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NEVER TAKE ST JOHNS WORT in combination with pharmaceutical anti
depressants!
Never, never, remember that. And it takes time for pharmaceuticals to leave
the body after ceasing the intake. Just wanted to state that before going on
to the alternatives.
BUT.
Pharmaceutical antidepressants have some pretty good and worthy competition
from the natural side, and there are some good books on the subject.
Consult your physician and nutritionalist, of course. That gets tricky
because if your physician is NOT up to speed on alternative medicines from
God's garden (nature), then he will always advise against it, as he puts
himself in a liable situation. (Put on Wisdom and be a detective)
Do your own research and inquiries, or email me directly and I will put you
in contact with a good source.
Your Amazon.com and Barnes and Noble are good places (public library is
FREE, too)
One book:
"The Prozac Alternative: Natural Relief from Depression With St. John's
Wort, Kava, Ginkgo, 5-Htp, Homeopathy, and Other Alternative Therapies"
by Ran Knishinsky
Another one:
"Dealing with Depression Naturally : Complementary and Alternative Therapies
for Restoring Emotional Health"
by Syd Baumel
and there are more, and remember, that I do not have PD, so I do not know
how these react with your meds.
I read of a study done with Paxil, St Johns and placebo, and Paxil came in
LAST in effectiveness
Some links to look at, but I do not endorse, consult your physician or
homeopathy consultant
http://www.vitacost.com/science/MedStudies/StJohnsWort.html

Jeff Bayard
Help Find the Cure!
http://dialforacure.com


----- Original Message -----
From: "Deborah Setzer" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Tuesday, September 24, 2002 5:03 PM
Subject: Do users know the risks of popular antidepressants?"


