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    Created in 2008, Phoenix Rising is the largest and oldest forum dedicated to furthering the understanding of, and finding treatments for, complex chronic illnesses such as chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), fibromyalgia, long COVID, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS), mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS), and allied diseases.

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Dr. Jay Goldstein's Rapid Remission ME/CFS Treatments.

Thomas

Senior Member
Messages
325
Location
Canada
Have you been able to get this drug? I can't find it anywhere without a prescription.
I couldn't find it anywhere online either so I asked my family doctor and he agreed to a trial of 14 1mg pills. He was hesitant but I sold him on it due to its use in anxiety which is a big problem for me. It's also used for ADHD and smoking cessation so perhaps you can lie and say you're trying to quit smoking or something.

He advised me to take it at bedtime but I'm wondering if Goldstein would advise taking it in the daytime to assess its effectiveness?
 

Sidereal

Senior Member
Messages
4,856
I couldn't find it anywhere online either so I asked my family doctor and he agreed to a trial of 14 1mg pills. He was hesitant but I sold him on it due to its use in anxiety which is a big problem for me. It's also used for ADHD and smoking cessation so perhaps you can lie and say you're trying to quit smoking or something.

He advised me to take it at bedtime but I'm wondering if Goldstein would advise taking it in the daytime to assess its effectiveness?

Goldstein recommended taking clonidine at bedtime which is a similarly acting drug. I take everything during the day at first because of wacky ME medication reactions; you wanna be alert and awake to watch for any bad reactions but if it works without side effects it's probably better to switch to bedtime dosing?
 

Thomas

Senior Member
Messages
325
Location
Canada
Goldstein recommended taking clonidine at bedtime which is a similarly acting drug. I take everything during the day at first because of wacky ME medication reactions; you wanna be alert and awake to watch for any bad reactions but if it works without side effects it's probably better to switch to bedtime dosing?
Good advice. I decided to go with Guanfacine over Clonidine because I think in Tuning the Brain, Goldstein wrote that he found Guanfacine to be superior to Clonodine over time.
 

Sidereal

Senior Member
Messages
4,856
Good advice. I decided to go with Guanfacine over Clonidine because I think in Tuning the Brain, Goldstein wrote that he found Guanfacine to be superior to Clonodine over time.

Absolutely. Clonidine is easy to get but not as good in terms of receptor profiling as guanfacine which is why I've been chasing the latter in vein. I have some clonidine right here in fact but haven't tried it yet.

This is a pretty important study (IMO) showing how the more selective drug guanfacine improves working memory whereas clonidine is detrimental:

http://www.nature.com/npp/journal/v20/n5/full/1395310a.html

A recent study of pediatric CFS in Norway also showed that suppressing the SNS tone with clonidine decreased their functionality compared to placebo. I wonder how guanfacine would have fared.
 

Thomas

Senior Member
Messages
325
Location
Canada
Absolutely. Clonidine is easy to get but not as good in terms of receptor profiling as guanfacine which is why I've been chasing the latter in vein. I have some clonidine right here in fact but haven't tried it yet.

This is a pretty important study (IMO) showing how the more selective drug guanfacine improves working memory whereas clonidine is detrimental:

http://www.nature.com/npp/journal/v20/n5/full/1395310a.html

A recent study of pediatric CFS in Norway also showed that suppressing the SNS tone with clonidine decreased their functionality compared to placebo. I wonder how guanfacine would have fared.
Interesting study, thanks for sharing. I'm guessing to calculate the dose of Guanfacine in the study one would multiply their weight in kilograms by .029 but I could be wrong.

As for the Norway reference I'll take that as an important warning. My blood pressure is usually in the low-normal category and I'm often tachycardic with OI and POTS'y, but overall I just want to see how this drug may affect my SNS which always feels like it's short circuiting.

This illness seems like a never ending trial and error exercise. We're so lucky! (not).
 

nandixon

Senior Member
Messages
1,092
@Sidereal

I've got a bad feeling about the guanfacine, because clonidine was very bad for me (too hypotensive), and in that article it states:
Blood pressure and the subjective feeling of sedation were affected equally by clonidine and guanfacine.
 

Sidereal

Senior Member
Messages
4,856
@Sidereal

I've got a bad feeling about the guanfacine, because clonidine was very bad for me (too hypotensive), and in that article it states:

Yes, it's normally used for hypertension. It would only be something to take at bedtime, at best, but the problem as with everything else in ME/CFS is that so many of us have OI and hypotension issues combined with apparent SNS excess and tachycardia which makes the whole thing damn near impossible to treat.
 

Thomas

Senior Member
Messages
325
Location
Canada
Yes, it's normally used for hypertension. It would only be something to take at bedtime, at best, but the problem as with everything else in ME/CFS is that so many of us have OI and hypotension issues combined with apparent SNS excess and tachycardia which makes the whole thing damn near impossible to treat.
I know, it's so annoying. What do you and @nandixon consider "too hypotensive"?
 

nandixon

Senior Member
Messages
1,092
Yes, it's normally used for hypertension. It would only be something to take at bedtime, at best, but the problem as with everything else in ME/CFS is that so many of us have OI and hypotension issues combined with apparent SNS excess and tachycardia which makes the whole thing damn near impossible to treat.
Yes, the clonidine was actually suggested to me a couple years ago by my sleep doctor as a possible sleep aid. I can't remember what dose I tried, but it probably would have been a 1/4 of whatever the smallest tablet size is. It wasn't helpful for sleep and made me feel worse (more fatigue/exhaustion) the next day.
 

john66

Senior Member
Messages
159
I don't think he ever mentioned mementine, but sounds like a drug that was in trials during the writing of his last book.
 

