Guest guest Posted May 27, 2004 Report Share Posted May 27, 2004 Hello Marilyn You are the first non-doctor person with whom I've communicated about this disease. It is a shock to be diagnosed with, and then it seems as if one is put onto a non-stop track leading to interferon. I live in Japan and, trust the medical system here, not at all. Most likely in looking for origins (the first stage of coming to terms with the problem before denial:)) I think that I must have got this from a hospital here when I was in for kidney stones. Subsequently I had thyroid nodes and went to Singapore where a blood test showed up the virus. All that led in quick order to a liver biopsy and genotyping etc., and now I find myself just back at work in Japan going through the internal recycling of the verdict and the decision to do the " therapy " . Were I able to afford it I would probably have done it in Singapore (a great place IMHO) but NEVER in Japan where they inter you into hospital for several months. My AST ALT levels were about 30-40 and the biopsy showed mild portal fibrosis no cirrhosis and only very mild inflamation As I'm working and have cut my viral load by almost 2 logs in a year by cutting out some work and my hobby - wine sigh.... and adding some milk thistle and other liver friendly supports. I hope to find an alternative. I don't care if I am deemed virus free if it means potential hmm diabetes - brain fog - fibromyalgia - vision loss and on and on.... My doctor in Singapore said the lowering of the viral load means nothing and that I just have a slow and steady progression of the disease with a poor outcome, but hey at 50, despite being otherwise fit - there is only one outcome eventually. I'm looking into Zadaxin (thymosine) and a couple of the other newer drugs which may not give 100% virus free but may keep it under control. Meanwhile I can go to dance classes, do my yoga and take care of my life including husband, pets and other here and now stuff. How are you dealing with this? > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2004 Report Share Posted May 27, 2004 Yikes, Debrah, I feel so uninformed to be able to give advice about this virus, I can only tell you that in my 56 years, I have learned to trust my gut feelings, and tell you what my personal experience is like. Every person has to make their own informed decision about this virus. I was diagnosed before Pegasys came on to the market. Schering-Plough's Peg-Interferon was the only thing out there, and they were doling it out there sparingly. I had to get on a *list* for it, and was assigned a " Be In Charge " case nurse that I could call if I had questions. If I didn't call, she would call me. They sent me a book all about Hepatitis, and in the back were the inserts for the drugs. The book was all sunshine and lollipops about how I could trust the doctors to help me. But when I read the inserts, everything in my body went " Whoa! " On the Interferon page, the first thing was a big black box. Inside it, it said " WILL cause hemolytic anemia " . I never heard of it before, so I went on the web and looked it up. It said it will destroy red blood cells faster than your body can reproduce them. AND it happens in the first two weeks! So whoopie, I can inject myself with Procrit and hope it works! No thanks! So I joined this list and people set me straight. I told them I was 1B, my viral load was only 350,000, and my biopsy only showed mild inflammation. Nobody ever tried to directly influence me, but they told me I had time to wait. They told me their stories - some didn't take the treatment, some did with success, and some took treatment with terrible results (Dana, you out there, care to share?). When I told my hepatologist that I was taking myself off the waiting list, he went absolutely postal on me. I swear to God, I saw dollar signs flying around his head when he was having his little hissy fit! Treatment costs $26,000 a year, and I know he was getting kickbacks, not to mention that my insurance kept denying all but 35% of my claims for him, saying he was over the price of my area of the country. But it's my life, and my choice. I thank God that I was as old as I was when I got my diagnosis, and at a point in my life where I don't take a lot of crap from anybody! Ooohh! I used to share your hobby - wine! I loved it, I was never much of a drinker to begin with, but about almost 30 years ago, dated a guy who was a wine connoisseur, and introduced me to wine and food. I truly do miss it, but I have other things in my life to make up for it. I was doing milk thistle until a friend who is very knowledgeable told me it just masks symptoms. I drink tons of water every day, try to get in 1 oz. for every 2 pounds of body weight, walk my dog every day, try to eat 60 grams of protein every day (or drink it in drinks without iron), take a nap