Parkinson's Disease Tulip


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Old 02-11-2019, 07:51 PM #1
johnt johnt is offline
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Location: Stafford, UK
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johnt johnt is offline
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Join Date: Apr 2009
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Default We can gain much by optimizing our drug regimen

Think back to the last year, and think of the day that you felt healthiest. If you are a PwP like me, you probably felt pretty good: that's both relatively good as compared to the rubbish days either side of it, but even absolutely good as compared to a non-PwP of your age and with the same other illnesses.

So, where does that leave us?

1. If we can get to our high water mark once, we can, if optimally dosed, get even better days.

2. If we can get to our high water mark using existing drugs, we don't need new drugs to get to this level again.

3. The challenge is to get the most out of existing drugs. For most PwP that means getting the most out of levodopa.

With most systems, if you put the same inputs in, you expect to get the same outputs out. This raises the question of why you can put in 600mg, split between four doses of levodopa one day, say, and the same amount and at the same times the next day, but get two different responses?

In short, we need to track down where the levodopa is being lost: is it deficiencies in the pills not coming up to spec? is it delayed gastric emptying? is it competition with protein in the diet? and this is a recent one, is it due to the wrong kinds of bacteria in the intestines?

Simon Stott has written an excellent article describing research into the effect of bacteria in the intestines on the amount of levodopa that gets usefully absorbed. See his 9th February blog at:

The Science of Parkinson's | Plain English information about the research being conducted on Parkinson's

John
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Born 1955. Diagnosed PD 2005.
Meds 2010-Nov 2016: Stalevo(75 mg) x 4, ropinirole xl 16 mg, rasagiline 1 mg
Current meds: Stalevo(75 mg) x 5, ropinirole xl 8 mg, rasagiline 1 mg
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Old 02-25-2019, 01:31 PM #2
Blackfeather Blackfeather is offline
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Default

I've been experimenting with using liquid sinemet. Their are several recipes on the internet. Google liquid sinemet. The recipes for making liquid sinemet use effervescent vitamin C tablets 1000mg. and powdered sinemet. Emergen-C and Aiborne are 2 easy to find brands. I didn't want the extra ingredients that are included, so I purchase vitamin C powder from Vitamin Shoppe. It comes with a1000mg scoop. I crush 6 sinemet tablets in a tea cup using a wooden spoon and add a scoop of vitamin C powder. Using a funnel I pour it into a 20 oz. plastic bottle. Next I add Canada dry club soda. This gives the effervescent effect, which may not be necessary. It's very simple to make and only takes a few minutes. I have found that liquid sinemet takes affect in minutes whereas the tablets can take up to 1 hour to work. Liquid sinemet can be used as a rescue remedy or can be sipped throughout the day. I'm still experimenting on how to best use it.
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