Guest guest Posted December 31, 2006 Report Share Posted December 31, 2006 I'm researching your protocol and wondered if you could do transdermal of either DMPS or DMSA on your schedule (never doing oral) or could do oral (if it's significantly more effective or safe) during the day and transdermal when the child is sleeping or refuses to take the oral. Are dosing and times the same or need to be adjusted due to absorption route? Also, our child lacks the liver/kidney glutathione gene (according to one test anyway), so we do glut/nac (she's low in nac too) with chelation - does timing here also matter? Can I apply it at the same time as chelators so it's levels can be up before ALA brings stuff out of the brain (to scavange if mercury gets dropped)? Maybe you (Andy) or other listmates with similar situations could also comment on our situation more specifically. In a nutshell poop withholding is basically barring our access to chelation, and we wondered if there's some way around it or if the risk is too high to do it yet. My daughter is 5.5 yrs and 44lbs, pddnos, and has had no wows yet - basically a nonresponder to every major therapy/biomed approach so far. Our child was very physically and cognitively impaired before 12 months (never crawled, couldn't sit by herself until about 1 yr, etc. but has been very coordinated physically since still cognitively impaired. It's as if her body cleared poisons out of her voluntary nervous system but her brain and gut (autonomic systems) are still contaminated, resulting in poop withholding as long as 6 days between poops, but when it finally comes out it's pretty soft. Nothing has worked to change her pooping habits significantly in the 2.5 yrs since diagnosis. Our DANs mostly won't prescribe chelators if she doesn't poop regularly but don't know how to get us there. Catch-22: We may never fix her gut or brain if we don't chelate, but can't chelate until her gut or brain function well enough that she can think better so she can poop better, which may never happen without chelation. Desperate, we fed her a big fistful of cilantro every day for 2 yrs (supposed to chelate) and got one DAN to prescribe TDDMPS 30mg/ml (1ml /day alternating days with glutathione/nac TD every day) which we agreed we'd only use during those periods when our daughter inexplicably started pooping regularly (once/day or alternating days), but suspend chelation if she missed 2 days - it took us 8 months to go through 3 month's prescription. We completed about 45 chelation days from that prescription, with no visible improvements and our single TD challenge test was zero for mercury (was high-normal range for nickel arsenic and a few other items). I added oral ALA 50mg with last three TDDMPS applications and noticed better than average days - especially good therapy appointments, more mental presence. Then I read about kids having setbacks (losing some limited language they have for example) even after lots of successful rounds (I don't know if this would apply to us as TD and at 30 mg DMPS - are major setbacks only for heavy duty IV's or high dose challenges?). So based on tantalizing positive results for now, I'd like to pursue the oral ALA + DMPS/SA transdermal using something like your protocol, but minimize risk of major redistribution. I wondered if I could adapt your protocol to allow substitution of transdermal and oral agents without changing the schedule (whether DMPS, DMSA, ALA, or even glutathione TD vs. oral liposomal). On chelating a poop-withholding child, if we keep the dose low enough (30mg or less each chelator and ALA) and continue glut/nac, are we " safe " ? Heyl (DMPS mfg) literature says that 90% of the DMPS is recovered from urine in 24 hours, so it seems it's going out the urine, but whether it's still carrying the Hg or dropped it along the way is not reported. Perhaps it hands off the mercury to glutathione which then takes it to the gut. Our current DAN thinks mercury goes out gut mostly and so our risk of reabsorption and redistribution is too risky to prescribe unless pooping about a day's amount of poop every day. Another local DAN thinks it's worth continuing chelation in a constipated child hoping that at least some mercury will be excreted each time even if some is redistributed; as long as low doses (not IVs) are used the effects of redistribution would be vanishingly small. Do we (1)keep chelating but risk redistribution, (2)hold off on chelation until her gut flows freely which may never happen (and she may never improve her dianosis - she's a nonresponder up til now), or (3) can you see a protocol that can get around the poop withholding issue, so we can chelate in some way that will minimize redistribution? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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