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#1
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Risperdal |
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#2
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| My neuropsychiatrist had me on Risperdal along with an SSRI for severe depression, not for hallucinations. I had to change docs and they ran blood test and found that Risperdal brought on diabetes, so I stopped the drug. The diabetes disappeared, but the depression came back, so I went to another dr. and he put me on zyprexa, another anti-psychotic. Within 3 months, I noticed a significant change in my vision and was losing weight. Went to my eye dr. and she was the one who diagnosed the diabetes and asked if I had started any new meds. This time the diabetes didn't go away after I stopped the drug, zyprexa. Now, on top of epilepsy+ depression, I have Type 1 diabetes to deal with also. I have to do insulin injections 5-6 times daily and check my glucose numerous times a day. So my message is anyone with a seizure disorder, beware of those anti-psychotics. Sounds to me like these hallucinations are seizure related. Why isn't the epileptologist taking care of them?
__________________ "The Golden Rule is that there are no golden rules." ~George Bernard Shaw |
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mel239 (06-18-2011) | ||
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#3
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| I dont know why my meds arent handling these quick hallucinations.They took care of the audio ones and they have pretty much handled my seizures and my constant auras so I have gotten tremendous relief and i really am not bothered by these other than being edgy and irritable after 6mos of this they havent gotten any worse but they havent gotten any less either.i really have never paid too much attention to triggers,i just seem to be all over the place and being alone with these kids so much of the time is such a responsibility that i tend to brush off my own problems. I really try to keep track in a notebook,but things just are so inconsistent and I get so frustrated because nothing seems to follow a pattern or make sense.I guess thats normal for temporal lobe E but I feel so nutty |
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#4
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| Mel, Different anti-seizure meds work different ways. Some prevent seizures before they happen, some stop them after they start, some prevent the electrical impulses from spreading (stopping them). Quote :
You are on Trileptal, right? Quote :
http://www.healthystock.net/category...vulsants.shtml If you are a serious science junkie: http://emedicine.medscape.com/articl...view#aw2aab6b3 http://answers.yahoo.com/question/in...3151309AAowb3x Book: Principles of Pharmacology... Since Trileptal stops the spread of seizures, I'm not sure if that means they never really get to the noticable point in the first place, or if the seizure just doesn't spread and progress. If it's the latter, then it makes sense you have a seizure for a second or so. I'm on Lamictal, and if an aura or seizure is under 10 seconds I don't count it. To me it's the meds doing their job. I bounced that off my epileptologist and he didn't disagree with it (I THINK he heard me!) It's worth asking your neurologist how Trileptal works on seizures - preventing altogether, or shutting it down after it starts. |
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mel239 (06-18-2011) | ||
| Tags |
| antipsychotics, hallucinations, seizures, tle |
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