Two typical MS drugs are Diazepam and Baclofen..
Both are used by hundreds of thousands of patients.
I wonder if the patients actually knew of the possible side effects, would they continue or even start taking these drugs.
Most drugs are tested on a minimum of 100 people, the side effects, both minor and serious are listed because they have happened, it isn’t a list concocted from the mind of a researcher, they are listed because it has happened to the testers.
When a patient signs for their prescription it’s stating that you acknowledge the possible damaging side effect and will not hold the pharmacy or manufacturer responsible for the possible detrimental effects on your life.
Okay by taking them they are pacifying or masking the symptom not the root cause. That basically means that the user may well have an okay life for a limited time, but at some point their immune system will simply not be able to protect them from the most basic of health issues, can you imagine family saying that he or she was able to live comfortably with multiple sclerosis but a flipping cold killed them.
Two typical MS drugs are Diazapam and Baclofen..
Diazepam belongs to a class of drugs called benzodiazepines. A class of drugs refers to medications that work similarly. They have a similar chemical structure and are often used to treat similar conditions.
Diazepam increases the activity of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), a special chemical that can send signals throughout your nervous system. If you don’t have enough GABA, your body may be in an excited state and cause you to have anxiety, get muscle spasms, or have seizures. When you take this drug, you’ll have more GABA in your body. This will help decrease your anxiety, muscle spasms, and seizures.
The following is from the makers Web site
Diazepam side effects
Diazepam can cause mild or severe side effects.
Diazepam oral tablet can slow down your brain’s activity and interfere with your judgment, thinking, and motor skills. You shouldn’t drink alcohol or use other drugs that can also slow down your brain’s activity while you’re taking diazepam. You also shouldn’t drive, operate machinery, or do other tasks that require alertness until you know how this drug affects you. There are additional effects that you should also be aware of.
The following list contains some of the key side effects that may occur while taking diazepam. This list does not include all possible side effects. For more information on the possible side effects of diazepam, or for tips on how to deal with a troubling side effect, talk with your doctor or pharmacist.
More common side effects
The more common side effects that can occur with diazepam include:
Drowsiness
tiredness or fatigue
muscle weakness
Inability to control muscle movements (ataxia)
headache
tremor
dizziness
dry mouth or excessive saliva
nausea
Constipation
If these effects are mild, they may go away within a few days or a couple of weeks. If they’re more severe or don’t go away, talk to your doctor or pharmacist.
Serious side effects:
Call your doctor right away if you have serious side effects. Call 999 if your symptoms feel life threatening or you think you’re having a medical emergency. Serious side effects and their symptoms can include the following:
Worsening of seizures. Symptoms can include:
Urine infequency.
Increase in severity
Changes in the brain or how you think.
Symptoms can include:depression
Confusion
Feelings of the room spinning (vertigo)
slowed or slurred speech
Double or blurred vision.
Thoughts of suicide
Memory loss
Unexpected reactions.
Symptoms can include:
Extreme excitement
Anxiety
Hallucinations..
increased muscle spasms
trouble sleeping.
Agitation
Liver problems.
Symptoms can include:
Yellowing of your skin or whites of your eyes (jaundice)
Bladder problems.
Symptoms can include:
Inability to urinate
Inability to hold urine
Increase or decrease in sex drive.
Withdrawal.
Symptoms can include:
Tremor
Abdominal or muscle cramps
Sweating
Convulsions
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And then there’s Baclofen…
Baclofen controls muscle spasticity in conditions such as multiple sclerosis and spinal cord injuries. Off-label uses include alcohol dependence, GERD, intractable hiccups, nystagmus, and trigeminal neuralgia.
Usual oral doses range from 5-80 mg daily for spasticity to 270 mg or higher daily for alcohol abuse treatment. Automated Intrathecal delivery through an implanted catheter and pump is an option for those who do not tolerate or respond to oral therapy.
Overdoses occur from large ingestions in abuse or self-harm attempts or from malfunction of an intrathecal assembly. Chronic therapeutic overdose is possible, especially in the elderly and patients with renal impairment, because baclofen is renally excreted. CNS, respiratory, and cardiovascular depression are common with significant overdoses.
The most striking symptom is prolonged, deep coma with absent brain stem reflexes that may mimic brain death. The Missouri Poison Center has actually halted premature organ harvesting in several overdose cases over the years!
Baclofen stimulates inhibitory GABAB control receptors on excitatory glutamate neurons in the brain and spinal cord. This decreases signals to muscles, which reduces muscle tone and spasticity.
Baclofen kinetics vary in oral versus intrathecal administration. Peak and half-life are prolonged in overdose:
Oral: Peak 1.5 hours, 2-3 hours in overdose; Half-life 5.5 hours, up to 32 hours in overdose
Intrathecal: Peak 4 hours after intrathecal bolus, 24-48 hours after continuous infusionSYMPTOMS OF TOXICITY
Patients typically present with lethargy, weakness, hypotonia, slurred speech and ataxia, and may exhibit hypothermia, abnormal movements, nystagmus, hallucinations, or seizures, cardiac depression with bradycardia and hypotension and deep coma with respiratory depression or apnea are common.
CAUTION: Deep coma with absent brain stem reflexes may mimic brain death!
I tend and prefer to look at the long-term, the big picture..
In the 1960’s a woman called Viv Nicholson was front page news after her husband won more than £150,000 which at that time was like millions today. The headline read..
Spend, Spend, Spend…
As far as I see it, that’s no different in taking drugs that make you feel good in the short term..
It’s okay to want it “now” but in my particular case I have patience and want to live a long time even if it takes years to be healthy..
The Ann Boroch Protocol is what I choose to do, when she developed the protocol it was painstakingly formulated over a four plus year period. She did this by eliminating foodstuffs that were shown to exacerbate candida, which has been proven to be the antagonist in this problem. She worked out which foods helped and which hindered the internal organs from doing what they are meant to do.
Okay, yes it does take a long time to “Heal” the body…… but its making permanent changes, not temporary artificial improvements that disappear when the chemicals aren’t strong enough to mask the problem.
I wrote an analogy several years ago which is worth repeating here…
Imagine coming home and finding your kitchen flooded with water….
The big pharma suggestion is to grab lots of blankets to mop up the continually flowing water…
The Ann Boroch suggestion is to turn the tap off first, then pull the plug out of the overflowing sink..Then… mop the water up..
When looked at like this it’s flipping obvious..
There’s no doubt the pariahs way, oops sorry, the big pharma way will help from a short term point of view, but its not mine…
If someone still has the potential to live another 20, 25 or 30 years then a restrictive 4 or 5 year program is worth persevering with. If on the other hand someone thinks they’ve only got another 8, 9 or 10 yrs left then it’s understandable taking the short term view and option.
But they must understand the likelihood of pharmaceutical side effects..
The only long term side effects from following the Ann Boroch Protocol is…
Good health..