> This was sent to me today and I thought it might be worth a read.
>
> Hugs,
> Deborah aka Tenacity
> -----------------------------------------------------------------
>
> "I need a pill RIGHT NOW
> Do users know the risks of popular antidepressants?"
> Patricia Pearson
> National Post
> Wednesday, September 18, 2002
>
> I note with interest that a U.S. federal judge in Los Angeles has ordered
> the maker of the antidepressant Paxil to pull some television ads. What
the
> judge called "misleading" commercials claimed that Paxil wasn't
> habit-forming, and had not been associated with dependency or addiction.
>
> Au contraire, GlaxoSmith-Kline's popular little happy pill allegedly
creates
> such severe withdrawal symptoms that a class action suit has been filed by
> 35 Americans, who claim to have become addicted to the drug. All parties
are
> due back in court on Oct. 7, to decide whether the California suit can be
> expanded to include plaintiffs nationwide.
> One reason I note this with keen interest is because a week ago Monday,
when
> most of my colleagues in journalism were preparing their opuses and photo
> essays about Sept. 11, I was scrabbling around on my hands and knees
trying
> to see if a single, last dose of the antidepressant Effexor might possibly
> have rolled under the fridge.
>
> My prescription -- which I, like thousands of North Americans, was offered
> after the trauma of Sept. 11 -- ran out on the weekend. I couldn't get
hold
> of my doctor. As a result, my head was doing this weird, pulsing,
samba-like
> thing that some Effexor users describe as "brain shivers," but that I find
> similar to how one feels under a strobe light.
>
> I'm talking spacy, dizzy, very woo-woo. One also looks forward to
> gastrointestinal upset, chills, blinding headaches and bizarre dreams.
>
> All this, after missing one dose, which is why I remain on the drug. Like
> Paxil, Effexor gets metabolized by the body as quickly as Chinese food,
and
> then relentlessly attacks you with withdrawal symptoms. A friend of mine
> forgot to take his pill one day this summer, for example, and had to
> interrupt his commute to the office, swerve into a Shoppers Drug Mart
> parking lot, blunder inside and beg the pharmacist for a single pill.
> Without it, he was unable to drive.
>
> This is a problem. Antidepressants -- which are nowadays marketed for
> everything from classic depression to anxiety, smoking cessation,
> post-traumatic stress disorder, back pain and PMS -- are enjoying
> blockbuster sales.
>
> By blockbuster, I mean more than $1-billion in retail pharmacy business in
> the year 2000 in Canada alone. Prescriptions for antidepressants jumped
62%
> in this country between 1996 and 2000, partly due to the drug companies'
> successful push for widening definitions of treatment.
> All of this increase came before 9/11, which precipitated an additional
> boost in sales. Prescriptions for antidepressants in New York City, for
> example, increased by 17% last autumn.
>
> So we have these very popular drugs beginning to show some rather
disturbing
> effects. There is trouble brewing here. My psychiatrist did not warn me
> about the withdrawal effects of my medication. Nor, by his own admission,
> does he know how the drug works or what the long-term impact on my body
> chemistry might be.
>
> Last winter, a study funded by the Canadian Breast Cancer Research
> Initiative and published in the British Journal of Cancer suggested that
> some antidepressants are increasing women's risk of breast cancer by 70%,
an
> incidence rate that doesn't show up for 10 years after treatment.
>
> I am hazarding the guess -- based on my own experience and the California
> lawsuit -- that psychiatrists and physicians are not presenting all
> information to patients and allowing them to weigh the risks.
>
> This would be in stark contrast to the risks associated with, and blared
> over loudspeakers about illicit drugs. This month, controversy erupted in
> Britain when Doctors John Cole and Harry Sumnall of the University of
> Liverpool published a critique of studies examining the harmful effects of
> the drug ecstasy, or MDMA. Given that this is an illegal street drug, a
> great deal of hue and cry inevitably arises around its use. According to
> Cole and Sumnall, the cause and effect of ecstasy-related health problems
> has not, in fact, been properly established. Of the 72 deaths in the
United
> Kingdom attributed during the 1990s to ecstasy, the psychologists argued
> that none were definitively connected to the drug, by first ruling out
> dehydration and other factors. The critique provoked an outcry of
indignant
> retorts.
>
> While the controversy remains unresolved, my point in bringing it
> up is that we do not even approach this level of righteous scrutiny when
it
> comes to the mood-altering drugs controlled by the medical establishment,
as
> opposed to the mind-altering drugs that go underground.
>
> In his recent book, Synthetic Panics: the Symbolic Politics of Designer
> Drugs, social historian Philip Jenkins makes an important observation
about
> the difference between ecstasy and Prozac, both of which were designed in
> labs for therapeutic use in altering serotonin levels in our brains: "In
the
> burgeoning atmosphere of the drug war, ecstasy was condemned as much by
its
> name as by its cultural connotations ... we can only imagine how Prozac
> would be regarded if the drug had been popularized through unofficial
> networks of therapists and had developed a reputation among
non-specialists
> for its pleasurable effects."
>
> More than 200 lawsuits related to the class of antidepressants called
SSRIs,
> which include Prozac, were settled out of court in the same time period
that
> ecstasy was generating panic in parents and lawmakers. Most of the
lawsuits
> claimed that users committed suicide or violently attacked their families.
>
> These were the most extreme cases. Lesser problems involving the broader
> group of antidepressants, including physical side effects, a risk of
> seizures, risk of addiction and elevated breast cancer risks, rarely come
to
> public attention.
>
> What, exactly, is the deal here? The merest hint of a prospect of
legalizing
> marijuana or MDMA sends every bully to their pulpit to squawk about health
> and morality, and meanwhile, millions of people are swallowing happy pills
> with unknown or undisclosed risks, because their doctor says "Take two,
and
> call me in the morning."
>
> One culprit lurking behind all of this is our continuing trust in our
> shrinks, and our sense of vulnerability in their presence. We're
disordered,
> and they know better. We've created a culture in which it is so acceptable
> to be mentally ill that new disorders are invented and treated each year.
> Many of them are treated with pharmaceuticals.
>
> We deserve to know the risks of these drugs, and to make informed
decisions
> about whether "excessive worry" is worth trading for worrisome drugs.
>
> [log in to unmask]
> © Copyright 2002 National Post
>
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