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ramakentesh

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Posts posted by ramakentesh

  1. Story of my pots:

    Had a complete remission between feb 2006 and dec 2008.

    Had milder remissions from 2010-2012, and now days my crashes ate shorter but more intense and in between im pretty good.

    sonetimes its overdoing it, sonetimes it just comes back. For me the quicker i recommence treatment (florinef and alpha agonists) the quicker i respond and improve.

  2. When essential hypertension patients are given too much antihypertensive medication they often experience 'adrenalin surges' as when the body interprets reductions in cerebral or reduced stroke volume it tries to compensate by activating beta receptors (increased heart rate but beta 2 receptors actually increase thoratic vasodilation which is probably not helpful).

    These adrenalin surges seem a part of POTS whether its a compensatory mechanism or just part of the problem. Researchers are looking at autoantibodies to beta receptors as well as antagonist ones to alpha 1 receptors. Perhaps variations in these aabs causes these strange symptoms but who knows. beta hypersensitivity is common in POTS.

  3. I dont think its that easy to figure out. Because if it was GABA then xanax would do the same and it doesnt.

    GABA may play a role but alcohol has numerous effects including changes in endothelial function, aldosterone activity, and there is a sustained increase in BP the next day after even acute rare use according to several papers that is not explained by increased adrenergic or angiotensin ii mediated vasoconstriction. My take is its an immunosuppressive as well as it also knocks my ank spond on the head occasionally. Volume loading with cold drinks is also helpful at the time.

    But the danger of saying definitively why it helps is that an assumption can obscure an important clue. :)

  4. The most likely reason you are experiencing these symptoms is because you have reduced blood flow to your brain meaning there is limited glucose and oxygen metabolism in your brain. In fact there are studies by Dr Medow and Stewart that suggest that POTs patients dont experience cerebral vasodilation in response to cognitive challenges.

  5. Dihydroergotamine has the added bonus of activating serotonin receptors only in the veins therefore bypassing and avoiding the adrenergic system completely (although some studies do suggest that it activates alpha 1 receptors like midodrine and phenylephrine)

    You may or not be aware but the best med for my POTS in terms of improvement of symptoms and reliability of action is Pseudoephedrine but obviously high tachy POTSies should avoid.

  6. Phenylephrine is used for POTS/OI in Australia. I am told it is less bioactive than midodrine and requires a larger dose as a consequence. I took it for a while and it worked well but the half life was tiny (2-3 hours on a good day). It also has central effects which seemed to help me but not every body.

    Increasing norepinephrine synthesis in POTS may or may not work very well. In australia they refuse to include POTS patients in the Northera study out of concern it may worsen tachycardia.

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