improving and asked him if he was familiar with Naltrexone. He said he was, primarily as it relates to substance abuse, but was aware that it was being used off label and why. I told him I was taking it and started by spiel. He was very interested. This time I had copies of what I had given my neuro with me and he seemed extremely interested in reviewing them. I asked him the magic question, " Would he be willing to write a prescription for LDN for me " and he said he didn't see why not. I know I could have pushed him and gotten it right there and then but thought best of it. I'll let him read and digest the documents I left with him and then call him in about a month. I figured by that time he'll become even more comfortable with prescribing it having review the documents I furnished him. It will give us one more LDN friendly doctor in our corner (In Bucks County, PA). By the way he's a D.O. not an M.D. D.O.'s seem to be more receptive to alternate treatments. I sorry I've rattled on, but I'm just so excited I couldn't contain myself. 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