when I'm tired instead of fighting it, and take a good multivitamin without iron in it, like Centrum Silver. It helped almost immediately. I expected to get results in several months, but I saw them in 2 weeks. I was so fatigued when I joined this list, I had been taking 2 hour naps every day. Henry, was it you who told me to walk to the corner and back, even if I had to go to sleep when I came back, I don't remember! Anyway, someone on this list told me to just keep moving every day and that I would be able to go farther every day. It's hard to remember the person I was back then. Anyway, I guess what I am saying is that you know what is right for you, and that's what you should do. It sounds like you have your health under control. Honey, just keep doing what you are doing, it works for you. We are not dying from this virus, we are living with it! Oh, a post P.S. - I used to work for a Japanese firm here in IL. Not easy people to deal with, I know! Best to you, Marilyn Re: There has to be a better way Hello Marilyn You are the first non-doctor person with whom I've communicated about this disease. It is a shock to be diagnosed with, and then it seems as if one is put onto a non-stop track leading to interferon. I live in Japan and, trust the medical system here, not at all. Most likely in looking for origins (the first stage of coming to terms with the problem before denial:)) I think that I must have got this from a hospital here when I was in for kidney stones. Subsequently I had thyroid nodes and went to Singapore where a blood test showed up the virus. All that led in quick order to a liver biopsy and genotyping etc., and now I find myself just back at work in Japan going through the internal recycling of the verdict and the decision to do the " therapy " . Were I able to afford it I would probably have done it in Singapore (a great place IMHO) but NEVER in Japan where they inter you into hospital for several months. My AST ALT levels were about 30-40 and the biopsy showed mild portal fibrosis no cirrhosis and only very mild inflamation As I'm working and have cut my viral load by almost 2 logs in a year by cutting out some work and my hobby - wine sigh.... and adding some milk thistle and other liver friendly supports. I hope to find an alternative. I don't care if I am deemed virus free if it means potential hmm diabetes - brain fog - fibromyalgia - vision loss and on and on.... My doctor in Singapore said the lowering of the viral load means nothing and that I just have a slow and steady progression of the disease with a poor outcome, but hey at 50, despite being otherwise fit - there is only one outcome eventually. I'm looking into Zadaxin (thymosine) and a couple of the other newer drugs which may not give 100% virus free but may keep it under control. Meanwhile I can go to dance classes, do my yoga and take care of my life including husband, pets and other here and now stuff. How are you dealing with this? > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 7, 2009 Report Share Posted October 7, 2009 Truehope has a nondrug formula that works well for bipolar and other problems.  Paxil Prozac Luvox Zoloft Lexapro Celexa for Bipolar Disorder Posted by Dianne Hansen | May 13, 2009 . SSRIs are bad for the bipolar brain. Paxil, Prozac, Luvox, Zoloft, Lexapro and Celexa are SSRI drugs. Wikepedia defines SSRI: Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors or serotonin-specific reuptake inhibitor (SSRIs) are a class of compounds typically used as antidepressants in the treatment of depression, anxiety disorders, and some personality disorders. The first class of psychotropic drugs to be rationally designed, SSRIs are the most widely prescribed antidepressants in many countries. From Mental Help Dot Net Bipolar Disorder Treatment – SSRI and SNRI Antidepressants: Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and other new antidepressants, such as buproprion and venlafaxine, are generally considered to be the first-line choices for the depressed phase of bipolar illness. Other medications such as tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), and monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) have also entered the bipolar treatment regimen. As discussed earlier, antidepressants alone have the potential to trigger a manic episode; therefore, they are prescribed in combination with a mood stabilizing drug. Similar to mood stabilizers, there are studies to support the use of antidepressants in between episodes. Continuous use of both antidepressant and mood stabilization treatments may keep the severe symptoms of bipolar disorder away. Specific antidepressants may not be safe for pregnant or nursing women and should be discussed with a physician. From Web MD Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs) for Bipolar Disorder Your doctor may prescribe newer