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Letters From Our Readers - Comments & Suggestions 03-05-08
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Letters From Our Readers - Comments & Suggestions 03-05-08


ImmuneSupport.com

03-04-2008

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FM Turns Out to be Lyme

I found out what my fibromyalgia of 25 years is – it's Lyme disease, a bacterial infection I acquired from a known tick bite in my foot in 1981. I had no symptoms at the time, so when the sore shoulder muscles, etc., started three months later, I had no clue it was from the tick bite. I only found out two years ago, when I became very chemically sensitive and went online to ask why and someone told me. I blood tested positive and went on antibiotics and within a week, the “Fibro” pain went to zero!

So a bacterial infection invading nerves and soft tissue can cause a myriad of symptoms. It's a systemic disease mimicking so many other conditions. If you would like to, …post this on your site so others can get themselves checked out for Lyme, too, if they want to. – Robin

Note: For more information, or to ask questions about Lyme and Lyme testing, you can visit ImmuneSupport.com’s busy Lyme Disease Message Board. If you’re not yet registered to contribute, you’ll be prompted to do so; it takes only a moment. (We host 16 message boards - from AIDS to Worship - in our Community space.

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An Active Participant in My Recovery

If I’d had the knowledge I have now in the beginning of my sufferings with Lupus and FMS, my whole life would have taken a different path. Now, though it has been many years, I have learned to overcome the worst of my obstacles, and accepted the things I cannot change.

I have changed my eating habits, dropped 40 lbs, and become an active participant in my own recovery. I would love to help others with my knowledge and experience… I feel I have a lot to offer to others who suffer unnecessarily with chronic pain etc. I know full well how life-changing, and devastating, it all can be.

I said I would never jog or walk again, I am; I would never feel good again, I am… I am trying to share my own story of health, healing, and being an active participant with good doctors, and most importantly, self-care. – Jane

Note: One good place to share ideas, tips, and doctor suggestions is the ME/CFS & FM Message Board. See these three permanent strings in particular – "Please Post Your Good Doctor Here" (this includes hundreds of messages, so include state or city in your message title to make searching easy), “What Worked for Me” and “Tips for Managing Daily Life.”

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LyricaR and Vision Problems

My rheumatologist put me on Lyrica last summer. It did help with pain and endurance, but I developed several side effects – the most important one being that my vision became blurry. I had been checked at Baskin Palmer at the University of Miami for a thorough vision screening, which was perfectly normal less than a year previously. I stopped Lyrica, went for thorough vision rechecks, and they found retina problems and cataracts. There was no problem before. These have not resolved since September 2007.

I also developed sharp nerve-like pain down the front of my calf. This resolved after stopping Lyrica. I thought others might want to know. – Jeanette

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LyricaR and Headaches

Just to let you know that Lyrica so far has been the best med, for FM patients. It works for RLS (restless leg syndrome) and I can sleep better. It is so frustrating because it is very good, even though it doesn't take the whole pain away, but I get some relief. However, I wake up with bad headaches the next day.

I've suffered with migraines for 15 years. So that's the problem I have with Lyrica. It makes me very angry that the only thing so far that has helped me triggers a headache. I know that very soon we will have another medication available that will be much better. God bless, and don’t lose hope. – Helena

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Don’t Dismiss Guaifenesin Protocol

I have been a long-time subscriber the FM Newsletter and I just wanted to say, "Keep up the good work!" I have many other resources for finding information on my condition, but yours is the only publication that I've found to have "one-stop shopping" so-to-speak. I can read your newsletters and get information on just about anything I need info about! You're also always current on the latest advances for the disease.

There is one note I would like to make, however. I read the transcript from your Live Chat with Dr. Charles Lapp on Feb 1, 2008, and something he stated alarmed me. When asked his opinion regarding Dr. St. Amand's Guaifenesin Protocol, he said, "I have not been a fan of guaifenesin for treatment. He suggests that [phosphate] in muscles may cause fibro pain. There is no real evidence for this. Double blind studies of guaifenesin in CFS/ME and FM have NOT shown any benefit, and that is my personal experience also."

Dr. St. Amand does suggest that phosphate build-up in muscles may cause Fibro pain, but his research goes much, much deeper than that. I have been on the Guaifenesin Protocol for over six years now, and I'm not sure where I would be without it. I went from being basically homebound and almost bed-ridden, to being able to maintain a reasonably normal life with minimal FM flare-ups since beginning the protocol.

This improvement was apparent within a few weeks of beginning the protocol and has consistently continued throughout the past six years. I have also met MANY others with FM on the Protocol who have similar stories. While it is true that not everyone seems to benefit from the protocol, from what I have seen and heard, it's much more of an effective treatment than Dr. Lapp would suggest.

For anyone with FM who is seriously in need of a vastly improved quality of life, I would strongly suggest that they get Dr. St. Amand's books and check out his website… Do not simply dismiss the protocol as a possible treatment! – Elissa

Note: For more information about the Guaifenesin Protocol and links to Dr. St. Amand’s books and website, see: “An FM Patient Counselor's Primer on the Guaifenesin Protocol" and “Q&A Session with R. Paul St. Amand, MD - Dec 7, 2007.”

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This information has not been evaluated by the FDA. It is generic and is not meant to prevent, diagnose, treat or cure any condition, illness, or disease. It is very important that you make no change in your healthcare plan or health support regimen without researching and discussing it with your professional healthcare team.

