Guest guest Posted October 23, 2010 Report Share Posted October 23, 2010 From ilads (Burrascano 10/2008) website: " If treatment is discontinued before all symptoms of active infection have cleared, the patient will remain ill and possibly relapse further. In general, early LB is treated for four to six weeks, and late LB usually requires a minimum of four to six months of continuous treatment. All patients respond differently and therapy must be individualized. " He is shy of 8 weeks since tick removal. 1. Is he still considered " early " LB? 2. Is the re a timeline to break up stages? " If high blood levels are not attained, treatment failures in early and late disease are common. However, these high doses can be difficult to tolerate. For example, doxycycline can be very effective but only if adequate blood levels are achieved either by high oral doses (300 to 600 mg daily) or by parenteral administration. Kill kinetics indicate that a large spike in blood and tissue levels is more effective than sustained levels, which is why with doxycycline, oral doses of 200 mg bid is more effective than 100 mg qid. Likewise, this is why IV doses of 400 mg once a day is more effective than any oral regimen. " 3. So our son started doxycycline 100 mg BID yesterday as I have shared preciously. Based on the above information, he should be on more possibly? He told me today he had a bloody stool (diarrhea and he said a lot of blood). This is the first time this has happened. He has had 2 doses of the antibiotics so far + all herbs. I don't know what the cause of this is. " Always check blood levels when using agents marked with an *, and adjust dose to achieve a peak level above ten and a trough greater than three. Because of this, the doses listed below may have to be raised. Consider Doxycycline first in early Lyme due to concern for Ehrlichia co-infections. *Doxycycline- Adults: 200 mg bid with food; doses of up to 600 mg daily are often needed, as doxycycline is only effective at high blood levels. Not for children or in pregnancy. If levels are too low at tolerated doses, give parenterally or change to another drug. " 4. Should my son be receiving blood tests? LYME DISEASE REHABILITATION " Despite antibiotic treatments, patients will NOT return to normal unless they exercise, so therefore an aggressive rehab program is absolutely necessary. It is a fact that a properly executed exercise program can actually go beyond the antibiotics in helping to clear the symptoms and to maintain a remission. " 5. What are your thoughts on exercise and what has worked for you? I read the physical therapy Rx Dr. B prescribed. We will follow that. WIth chronic fatigue, I suppose I will get him to exercise on his good days? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2010 Report Share Posted October 24, 2010 Hi - I made a post on lymenet asking what is an appropriate level of doxy. People have answered there. I think you need to go on lymenet and engage with the Lyme patients there. They are very experienced at answering questions, and everyone gives referrals to Lyme-experienced doctors. You can go to www.lymenet.org and sign up. It's best not to use your full name which could identify you too easily. Then you click on flash discussion and medical questions. Either you can continue on the post I started in Medical Questions, which is titled Doxy Question, or you are certainly welcome to start your own post and I can delete the one I started. If you want Lyme-literate doctor referrals in your area, which is my/our opinion that you need at this point, you can ask in the section called Seeking A Doctor, and put your state in the heading. At least your son has you working hard for him, so thanks for asking us what to do - Robin [ ] ilads quotes and Questions From ilads (Burrascano 10/2008) website: " If treatment is discontinued before all symptoms of active infection have cleared, the patient will remain ill and possibly relapse further. In general, early LB is treated for four to six weeks, and late LB usually requires a minimum of four to six months of continuous treatment. All patients respond differently and therapy must be individualized. " He is shy of 8 weeks since tick removal. 1. Is he still considered " early " LB? 2. Is the re a timeline to break up stages? " If high blood levels are not attained, treatment failures in early and late disease are common. However, these high doses can be difficult to tolerate. For example, doxycycline can be very effective but only if adequate blood levels are achieved either by high oral doses (300 to 600 mg daily) or by parenteral administration. Kill kinetics indicate that a large spike in blood and tissue levels is more effective than sustained levels, which is why with doxycycline, oral doses of 200 mg bid is more effective than 100 mg qid. Likewise, this is why IV doses of 400 mg once a day is more effective than any oral regimen. " 3. So our son started doxycycline 100 mg BID yesterday as I have shared preciously. Based on the above information, he should be on more possibly? He told me today he had a bloody stool (diarrhea and he said a lot of blood). This is the first time this has happened. He has had 2 doses of the antibiotics so far + all herbs. I don't know what the cause of this is. " Always check blood levels when using agents marked with an *, and adjust dose to achieve a peak level above ten and a trough greater than three. Because of this, the doses listed below may have to be raised. Consider Doxycycline first in early Lyme due to concern for Ehrlichia co-infections. *Doxycycline- Adults: 200 mg bid with food; doses of up to 600 mg daily are often needed, as doxycycline is only effective at high blood levels. Not for children or in pregnancy. If levels are too low at tolerated doses, give parenterally or change to another drug. " 4. Should my son be receiving blood tests? LYME DISEASE REHABILITATION " Despite antibiotic treatments, patients will NOT return to normal unless they exercise, so therefore an aggressive rehab program is absolutely necessary. It is a fact that a properly executed exercise program can actually go beyond the antibiotics in helping to clear the symptoms and to maintain a remission. " 5. What are your thoughts on exercise and what has worked for you? I read the physical therapy Rx Dr. B prescribed. We will follow that. WIth chronic fatigue, I suppose I will get him to exercise on his good days? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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