Hi, if you’ve had experience with taking Amantadine please share your information with me. I was doing well and had first appointment with MDS and she decreased my Rytary and took me off QUEtiapine Fumarate. I haven’t felt well since. Appreciate any feedback. Thank you.
Amantadine : Hi, if you’ve had experience... - Cure Parkinson's
Amantadine
Sometimes MDs think they need to tinker with your meds to feel like they are doing something. However, they should not be trying to fix what is not broken.
If what you were doing was working for you and you have not felt well since, insist on going back to the old regimen.
I hope you weren't taken off your Seroquel (Quetiapine fumarate)abruptly. That would certainly explain not feeling well. If it helps with depression and your doctor doesn't think that's a good option perhaps a different antidepressant. I take Lexapro or the generic actually, escitalopram, 10 mg a day and it helps with depression and anxiety.
I've been taking amantadine for years without any side effects that I know of. Twice a day 100mg.
If none of that is the problem then I don't see why you couldn't take your rytary at the same level where it was working. Doctors love to tinker with our meds. I suppose it makes them feel useful and that our appointment was worthwhile but it does us no good.
Amantadine was a disaster for me, caused 100% insomnia and a bad mental spiral. I know one person who does super well with it - 15 years out with low dose C/L and Amantadine. It varies person to person.
Made me extremely tired and gave me the worst nightmares ever.Very good for chest infections and the flu though.Good Luck.
My husbands taking Modapar and Rasigiline, but was having problems with dyskinesia. Neuro added in Amantadine which really does help stop the dyskinesia.
Sometimes is able to decrease the Modapar and lengthen times between doses. Often forgets to take dose of Modapar as he doesn’t seem to get defined on and off times.
Hope you can either go back to your meds that suit you, or at least have that conversation with your Neuro. Hard to wonder why they changed them.
Started a month ago due to dyskinesia can't say it's done much really
Been taking amantadine for over a year. Dr prescribed 3x 100mg a day, 3 was too much, not good, 2 a day works for me.
Just started taking amantadine 5 days ago due to dyskanisia. I now have reduced dyskanisia /squirming. Longer time between c/l doses and more energy. 5 years dx.
What exactly was your doctor's rationale for the changes? why were you on these particular meds in the first place, and how was that working out, and what do YOU think the change was about? What exactly do you mean by haven't felt well since? What's your relationship with this doctor? What's your background story, health history, co-occurring disorders, general condition, history, stage and diagnosis, age? Hard to make a competent guess without some context, actually rather a lot of context. Does this doctor even know how you feel?
Didn't you know? Doctors are well-recompensed by the drug companies for prescribing their drugs. The more drugs (and the more expensive) they can prescribe the greater their rewards! This leads them to want to experiment with different drugs. There are many websites exposing this problem. Here is one of them:
Didn't you know? Doctors are well-recompensed by the drug companies for prescribing their drugs. The more drugs (and the more expensive) they can prescribe the greater their rewards! This leads them to want to experiment with different drugs. There are many websites exposing this problem. Here is one of them:
I’ve been taking amantadine for almost a year and I found it helpful (noticed an improvement in my speaking ) the first few days I took it . I haven’t noticed a difference lately, to be honest. But perhaps my progression is making all the drugs I take seem not as remarkable. When my doctor wanted me to take two amantadine pills daily I discovered that it was too much as I couldn’t sleep at night— so I am still taking one along with a handful of other drugs and supplements.
Didn't you know? Doctors are well-recompensed by the drug companies for prescribing their drugs. The more drugs (and the more expensive) they can prescribe the greater their rewards! This leads them to want to experiment with different drugs. There are many websites exposing this problem. Here is one of them:
Didn't you know, while responding to a question directed at fonsi, that you are not fonsi? Did you know that you are different people and that she was the one asking and only she could answer those questions? Didn't you know?