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DISCUSS THIS ARTICLE  (7 existing comments)
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Lyrica for pain....See Rule One.
Posted by: leaknits
Mar 6, 2008
Rule One re Fibro & CFS is "Everybody's different." I'm glad the posters were able to get some relief for their pain. BUT: my dr persists in ordering up medications made for illnesses I do not have. Lyrica was produced for people who have epilepsy, herpes which presents as shingles, diabetes. I have none of these things but I do have intractable pain due to a long-ago fall and broken leg, two botched surgeries, and the fact the surgeons I got didn't bother to notice a femur-femur head socket jam and twist. I do have Chronic Fatigue Syndrome or whatever it's called this week. Dr claims I have Fibro which I do not. Since he decided without bothering to pressure-point test me that I have Fibro, he seemingly felt he could prescribe just about anything he wished to. So. Dear dr said "Lyrica. It helped some people somewhere with pain." I thought that this incidence of going very far "off-label" just might work this time. I was wrong. Dr was even more wrong than I was. What resulted was the fact that I, a 60 year old woman, had to baby-crawl from room to room in order to avoid vomiting, then incredible head pain and dizziness --- I dread falling & breaking more bone(s). Got word to dr as to what happened. "Oh," he burbled, "you'll get used to the effects." I DID NOT WANT TO "get used to" having to crawl instead of walk upright. It is not possible to maintain any kind of life on hands and knees, unless one is employed as a shamrock hunter. It is not possible to crawl through the Outside World for shopping. It is not possible to prepare and eat a meal while on all fours on the floor. I am not a fourfooted beast; only two feet came with this body. I do have two hands as well but even if my post office (for instance) was closer than a three mile round trip and, even if I could get there, odds are that "my" mailbox would be well above my suddenly reduced height. I know that because even when I'm using my powerchair for transport, I have to do a very long stretch of arm with key in hand to open the box and retrieve my mail. My dr is a true quack, so much so that I'm surprised he doesn't have feathers. The weird unending weight gain wasn't good, either. I could use a couple extra pounds but Lyrica is not the way to get them. At the rate pounds were piling onto my body I'd have weighed in at around 300 pounds in one year. Not a good idea for a person 5'6" in height and frail-boned, present weight 115 pounds. To nearly double my weight in one year wouldn't be really good for my heart, either, since I also deal with chronic heart failure. My gosh, I can't lift 20 pounds, much less 300 of them. Big Pharma should stop adding "hurt the patient" drugs to things they claim will help us. I'm also not impressed that FDA approved the Lyrica for Fibro. FDA approved Thalidomide, too. Lea.
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headache from lyrica
Posted by: dylinn25
Mar 5, 2008
I started taking Butterbur 50 mg twice a day. It took a few weeks, but I have not had a single headache (or migraine)since
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Lyrica
Posted by: kelly20
Mar 7, 2008
I went on Lyrica 3 months ago for fibromyalgia and it had the following effects on me: dizziness, and bad almost migraine-like headaches. My doctor told me today slightly less than 50% of people have had help with their fibromyalgia. So in a week or two, I will be completely off of it and searching for the next up and coming drug of the month to try for fibromyalgia.
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Guafenesin success
Posted by: cjg4048
Mar 5, 2008
I believe that there are still numerous conditions within the fibromyalgia category and someday, doctors will sort them out into subcategories. When I first saw Dr. St. Amand, I actually thought the tender areas were irritated by a foreign body, such as calcium deposits. His explanation of phosphates made sense to me. I have been following the guafenesin protocol for over 4 years under the care of Dr. St. Amand. Although I still have bad days, they are less frequent. My husband tells me how improved my everyday condition is, and I am still hoping for more progress. If you feel the same way, this protocol might be very helpful. If not, please keep reading and talking to your doctors until a successful treatment plan is found for your "subcategory". Best wishes and heartfelt thanks to the Immune Support staff.
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Hard to believe just a week!
Posted by: jimbbb
Mar 5, 2008
Robin posted this "I blood tested positive and went on antibiotics and within a week, the “Fibro” pain went to zero!" A week!!!??? That is a miracle. But I assume it did not resolve all the rest of your symptoms in just a week. (Especially if you had Lyme for 25 years).
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Lyrica & eye problems
Posted by: wellkid
Mar 9, 2008
I was on Lyrica for a few months or less, and developed blurred vision and dry eyes to the point that I could no longer wear my contacts. I quit taking the Lyrica over a year ago and am still having problems with my eyes. After a month of not being able to wear my (rigid gas permeable) contacts, my eyes apparently changed shape and I had to get a new prescription. That didn't work either, and I'm now on my second or third set of new contacts since Lyrica, and still can't wear them comfortably all day like I used to. The kicker is that I couldn't tell that I got any benefit at all from the Lyrica; it just ruined my eyes to the point that I feel obligated to warn others of the possibility. Try it, but carefully! and I hope you have better luck than I did.
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Dr. Amand
Posted by: veeveelyle
Mar 5, 2008
HI, I am very pleased to have read this comment about this protocol. I will be starting this the first of April and am hoping it works for me . I have read all the Dr's books and am very anxious to get started. Thank you for your input. I need to hear this kind of feedback at this time. thank you. veeveelyle
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