These drugs alter your brain chemistry, and with time you may start to behave weird, get impulse control issues. You yourself won't notice, until you're a full blown maniac. Happens to about 15% of the patients taking Pramipexole. Wanna play russian roulette? Google it, "pramipexole" and "impulse control". And if your neurologist hasn't warned you about it, frankly, I'd look for a new one. Because this has been all over the medical literature in the last 10-15 years. He should know, and alert patients.
Also, be VERY careful if a dose increase is required. You may go years with a constant dose, then you're lucky. But you may require more and more after just a few months. Then you're in a vicious cycle of augmentation.
Just want to save you from what I've been going through. And yes, it was pramipexole too.
Hi....No, I don't want to be addicted to anything, including coffee in the a.m. To be honest though, I firmly believe that we're addicted to drugs if not physically, then psychologically. Not all, of course, but some.
Yes, they change the brain chemicals, but that's how they work. Gabapentin, the first anti-seizure drug we used was the exact same way & it did work. It stopped the seizures that sent pain signals down the spinal cord to the nerves and then muscles. It had been used for epilepsy for years. I'm against drug use because they caused the very early deaths of people I loved. And now b/c of one condition after the other, I take meds that I never wanted to, but b/c of what may happen (and has in my case), I suppose I should be grateful they're available. Some of us suffer severe pain as a result of damage, and as opposed to spending a life in bed, still in pain, or taking the drug, I'll do that any day. I do give myself vacations, just like I do vitamins, but drugs cross a line when they're illegally used by companies who knowingly know of a certain bad side-effect, and don't notify doctors or the public. That's outrageously wrong, as we all all know.
Any substance has side effects the positive on one side and negative on the other. Again, I so wish I wasn't caught up in this, but I am. Some of the cholesterol lowering drugs have horrible side-effects in some, but not all people. We each have to weigh our risks.
So, yes, I'll take my chances with the Parkinson's drug b/c nothing else has ever worked. I'm going in the opposite direction...I'm going down in my use of it and there are days when that doesn't occur at all. I average no-2 or 3 hrs. sleep per night. Very little, and if I had RLS I'd be totally awake all night long. I was a nurse for 8 yrs. many years ago, I'm up to date on medical matters and I, like you probably do, dislike the ads on TV. Oh, by the way, I was reading recently where Pamiprexole has worked on people with CFS/ME....etc. The doses are high, but for those willing, it's an interesting study to follow. Yes, I'd have problems with many of my drugs (being without them), but there are no choices. Just like I didn't choose to have the surgeries I did (one of them being brain surgery), I wouldn't have it today, but I was very young and strong at the time. Far worse was the spinal cord surgery I had...I still have the additional pain it left me in, along with a healed fractured rib that gives me no end of trouble.
I'm sorry, I don't mean to make this a lecture. You're wise to go into things knowingly, don't ever stop that. But, also, don't let it hold you back from something that may change your life. One of the bad things the Internet has done is giving us too much information. Sometimes it's almost impossible to make a choice. I hope you aren't too horribly afflicted and that your maintaining your own. Yours, Lenora.