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coastacu

To:Chinese Medicine

Subject:Prozac

Date:Tue, 22 Nov 2005 11:46:00 -0500

 

 

Hello All,

 

I have through the years encountered patients who, for one reason or another,

do not respond well to TCM treatment of their depression and who choose to begin

using Prozac. Or, patients who come to me for other reasons and are happily

using Prozac already. Admittedly, not the best choice from where I sit, but it

is their choice.

 

So, how to deal with the normal side effect of greatly reduced libido? I have

struggled with this to no effect in the past. If we accept, as compassionate

health care providers, that patients have the right to make their own choices,

how do we deal with the side effects? There do seem to be elements of kidney yin

and/or yang depletion, along with liver and heart issues, but I have been unable

to effect a change. Any ideas?

 

Thank You!

 

Beata Booth LAc

 

 

 

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coastacu wrote:

> So, how to deal with the normal side effect of greatly reduced libido? I have

> struggled with this to no effect in the past. If we accept, as compassionate

> health care providers, that patients have the right to make their own choices,

> how do we deal with the side effects? There do seem to be elements of kidney

yin

> and/or yang depletion, along with liver and heart issues, but I have been

unable

> to effect a change. Any ideas?

>

 

refine 5 e pattern

 

this can be largely ST offending Water yin

 

establish this with:

face color diagnosis - tongue markings - parental qi history - symptom

chronology

 

once established treat with accurate horary 5 shu in bi phasal mode

 

i am betting there is some asymmetry also, correct this first

 

in about 3 to 5 turns at 4 day intervals there will be some change

in about 7 turns this will become apparent

in 10 one is well on the way

 

i would suggest a well thought waning off

 

lastly a 1 a month tune up for 1 year

 

all along one ignores what he is taking, that being the better part of valor

 

Dr. Holmes Keikobad

Baccalaureate in Medicine & Surgery

Diplomate in Public Health & Hygiene

Diplomate in Acupuncture NCCAOM

Licensed Acupuncturist AZ & CO

Clinician Community Acupuncture Clinic

Clinical Director Acupuncture CEUS on DVD CD

www.acu-free.com. Toll Free 1.888.TRU.SELF <878.7353>

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Hello,

just a thought, but you can often do a straight swop for the Prozac (or

other SSRI) with St. Johns Wort and Kava-Kava (50-50) - usually its a smooth

transition (NB Kava-kava is banned in UK) and then you have the `naked`

patient - much better for acupuncture.

 

regards

 

stephen

>

> Hello All,

>

> I have through the years encountered patients who, for one reason or

> another, do not respond well to TCM treatment of their depression and who

> choose to begin using Prozac. Or, patients who come to me for other reasons

> and are happily using Prozac already. Admittedly, not the best choice from

> where I sit, but it is their choice.

>

> So, how to deal with the normal side effect of greatly reduced libido? I

> have struggled with this to no effect in the past. If we accept, as

> compassionate health care providers, that patients have the right to make

> their own choices, how do we deal with the side effects? There do seem to be

> elements of kidney yin and/or yang depletion, along with liver and heart

> issues, but I have been unable to effect a change. Any ideas?

>

> Thank You!

>

> Beata Booth LAc

>

>

>

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Have you considered Damiana tincture? I don't imagine it's part of the TCM

pharmacy, but it is fairly widely available at natural food stores (I've found

it at whole foods) and can be effectively used on an as-needed basis - I don't

believe it's intended for regular use. I've found it effective for women dealing

with loss of libido related to menopause, though most of the articles I've seen

recommend it for men.

 

-- Susan Kol

 

coastacu wrote:

coastacu

To:Chinese Medicine

Subject:Prozac

Date:Tue, 22 Nov 2005 11:46:00 -0500

 

 

Hello All,

 

I have through the years encountered patients who, for one reason or another,

do not respond well to TCM treatment of their depression and who choose to begin

using Prozac. Or, patients who come to me for other reasons and are happily

using Prozac already. Admittedly, not the best choice from where I sit, but it

is their choice.

 

So, how to deal with the normal side effect of greatly reduced libido? I have

struggled with this to no effect in the past. If we accept, as compassionate

health care providers, that patients have the right to make their own choices,

how do we deal with the side effects? There do seem to be elements of kidney yin

and/or yang depletion, along with liver and heart issues, but I have been unable

to effect a change. Any ideas?

 

Thank You!

