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Old 04-20-2008, 03:01 PM #1
daniella daniella is offline
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Hi. When I was at Cleveland clinic they talked about how the opiates make your body precieve more pain. Now this could be off a little cause I was in a fog of pain while I was there. So I would assume too that if you are using them every day you are going to experience those days off at the start more painful. Maybe there is something to help you that is not narcotic/opiates. I know many at CC were going through withdrawl and were trying different things but also had to experience more pain. Of course check with your doc. Feel better
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Old 04-20-2008, 04:21 PM #2
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Originally Posted by daniella View Post
Hi. When I was at Cleveland clinic they talked about how the opiates make your body precieve more pain. Now this could be off a little cause I was in a fog of pain while I was there. So I would assume too that if you are using them every day you are going to experience those days off at the start more painful. Maybe there is something to help you that is not narcotic/opiates. I know many at CC were going through withdrawl and were trying different things but also had to experience more pain. Of course check with your doc. Feel better
From what I'm reading using low dose opiates for RLS is a bit different than treating most other kinds of pain. For some people with RLS the opiates don't work at all...I seem to be one of them. Tramadol, though it acts like an opiate, isn't one in the strictest sense of the word. This doctor from that site uses methadone quite a bit for the most intractable cases of RLS pain with good results.

Treatments for RLS in general seem to be limited to Parkinson type drugs. Neurontin works for some, and now there's Lyrica, which is related to Neurontin. Requip and Mirapex or Lyrica with the addition of Tramadol or opiates seems to be the best and most consistent treatment for severe RLS. However, most GP's are hinky about giving opiates. So most severe RLS sufferers are not treated adequately. And a lot of it is that most doctors are not familiar enough with RLS treatments to do what's necessary for their RLS patients. Kinda sounds like PN, eh? LOL!
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Old 04-21-2008, 05:13 PM #3
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I have used Mirapex for RLS for almost 10 years. I have the irresitable urge to move a limb....it can be legs and arms at times...classic RLS.

I have had RLS since childhood...it just got worse and worse as I aged.


Any cold medication, antihistamines, benadryl etc makes it worse, all these things that are anticholinergic,
also amitriptyline, nortriplyline etc..(tricyclics)
Anything that contains SSRI makes it worse.
Any antidopaminergic makes it worse. (Reglan, risperdal etc)

If you take opiates, as they wear off, RLS will kick up for a few days, if you do not take Mirapex.

Things that have helped:
Mirapex
Opiates
Beta blockers
Lyrica

I can not take tramadol due to severe autonomic reactions which required hospitalization...it has SSRI.

I also have paradoxical excitation with opiates, benadryl, chloral hydrate etc. I take an opiate for pain but, as a result don't sleep well. (I have other issues besides PN.)

Have your ferritin checked. I was never able to get my ferritin high enough until lately to stop RLS.

You can be genotyped to see if your 2D6 enzyme makes you a rapid metabolizer or non-metabolizer of many of the drugs I mentioned. Many psychiatrists now are doing it to avoid adverse reactions as so many meds are in the 2D6 family...Mirapex is metabolized by the kidneys not liver.

wemove.org and rls.org have a lot of info. There is also a site out of southern california...can't think of the name...it has a lot of info too.
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Old 04-21-2008, 05:45 PM #4
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Originally Posted by cyclelops View Post
I have used Mirapex for RLS for almost 10 years. I have the irresitable urge to move a limb....it can be legs and arms at times...classic RLS.

I have had RLS since childhood...it just got worse and worse as I aged.


Any cold medication, antihistamines, benadryl etc makes it worse, all these things that are anticholinergic,
also amitriptyline, nortriplyline etc..(tricyclics)
Anything that contains SSRI makes it worse.
Any antidopaminergic makes it worse. (Reglan, risperdal etc)

If you take opiates, as they wear off, RLS will kick up for a few days, if you do not take Mirapex.

Things that have helped:
Mirapex
Opiates
Beta blockers
Lyrica

I can not take tramadol due to severe autonomic reactions which required hospitalization...it has SSRI.

I also have paradoxical excitation with opiates, benadryl, chloral hydrate etc. I take an opiate for pain but, as a result don't sleep well. (I have other issues besides PN.)

Have your ferritin checked. I was never able to get my ferritin high enough until lately to stop RLS.

You can be genotyped to see if your 2D6 enzyme makes you a rapid metabolizer or non-metabolizer of many of the drugs I mentioned. Many psychiatrists now are doing it to avoid adverse reactions as so many meds are in the 2D6 family...Mirapex is metabolized by the kidneys not liver.

wemove.org and rls.org have a lot of info. There is also a site out of southern california...can't think of the name...it has a lot of info too.
Thanks so much for this. The sites you mention, two of them I believe, are the same site and is the one I'm currently exploring that has been *so* very helpful. rlshelp.org

I'm currently taking Mirapex which seems to be helping much. No Tramadol needed for the first time in months, last night. Will go without tonight as well for a drug holiday as the Doctor at the rlshelp.org site suggested. Pray I make it through the night. I was fine all day yesterday and through last night. However, today I'm having symptoms of the burning raising it's ugly head once again.