antidepressants known as SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) for treating severe depression in bipolar disorder. They are usually prescribed along with lithium. We have documentation to show that SSRI drugs don’t have any more effect on bipolar disorder than a placebo does. But worse than that, we have testimonies from a doctor and a sheriff about SSRIs that you will surely find intriguing… First let Dr. Ann Blake introduce the sheriff: “Sheriff Mack and I grew up together. His sister was one of my best friends and we all spent a lot of time together. I knew his family very well and I also know his wife’s family very well. So when I began to write about SSRIs and noticed so many cases showing up in my own home town involving antidepressants, including one of his best friends, I called him. At that time he was serving as the Graham County Sheriff. While serving in that capacity he brought three of his best buddies home in body bags because they committed suicide on one of these drugs. He has been one of my most avid supporters ever since as I have also been an avid supporter of his work. In 2004 he made the trip c ross country with us to Washington, DC to testify before the FDA. I have included his testimony below for you to see how much of an impact his powerful testimony must have had upon the FDA Advisory Committee in encouraging them to place the Black Box Warnings for increased suicide on antidepressants. He and I both know that law enforcement mustwake up to the nightmare of these drugs as they deal with it daily. He has a new book out, “The County Sheriff, America’s Last Hope†and he just sent me a YouTube video interview that he just did on the book. I share it with you now as well as his powerful FDA testimony below.†Sheriff Mack’s testimony before the FDA in 2004: “My name is Mack. I am a retired law enforcement officer and sheriff from Arizona. My expertise in that field was juvenile delinquency, school violence, and narcotics investigations. My first experience with SSRIs was when I was a parent of a second grader, my wife and I were called into the school, our son had a problem staying in his chair. What was the government school’s answer? Drug your son into submission, so he will stay in his chair. We refused and we thank God now that we did. Our son turned out just fine, played basketball, baseball, and excelled at school and sports. I was a sheriff of a small community in Arizona. We had an abnormal amount of high rate of suicide and teen violence. I am just an inves tigator, I just present the facts. One thing that we could not ignore was the circumstantial evidence that the common denominator in all of these cases was the victims or perpetrators were on SSRIs. In investigating these events, it became quite commonplace for all of us to ask the same question as we got to the next event of horrified and traumatized people and families. You have heard from many of them today. Some people don’t have the adverse reaction to these drugs, some do. I learned the same with LSD when I investigated that as an undercover narcotics officer. I can only say that the evidence is mounting over and over as did in our investigations. We cannot, as law enforcement officials, ignore such circumstantial evidence. I doubt very seriously if you could either. I am an advocate for state’s rights and I do believe that if the FDA fails to take action, the state and local authorities will have to. Thank you.†-Sheriff Mack Dr. ’s testimony before the FDA: Ann Blake , Ph.D. I would like to say, first of all, that this is a meeting that should not be taking place today. I testified at an FDA hearing similar to this in 1991, and these drugs should have been banned at that time in my opinion. I am Dr. Ann Blake , a Ph.D. in health sciences with emphasis on psychology. I have spent the last 14 years researching the SSRIs and working with patients who are having20adverse reactions to these medications. I am also the author of Prozac: Panacea or Pandora, Our Serotonin Nightmare. I have testified in criminal and civil cases for 12 years concerning these medications, and I am greatly concerned about the use of these drugs among children, with developing brains, who have far more reactions than the general public would, and the elderly who are having severe adverse reactions. What I presented to the FDA in 1991, I would like to present again. Each of you will get a copy of this. This is a 31-year-old patient on Prozac for six months, shows the patient, although appearing alert and functioning, in a total anesthetic sleep state while dreaming. I believe technically, you could call that a REM sleep behavior disorder. The research now shows, this many years later, that 86 percent of the cases being diagnosed with this REM sleep behavior disorder are patients on antidepressants, 80 percent of those on SSRI