 

Beata Booth LAc

 

 

 

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Hello Beata,

 

> There do seem to be elements of kidney yin and/or yang depletion, along

with liver and heart issues, but I >have been unable to effect a change. Any

ideas?

>

I guess that as long as the patients don't manage to get in touch with the

underlying emotions that are causing the depresion, I am not sure how much

real progress can be made. Depression is anger turned inwards. WIth a lot of

boundary (Metal) and self-worth (Fire) issues. I am currently working with

a few people on antidepressant of one sort or another, and my general

impression is " sleepy/lethargic energy " .

 

Artemis

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Since school, for every individual taking

anti-depressants, anti-hypertensives, oral

contraceptives, other agents that set new

physiological parameters, I experience in the

pulse that it is pushing against something -

accurate appraisal, of course. Do treat the

(liver qi etc) stagnation as needed.

 

Personally, for patients on anti-depressant meds,

Prozac is my least fav, heavy on side-effects

incl. sexual as you are observing. A psychologist

I know says one patient called it his " feel

nothing " medicine. Effexor and Lexapro have less

sedation, sexual side effects and *weight gain.*

 

Please do not neglect to refer patients with

deficient relationship and life skills to

psychotherapy with a very good masters or

doctorate level counselor/psychologist. I believe

I do not hear enough of this from colleagues.

Yet, working with counselors, our patients may

" get it " sooner, internalizing so that previous

or new intellectual understanding becomes gut

level, part of one's being, long before it might

just doing talk therapy.

 

Lynn

 

 

 

--- coastacu wrote:

 

> coastacu

> To:Chinese Medicine

> Subject:Prozac

> Date:Tue, 22 Nov 2005 11:46:00 -0500

>

>

> Hello All,

>

> I have through the years encountered

> patients who, for one reason or another, do not

> respond well to TCM treatment of their

> depression and who choose to begin using

> Prozac. Or, patients who come to me for other

> reasons and are happily using Prozac already.

> Admittedly, not the best choice from where I

> sit, but it is their choice.

>

> So, how to deal with the normal side effect

> of greatly reduced libido? I have struggled

> with this to no effect in the past. If we

> accept, as compassionate health care providers,

> that patients have the right to make their own

> choices, how do we deal with the side effects?

> There do seem to be elements of kidney yin

> and/or yang depletion, along with liver and

> heart issues, but I have been unable to effect

> a change. Any ideas?

>

> Thank You!

>

>

> Beata Booth LAc

>

>

> [Non-text portions of this message have been

> removed]

>

>

 

 

 

 

 

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....refine 5 e pattern

this can be largely ST offending Water yin

Dr. Holmes Keikobad...

 

In fact, Holmes, I recall reading that

historically, the most anti-depressant meds with

the most anticholinergic effects were also the

most effective a-d meds. I had forgotten that,

thank you for the reminder. In other words, if

effective, they are going to be drying. If

someone is on continued a-d tx, I would think

ongoing attention acu/herbs to moisten, and

plenty of po fluids would be a necessary tx

focus.

 

Lynn

 

 

 

 

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the most anti-depressant meds with

the most anticholinergic effects were also the

most effective a-d meds.

>>>>>

That is not true. The first generation TCAs had the most anticholinergic effects

and were not and not more or less effective than second generation TCAs or

SSRIs. They tend to be more sedative so better for sleep problems. The only

antidepressants that MAY be slightly more effective are the new atypical.

 

 

 

 

Oakland, CA 94609

 

 

-

J. Lynn Detamore

Chinese Medicine

Saturday, November 26, 2005 7:11 PM

Re: Prozac

 

 

...refine 5 e pattern

this can be largely ST offending Water yin

Dr. Holmes Keikobad...

 

In fact, Holmes, I recall reading that

historically, the most anti-depressant meds with

the most anticholinergic effects were also the

most effective a-d meds. I had forgotten that,

thank you for the reminder. In other words, if

effective, they are going to be drying. If

someone is on continued a-d tx, I would think

ongoing attention acu/herbs to moisten, and

plenty of po fluids would be a necessary tx

focus.

 

Lynn

 

 

 

Music Unlimited

Access over 1 million songs. Try it free.

http://music./unlimited/

 

 

Download the all new TCM Forum Toolbar, click,

http://toolbar.thebizplace.com/LandingPage.aspx/CT145145

 

and adjust

accordingly.

 

 

 

 

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