I think I've been to wemove.org but will visit just to see.

I can't take Lyrica. Related to Neurontin and that made me suicidal.

The Tramadol was a miracle for me. The opiates don't seem to help me much. Tramadol acts like an SSRI but is different and for most people doesn't cause a worsening of RLS symptoms. SSRI's did a big number on me. Tramadol has not caused that.

All my life my iron has been closer to high rather than depleted. I came close with my third pregnancy though. That having been said I do plan on asking my
NP to check my ferritin levels rather than iron levels. There is a difference.
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Old 04-21-2008, 06:44 PM #5
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Lightbulb just a short comment...

I think RLS is a boatload of many different metabolic problems.

That site was interesting. I did research that doctor and he is a pulmonologist, and has a professional connection to a drug trial company.
That company makes money testing drugs.

His pervasive recommendation for Mirapex IMO may be linked to his
income.

Sorry...but I will not put up the links. But anyone can find them on Google.

RLS is a movement disorder and as such, when I see almost every drug known to man
listed on his site as helpful...I have to wonder what the real cause(s) is/are.
(most of the drugs he lists as helpful are NOT related to each other)

ReRead the Magnesium info... his recommendation for mag oxide is OLD OLD
and ill advised. But the bottom line? He says try it. Just don't use the old
cookbook medical recommendation, and use the newer agents...the chelates.

So RLS may be a circulatory disorder.
It may be due to low Iron.
It may be due to LOW DOPAMINE? But he really trashes Sinemet, which has
been used for ages for this.
It may be due to SSRI overload...which over 6mos of time depletes dopamine.
It may be due to low blood sugar.
It may be due to hypertension.
on and on and on.

I am just saying...be open minded and careful.
Drugs that affect neurotransmitters are not innocuous. They may do far more
than help.
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"Thanks for this!" says:
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Old 08-24-2008, 07:56 PM #6
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Unhappy RLS and PN

Quote:
Originally Posted by jarrett622 View Post
Thanks so much for this. The sites you mention, two of them I believe, are the same site and is the one I'm currently exploring that has been *so* very helpful. rlshelp.org

I'm currently taking Mirapex which seems to be helping much. No Tramadol needed for the first time in months, last night. Will go without tonight as well for a drug holiday as the Doctor at the rlshelp.org site suggested. Pray I make it through the night. I was fine all day yesterday and through last night. However, today I'm having symptoms of the burning raising it's ugly head once again.

I think I've been to wemove.org but will visit just to see.

I can't take Lyrica. Related to Neurontin and that made me suicidal.

The Tramadol was a miracle for me. The opiates don't seem to help me much. Tramadol acts like an SSRI but is different and for most people doesn't cause a worsening of RLS symptoms. SSRI's did a big number on me. Tramadol has not caused that.

All my life my iron has been closer to high rather than depleted. I came close with my third pregnancy though. That having been said I do plan on asking my
NP to check my ferritin levels rather than iron levels. There is a difference.
Hey gang -

I have been reading through some of the back threads and have a question about RLS and PN? Can RLS sometimes be a cause/contributor of PN? If so, does it need to be a severe case? I had a sleep study many years back (about 14) and was diagnosed with sleep apnea and RLS. I do agree that I have sleep apnea but if I have RLS it is a very minor case. I do not have the symptoms that you all are citing. Once in the past, while laying in bed with hubby watching, TV my leg did involuntarily react and hit his leg. That is the one and only indicator we have ever had of RLS.

However, since the PN started I am twitching like a son of a gun. My 3 yr old grandaughter thinks the twitching is wonderful. She thinks I do it on purpose and has the most wonderful laugh when it happens...

Just wondering..
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Old 08-24-2008, 11:12 PM #7
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Leslie my legs did a lot of twitching way back when. It happened so often and it reminded me of the same feeling I would get when my cat walked gently up the covers the same way the cover would feel.

It went away as it moved up my legs .

Or so I thought it would be the best, only it wasn't as it kept going up my legs. The higher it went towards my knees, the less difference I felt. .

But I still walk great. It is amazing to my really how well I do walk with dead feet and it all the way up almost.

I'm just worried about when it goes over the knee now and would like to hear in another thread if needed, how they manage if it is over their knees.

It is in hands bad now but I know it will get orse from how my feet did.

It is still managable but I have to keep myself thinking of the better things in my life now. I sure can't lose focus on the good things.

I have been under a lot of stress lately and denying that I am worried and my whole body, especially arms, is doing that bit that feels like my nerves or muscles are switching back and forth, really fast. I don't like it as I've started wondering how Parkinson disease does a body.


After injury, fibromyalgia. More life denenerative disc and then idiopathic peripheral neuropathy. I hope it ends there.
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Old 03-29-2012, 08:10 AM #8
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Default from feet to legs to groin

Quote:
Originally Posted by Zayne View Post
Leslie my legs did a lot of twitching way back when. It happened so often and it reminded me of the same feeling I would get when my cat walked gently up the covers the same way the cover would feel.

