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#1 | ||
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Member
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I saw my neuro and asked for Requip instead of Mirapex. He asked why I wanted to go off Mirapex, and I cited weight gain and cloudy thinking. I take Mirapex for RLS, not for PD. (For PD I take Sinemet and Amantadine.) I forgot to mention fatigue.
My questions for those who have RLS as well as PD and for a period of time took Mirapex and later changed to Requip: *Do you have RLS as well as PD? *How did you get off Mirapex? #Did you titrate up on Requip as you titrated down on Mirapex or did you go completely off Mirapex first and then went on Requip? *Did Requip take care of your RLS? *Any negatives from changing? *Any positives from changing? I know these are many questions, but I would appreciate your help. Ann |
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#2 | |||
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Member
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Hi Ann,
I don't have RLS but I do have PD. I thought this may be of some help to you. At one point in the medication change game, I switched from Requip to Mirapex. I titrated down off of Requip completely before starting Mirapex. My reason for switching between Requip and Mirapex, weight gain, constant sleepiness, and cloudy thinking. Any positives from changing? No,none. Any negatives from changing? Yes, sleepiness became worse, weight gain became worse, cloudy thinking became worse, OCD urges grew significantly. I finally titrated down off of Mirapex and have never taken either again. GregD
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"You can't fight City Hall, but you can pee on the steps and run." --Gary North |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | soccertese (07-08-2010) |
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#3 | |||
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Member
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I also have RLS. The l-dopa alone seems to have taken care of it.
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#4 | |||
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Senior Member
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Ann - I take Requip (generic) for RLS. I took Mirapex years ago - first PD drug prescribed to me; after 6 years, switched to Requip because Mirapex made me sleepy.
That was five years ago. I decided to go off the Requip as well, because I don't like the way agonists make me think and feel, but, because of the RLS, I started up again with Requip about 3 years ago. I am taking the generic now; very low dose - 1 mg/ 3 times a day. Works well for my RLS - I also am taking Sinemet (generic) 3/day and Amantadine 3/day. That, plus an antidepressant, is my total med regimen.
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Carey “Cautious, careful people, always casting about to preserve their reputation and social standing, never can bring about a reform. Those who are really in earnest must be willing to be anything or nothing in the world’s estimation, and publicly and privately, in season and out, avow their sympathy with despised and persecuted ideas and their advocates, and bear the consequences.” — Susan B. Anthony |
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#5 | ||
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Senior Member
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Ann, we tried this, it was a total disaster for us and one my husband has not fully recovered from, if he ever will. Not to scare you, though, you know we are all so different.
He has predominant ridigity and pain PD although he does have a tremor the mirapex helps with. We've been dx'd a little over four years, if that helps. We tried to get off mirapex for the same reasons you are getting off requip: sleepiness, brain fog, weight gain. Our neuro, a key guy at a teaching facility, told us to just switch: one day just quit taking the mirapex and begin with requip, titrating up slowly on how many mg of requip we got up to....problem was, we got to 16mg a day of requip and still felt like total crap. We had been taking about 2.5 mirapex a day. We gave it three weeks. It was quite bad, so we had to go back to mirapex. Didn't want to, but the pain was simply intolerable, and my husband has a pretty high pain threshold. We were taking a ton of aspirin and ibuprofen, hoping to get past the "turning point" but never got there. When we went to our regular neuro after this experiement (the specialist who got us to switch we only see a few times a year, not sure now it's worth it!) and told him we'd been switched from mirapex to requip, he just shook his head and said "that never works, you have to take so much more requip to get the same effect as you do with mirapex." And one can only take so much of any one drug. Before we tried the switch I did a lot of research. Everyone had a different opinion, it was really no help and actually made the decision harder. In the end we just decided we would try it, and could always go back. You can, but you may suffer some setbacks like we did, and are still working to recovery from. And the experience was something I would not wish on anyone. I'd google this and see what you find. Look for someone with roughly the same type of PD you have, length of time you've had it, etc. That might make your decision, and any experiment, less of a gamble. Good luck. Last edited by lurkingforacure; 07-08-2010 at 06:13 PM. Reason: add dx time |
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