Guest guest Posted September 30, 2007 Report Share Posted September 30, 2007 The mito cocktail is perscribed for children or adults who have confirmed or suspected mitochondrial disease (www.umdf.org has alot of info on mito). Its generally only suggested that it be perscribed by a doctor as no long term studies have been done on the doses and suppliments that are used... with mito there are no other treatments and the disease is progressive and devastating so its worth it to try a cocktail with no long term studies... It is usually made up of several vitamins and suppliments, depending on the child and the specific mito disorder... usually it has carnitor (perscription med), coenzyme q10, high doses of vitamins C, E, B1 and B2, occasionally biotin, vitamin K, A, creatine, alpha lipoic acid, etc.... its very individual based on the patient and the disease.. Hope this helps explain it a bit! Keely www.caringbridge.org/visit/brandonandtyler > > > Does your son have any issues other than the apraxia? > > > > Hi Keely, > > > > Sorry it took me so long to respond. Yes, Ethan has sensory issues > > too. His apraxia is also global so he is generally uncoordinated > but > > some days are much better than others. He has some minor > dysmorphic > > features like a simian crease on both palms, a high arched palate, > > slight micronathia and microcephaly. He also has had some > peripheral > > neuropathy that we discovered in tactile exercises during OT. It > has > > seemed to have gotten much better on vitamin E though. > > > > He has responded in the past to supplementation by surging but then > > partially regressing. He often keeps motor gains but always loses > > the limited speech sounds. For a couple of weeks he was having > daily > > poput words (that were contextually appropriate) but then they > > disappeared. Since beginning levocarnitine he is surging again but > > not having poputs, just many more sounds and speech attempts, with > > some success after significant groping. > > > > Developmentally he has had some sensory issues from birth but they > > have come and gone and changed over time. He was slightly late with > > motor milestones. > > > > He has always seemed apraxic though. He would lose new sounds > > whenever he gained new ones even as a baby and we have video of him > > at 11 mos. obviously groping. He could not voluntarily stick out > his > > tongue until he was about 20 mos.-old. He still can't move it > around > > well. He can't blow or pucker. He couldn't clap until he was 18 > mos- > > old and there are still some days when it is difficult for him to > > point. > > > > He also has hypotonia and chronic GI problems. He is a very > resistent > > eater and can't chew well. He has never lined things up or flapped > > his hands but lately he has been spinning things a lot and his eyes > > seem to hurt. (We are taking him to an allergist and an > > opthamologist.) > > > > On the positive side he is extremely affectionate and generally > very > > happy. He doesn't have excessive tantrums because, quite frankly, > he > > communicates well non-verbally and can usually make himself > > understood. He has some auditory processing issues but his > receptive > > language is good. > > > > The preliminary metabolic tests look good but we are still > following > > up to make sure. There are other metabolic things that would fall > > more in the area of endocrinology that we want to exclude. We don't > > want to get too invasive though unless we see more red flags. Our > > neurologist suggested the possibility of a mild mitochondrial > > disorder and agreed that trying a mito cocktail might be a good > idea. > > > > What supplements does your son take? Is he on a restricted diet? > > What types of theraputic interventions have helped the most? > > > > Thank you again for your input. > > Nadine > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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