antidepressants.There are some very famous cases that I believe manifest that very clearly, and in representing those families today, I would give you Yates, who drowned her five children while taking Effexor and Remeron. DR. RUDORFER: Thank you. I am afraid we are out of time now. DR. RUDORFER: Thank you. Dr. Ann Blake ’s September 13, 2004 to the FDA I am Ann Blake , PhD, head of the International Coalition for Drug Awareness. I am the author of Prozac : Panacea or Pandora? – Our Serotonin Nightmare and have testified in court cases involving antidepressants for 12 1/2 years. The last 15 years of my life have been devoted full time to researching and writing about SSRI antidepressants. Research on serotonin has been clear from the very beginning that the most damaging thing that could be done to the serotonin system would be to impair one?s ability to metabolize serotonin. Yet that is exactly how SSRI antidepressants exert their effects. For decades research has shown that impairing serotonin metabolism will produce migraines, hot flashes, pains around the heart, difficulty breathing, a worsening of bronchial complaints, tension and anxiety which appear from out of nowhere, depression, suicide – especially very violent suicide, hostility, violent crime, arson, substance abuse, psychosis, mania, organic brain disease, autism, anorexia, reckless driving, Alzheimer’s, impulsive behavior with no concern for punishment, and argumentative behavior. How anyone ever thought it would be “therapeutic†to chemically induce these reactions is beyond me. Yet, these reactions are exactly what we have witnessed in our society over the past decade and a half as a result of the widespread use of these drugs. In fact we even have a whole new vocabulary as a result with terms such as “road rage,†“suicide by cop,†“murder/suicide,†“going postal,†“false memory syndrome,†“school shooting,E2 “bi-polar†– every third person you meetanymore – along with the skyrocketing rates of antidepressant-induced diabetes and hypoglycemia. Can you remember two decades ago when depressed people used to slip away quietly to kill themselves rather than killing everyone around them and they themselves as they do while taking SSRI antidepressants? A study out of the University of Southern California in 1996 looked at a group of mutant mice in an experiment that had gone terribly wrong. These genetically engineered mice were the most violent creatures they had ever witnessed. They were born lacking the MAO-A enzyme which metabolizes serotonin. As a result their brains were awash in serotonin. This excess serotonin is what the researchers determined was the cause for this extreme violence. Antidepressants produce the same end result as they inhibit the metabolism of serotonin. These are extremely dangerous drugs that should be banned as similar drugs have been banned in the past. As a society we once thought LSD and PCP to be miracle medications with large margins of safety in humans. We have never seen drugs so similar to LSD and PCP as these SSRI antidepressants. All of these drugs produce dreaming during periods of wakefulness. It is believed that the high serotonin levels over stimulate the brain stem leading to a lack of muscle paralysis during sleep thus allowing the patient to act out the dreams or nightmares they are having. The world witnessed that clearly in the Zoloft-induced murder-suicide of comedian Phil Hartman and his wife, Brynn. Connecticut witnessed the Prozac-induced case of Silk several years ago. This young mother attacked her family with a knife, then set the house on fire killing all but her 8 year old daughter who ran to the neighbors. As she stood bleeding and screaming for help she explained, “Help! My mommy is having a nightmare!†Out of the mouths of babes we will understand these nightmares for whatthey are. She understood that this was something her mother would do ONLY in a nightmare, never in reality. This is known as a REM Sleep Behavior Disorder. In the past it was known mainly as a drug withdrawal state, but the largest sleep facility in the country has reported that 86% of the cases they are diagnosing are patients on antidepressants. Because this was known in the past as a condition manifesting mainly in drug withdrawal you should see how dangerous the withdrawal state from these drugs will prove to be. That is why it is so critical to make sure patients are weaned EXTREMELY slowly so as to avoid ANY chance of going into a withdrawal state.†For your information, here is the medical article just out in the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons on antidepressant-induced murder and suicide. Speak with Him Thou for He hearest. Spirit with Spirit can speak. Closer is Love than breathing,0D Nearer than hands and feet. (with appreciation for Tennyson) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.