It went away as it moved up my legs .

Or so I thought it would be the best, only it wasn't as it kept going up my legs. The higher it went towards my knees, the less difference I felt. .

But I still walk great. It is amazing to my really how well I do walk with dead feet and it all the way up almost.

I'm just worried about when it goes over the knee now and would like to hear in another thread if needed, how they manage if it is over their knees.

It is in hands bad now but I know it will get orse from how my feet did.

It is still managable but I have to keep myself thinking of the better things in my life now. I sure can't lose focus on the good things.

I have been under a lot of stress lately and denying that I am worried and my whole body, especially arms, is doing that bit that feels like my nerves or muscles are switching back and forth, really fast. I don't like it as I've started wondering how Parkinson disease does a body.


After injury, fibromyalgia. More life denenerative disc and then idiopathic peripheral neuropathy. I hope it ends there.
Hi Zayne,

I have not had RLS but I seem to have severe neuropathy though I only got a symptomatic diagnosis from the ER. I don't have health insurance so I have not had any tests run yet. I do have an appointment with a volunteer clinic in 2 weeks and I'm hoping they can get me in to see a neurologist quickly. It all started 3 years ago with tingling and occasinal numbness in my left foot after I smashed my little toe on a table leg. Now, in the last 4 months after a fall walking into a store with wet floors, I have intense burning or cold numbness in both feet, horrific pain, as if there are little hard shelled creatures rolling around in both legs and excruciating vise like pain in my genitals. I'm only assuming that all of this is related to the toe smash and the fall but I really don't know anything for sure. I have been on 900 mgs. of Neurontin for 3 weeks but it doesn't seem to be helping and is making me very irritable. I don't know whether to cut it out or double the dose as I read that other people are taking much higher doses, some with success. Does that mean I'll be twice as irritable? The overall pain is worse on my left side and I walk awkwardly with a definate limp. I have found that icy or hot circulating foot baths, depending on how my feet feel, with epsom salts, provides relief for a decent amount of time and sometimes light massage if I can stand it improves circulation. I take an extended relief opiate called Opama 2 or 3 times a day and I find it helps better than other pain meds I've tried and it doesn't interfere with sleep. I also take flexeril, a muscle relaxer, at bedtime to help with sleep, which is hard to come by these days. I find some relief but I do feel 'hungover' most of the time, but it seems a small price to pay compared to the relentlous pain. I have to wear something loose and comfortable on my feet at all times, either lined slippers or plastic clogs with socks, regardless of whether my feet are burning or freezing. I don't want to be bound to all theses medications for the rest of my life, but right now it's the best I can do. I am reading lots about vitamin B12 and other supplements that can be helpful. I'll be getting tested for deficiencies at the clinic.
I know I'm sort of rambling here but the severity of my condition has come on pretty quickly and I'm just relaying my experience in the hopes that it will be helpful to others and trying to learn as much as I can by hearing other peoples experiences. I hope some of this has been helpful to you. John
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Old 04-26-2012, 02:53 PM #9
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Default Relationship of RLS as a sympton of PH

I am new to the group. I am a 65 year old Vietnam Veteran, who was exposed to Agent Orange. I have suffered with RLS for about 10 years, and first was on requip, and now on mirapex, which helps. I have to wear support hose to drive any distance or fly. I have been treated by a private doc for this, but have also begun treatment with the VA. I have been trying to find information on the relationship of RLS to PH, as PH is considered a presumptive disease by the VA-if you have PH and served in Vietnam you are presumed to have it caused by Agent Orange. It is a condition for which disability is paid. I plan to file for this and am interested if anyone else has experienced the same issues, or has seen any documentation that establishes the relationship.
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Old 08-25-2008, 11:10 AM #10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Leslie View Post
Hey gang -

I have been reading through some of the back threads and have a question about RLS and PN? Can RLS sometimes be a cause/contributor of PN? If so, does it need to be a severe case? I had a sleep study many years back (about 14) and was diagnosed with sleep apnea and RLS. I do agree that I have sleep apnea but if I have RLS it is a very minor case. I do not have the symptoms that you all are citing. Once in the past, while laying in bed with hubby watching, TV my leg did involuntarily react and hit his leg. That is the one and only indicator we have ever had of RLS.

However, since the PN started I am twitching like a son of a gun. My 3 yr old grandaughter thinks the twitching is wonderful. She thinks I do it on purpose and has the most wonderful laugh when it happens...

Just wondering..
There are two distinct disorders: RLS and PLMD (Periodic Limb Movement Disorder). They can be confused and while they use some of the same treatments for both they are still very distinct and different disorders...or so they say. To me they seem like the same thing. You may have PLMD rather than RLS.

ETA: Since I had a duh moment and didn't really answer your main question; According to the doctor, the expert on RLS and such, no, PN doesn't cause RLS. They don't know what causes it but they have ID'd some triggers. There doesn't seem to be a connection between RLS and PN. There are shared symptoms in all of these above mentioned disorders. It requires testing and a good doc to differentiate between what's what.
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