JPV

ɹǝqɯǝɯ ɹoıuǝs
Messages
858
However, as you may have gathered, I had a major relapse eight years later, a day after some minor surgery. And tolerance to nitroglycerin or isosorbide dinitrate can develop quickly; it never worked the same for me.

Here's what David Whitlock has to say about nitroglycerin resistance...
An Engineering Perspective on CFS – by Dave Whitlock

“NO donors” have been suggested, but NO/NOx chemistry is more complicated than most researchers appreciate. Nitroglycerine has been called an NO donor, it is not. It does have some NO/NOx effects, but the precise mechanisms are not well understood. It likely has to do with generation of NO/NOx species in mitochondria, but at the expense of mitochondria aldehyde dehydrogenase (which is destroyed). This is thought to be the mechanism behind what is called “nitrate resistance” where people lose the ability to respond therapeutically to nitroglycerine. Nitroglycerine does cause migraines, and does cause oxidative stress. It may be exerting more of a long term “anti-NO” effect following a short term “NO effect” because of compensatory rebound. Some NO donors (such as sodium nitroprusside) do work as NO donors, but because NO has such a short lifetime (less than a minute), it must be administered continuously and intravenously and again, only in a hospital setting.

He's developed a probiotic spray that's supposed to help increase nitrate and nitric oxide. I believe that they are selling it as a beauty aid for now while they wait for FDA approval to allow them to make specific health claims...
Q: How does it work?

A: The Nitrosomonas in the AO+ Mist work by consuming the irritating compounds produced by your skin (like ammonia and urea in sweat), and in turn producing beneficial byproducts. Specifically, Nitrosomonas produce Nitrite and Nitric Oxide. Nitrite tames the bad bacteria and promotes the good bacteria on the skin. Nitric Oxide is a key antioxidant and anti-inflammatory. These two byproducts together do a great deal to help promote healthy skin overall.
 
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Wayne

Senior Member
Messages
4,306
Location
Ashland, Oregon
95/65 is actually a VERY good BP reading for me! I still feel bad but what I meant is that I rarely can get my BP that high on my own.

Hi @Gingergrrl,

95/65 used to be good for me as well. I think I remember you posting you're getting started on low-dose hydrocortisone at this time, so wanted to mention I quickly discovered after starting on my low-dose HC (Cortef) that my blood pressure stabilized, and has been much more consistent ever since--usually around 120/85 or so.

Made a huge difference in my functionality--went from about 5% functionality to around 20%, even though my bp still drops about 20 points from a laying down or sitting position to standing. It just used to be a lot worse.
 

Gingergrrl

Senior Member
Messages
16,171
Hi @Gingergrrl,

95/65 used to be good for me as well. I think I remember you posting you're getting started on low-dose hydrocortisone at this time, so wanted to mention I quickly discovered after starting on my low-dose HC (Cortef) that my blood pressure stabilized, and has been much more consistent ever since--usually around 120/85 or so.

Made a huge difference in my functionality--went from about 5% functionality to around 20%, even though my bp still drops about 20 points from a laying down or sitting position to standing. It just used to be a lot worse.

@Wayne right now my BP is 90/58 in spite of Midodrine, lots of water, salt stick tablets and compression stockings. Can no longer drink Vitalyte or Nuun due to severe MCAS histamine allergic reactions at present. So far the Cortef is great and I am hoping it will increase my BP and dampen down the reactions. Thanks for the encouragement.
 

wastwater

Senior Member
Messages
1,271
Location
uk
I've just got betrayal by the brain.
How does tuning the brain relate to this,is it worth getting.thanks
 

Thomas

Senior Member
Messages
325
Location
Canada
@wastwater i have both. I find that I go back to Tuning The Brain more than BBTB mostly because it's a more recent publication.

@Sidereal what are some of the Goldstein meds that you've tried? Have you done any of the IV's? I've tried naphazoline, nimodipine, Ritalin, nitroglycerin, sumatriptan, piracetam and a few others. Waiting on a shipment of amantadine, beta blockers, tamiflu, doxy, reboxetine, and hydergine. And I was able to get approved for IV ketamine/lidocaine at a local pain clinic at the end of July.
 

Sidereal

Senior Member
Messages
4,856
@wastwater i have both. I find that I go back to Tuning The Brain more than BBTB mostly because it's a more recent publication.

@Sidereal what are some of the Goldstein meds that you've tried? Have you done any of the IV's? I've tried naphazoline, nimodipine, Ritalin, nitroglycerin, sumatriptan, piracetam and a few others. Waiting on a shipment of amantadine, beta blockers, tamiflu, doxy, reboxetine, and hydergine. And I was able to get approved for IV ketamine/lidocaine at a local pain clinic at the end of July.

Have not tried IVs. Tried nimodipine, guaifenecin, probenecid, piracetam, ranitidine, cimetidine.
 

Thomas

Senior Member
Messages
325
Location
Canada
Have not tried IVs. Tried nimodipine, guaifenecin, probenecid, piracetam, ranitidine, cimetidine.
How long do you take a medication before deciding whether it's doing anything or not? Sometimes I fear I give up on a med too quickly like after a dose or two. Sorry for the questions ;)