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Old 12-20-2015, 01:18 PM #11
heb1212 heb1212 is offline
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Originally Posted by madisongrrl View Post
Joanna,

I know that you can not get IVIG, but could you get someone to prescribe Low Dose Naltrexone for you? It might be worth a try and it only cost about a dollar a day.
Hi, Madison... I have heard of LDN in several different forums for overlapping issues I have (chronic virus, fibro, neuropathy). I'm wondering how you have succeeded getting a RX for it, when it doesn't seem to be FDA approved in the US for chronic pain conditions? Did you bring the suggestion to your doctor and he approved of it or was it his/her suggestion to you? Also, it doesn't seem to be compounded in the low dosage here in the US, so how do you get it dispensed? I'm going back to pain management in January, and I'd like to go as informed and prepared as possible. I found a PubMed review on LDN that I think I'll bring with me, but it all seems very experimental at this point. I've tried so many things; so many side effects. Currently, I'm on gabapentin and nortriptyline, too, but low doses of both. Thanks!
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Old 12-20-2015, 02:30 PM #12
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Lightbulb

Naltrexone is available in other doses in the US.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naltrexone

I believe you have your RX written for whatever low milligrams you have your doctor start you up on, and take that to a compounding pharmacy and they divide up the tablet for you into smaller doses. Some websites have directions for the patient to do this themselves.

Our MS forum here has a pharmacy that does this for them, and mails the RX out to the patient when it is ordered.
http://neurotalk.psychcentral.com/thread71392.html
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heb1212 (12-20-2015)
Old 12-21-2015, 07:30 AM #13
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Originally Posted by heb1212 View Post
Hi, Madison... I have heard of LDN in several different forums for overlapping issues I have (chronic virus, fibro, neuropathy). I'm wondering how you have succeeded getting a RX for it, when it doesn't seem to be FDA approved in the US for chronic pain conditions? Did you bring the suggestion to your doctor and he approved of it or was it his/her suggestion to you? Also, it doesn't seem to be compounded in the low dosage here in the US, so how do you get it dispensed? I'm going back to pain management in January, and I'd like to go as informed and prepared as possible. I found a PubMed review on LDN that I think I'll bring with me, but it all seems very experimental at this point. I've tried so many things; so many side effects. Currently, I'm on gabapentin and nortriptyline, too, but low doses of both. Thanks!

The new clinic that I'm seeing prescribed it without me asking. It is prescribed off label. It is FDA approved at higher doses, but will likely never approve it at lower doses; there is no money to be made for pharma, so they won't invest the money for low dose approval. This drug had a low side effect profile. I personally take 2.5 mg each night and have had zero side effects.

I get my LDN compounded at a pharmacy here in the city where I live in. It cost me about a dollar a day and they ship it to my house, Pain doctors are starting to use LDN. Pradeep Chopra is a well known pain doctor who has published a small case study that highlights success with RSD patients on LDN.

There is a good paper out there that explains the 2 mechanisms for this drug. Let me know if you can't find it because I probably have it tucked away somewhere on one of my computers.


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Old 12-21-2015, 06:24 PM #14
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Originally Posted by madisongrrl View Post
The new clinic that I'm seeing prescribed it without me asking. It is prescribed off label. It is FDA approved at higher doses, but will likely never approve it at lower doses; there is no money to be made for pharma, so they won't invest the money for low dose approval. This drug had a low side effect profile. I personally take 2.5 mg each night and have had zero side effects.

I get my LDN compounded at a pharmacy here in the city where I live in. It cost me about a dollar a day and they ship it to my house, Pain doctors are starting to use LDN. Pradeep Chopra is a well known pain doctor who has published a small case study that highlights success with RSD patients on LDN.

There is a good paper out there that explains the 2 mechanisms for this drug. Let me know if you can't find it because I probably have it tucked away somewhere on one of my computers.


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Hi Madisongirl, thankyou for the info on LDN. I did acquire some here in the UK but felt unsure about it as I didn't know what side effects I may suffer. I only took it a week and threw it. I have become very skeptical of everything now I have come a bit further down the road of illness and trying to find something to help. I think I will look through some more online info again and really consider giving it a good try. Do you feel it has helped you? Hole it has to some extent
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Old 12-21-2015, 08:12 PM #15
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Hi Madisongirl, thankyou for the info on LDN. I did acquire some here in the UK but felt unsure about it as I didn't know what side effects I may suffer. I only took it a week and threw it. I have become very skeptical of everything now I have come a bit further down the road of illness and trying to find something to help. I think I will look through some more online info again and really consider giving it a good try. Do you feel it has helped you? Hole it has to some extent
LDN has a low side effect profile. Some people might get insomnia at first and others experience vivid dreams. I did not have any issues with it. Plus, I'm so doped up on gabapentin that I never remember my dreams or have problems sleeping.

I started LDN and antibiotics in the middle of October. I felt improvements after 2 weeks of starting those drugs. I thought it was due to the LDN, however the nurse said it likely due to the antibiotics. She said it takes a little longer for LDN to work for neuropathic pain - so if you try it again, give it several months to work.

Today, I've felt the best that I've ever felt since initially getting sick. I'm going to continue on with the LDN...
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