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#1
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My pdoc recommended omega 3 and Vit E, along with my regular medications. Has anyone else had good experiences with these?
My current meds are Trileptal 900mg, Paxil CR 25mg, Omega 3 2000mg, and Vitamin E 1000 IU. I don't know exactly which is working for me (maybe all), but I feel great, and my mind is clear! (none of the "fogginess" that comes with some meds) I didn't feel that the Trileptal was working at first, but I guess that I didn't give it a chance. The paxil is working great for my anxiety problems, also. I have Klonopin 0.5mg, but now rarely have to take it. Maybe the supplements are helping for Bipolar, also?
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#2
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ITD - The Omega-3 clinical trial that was published in The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry (and the only psychiatry journal to which I still subscribe) was very flawed. I guess that one could say that they used "creative statistics" in order to make it appear that the response rate of the Omega-3 fatty acid group was larger than it really was. I can't remember the author's name, nor that of a big name in biolar disorder (they will come to me, if I don't think about them).
That being said, I do believe that Omega-3 fatty acids do help control bipolar disorder, but there are some annoying side effects. To get enough Omega-3 for a clinical effect, the dose is so high that you literally smell like a fish. The doctor (Kroll?) has his own concentrated Omega-3 concoction that he used in his clinical trial. I don't know if there are concentrated products on the market, but I would bet that they would be expensive. Also, if you've not had a manic/depressive episode how do you know if it is the fish oil or if it is a natural remission. In clinical trials for new drugs for bipolar disorder this is the hard part, is it the drug or is it natural? Clinical trials are usually 6 to 12 weeks in length. Running these trials is expensive and humans are the worst guinea pigs; way too unpredictable. I don't think that it is possible to come to any conclusion on the effects of a drug being tried for bipolar disorder in such a short time period (?Kroll's clinical trial was a year or more - I think - in length). Basically all the researchers are doing is recording (start-up) side effects. Omega-3 fatty acids pass into the brain fairly easily. They also cross cell walls easily. Fatty acids have a large lipid [fat, oily] groups making up their molecules. Since "like dissolves like" Fatty acids can "dissolve" into cell walls; they actually slip into the cell between two molecules in the cellular wall. Inside a nerve cell, it is thought that omega-3 fatty acids interferes with the energy production in the cell, normalizing it (ie. the nerve cell won't fire so easily). This looks good on paper but does it help enough to have a significant effect. Maybe, in some people. I don't know, I think it should work better than it does and I don't know of a reason why this is so. I hope that this mish-mash is of some help. - Cam |
#3
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Thanks for the info Cam.
Believe me--I would never rely solely on supplements for my illness. I am taking them per my pdoc just as supplements, along with my regular meds. I never want to lapse back into the person that I had been for years. Also, no way I'm going to walk around smelling like a fish ![]() ![]() thanks again ITD
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#4
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Oh sorry ITD, I also just assumed that you would continue the more "conventional" treatments. The omega-3 fatty acids may help, but "if it ain't broke, don't fix it". Keep on truckin' down the road and be aware of the potholes.
- Cam |
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