saiconoclast
Greenlighter
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2014
- Messages
- 9
Interesting and very promising case study using loperamide and omeprazole in opiate WD.
Lansoprazole (Works the same way as omeprazole aka is a proton pump inhibito.) is also a P-glycoprotein modulator and I assume pantoprazole is too.Interesting and very promising case study using loperamide and omeprazole in opiate WD.
I take from the conclusion where it says some like '[the two] taken together allows lope to cross the BBB.' that they should be taken together. I'm on day 2 of this test myself. Will report.Lansoprazole (Works the same way as omeprazole aka is a proton pump inhibito.) is also a P-glycoprotein modulator and I assume pantoprazole is too.
I read the study but it doesn't say when to take the loperamide, if you should take it at the exact same time as the PPI or if you should or can take it later.
Also I'm regards to the scores regarding the withdrawal severity, I'd assume loperamide by itself would lower withdrawal a little such as stopping diarrhoea, especially at the very small doses used in the study.
I'd say.At interpreting the chart, am i correct the combo of:
Loperamide & Omeprazole with add-on 200 mg Quetiapine
C.O.W.S. 2-1-1 and,
Loperamide & Omeprazole with add-on 200 mg Quetiapine & Escitralopam
C.O.W.S. 3-1-0
These two seem most effective, if i interpret it correct ?
Yes this all pretty much lines up with what we know about Loperamide (Immodium) and its use with P-Glycoprotein Modulators like Omeprazole (Prilosec). We used to talk with much greater frequency regarding Loperamide here on the forums. It was years ago now that it came into clear focus that the drug's usage in high dosages is inherently cardiotoxic. We started seeing deaths in scenarios that at first seemed random but with time became clear; people dead with no apparent cause, Loperamide present at site of death or in the blood of the deceased etc. (Loperamide is dangerous without using PGP inhibitors, I want to make that completely clear).
For this reason, we have taken to advising against Loperamide's usage in this fashion completely. We understand people will do it. If you need to, use this once or twice in your life to bail you out of some serious shit. It's the ones who decide that Loperamide is now going to be their daily fix that are at highest risk. Please be careful guys.
Honestly that paper is really suspicious.Interesting and very promising case study using loperamide and omeprazole in opiate WD.
It blocks a cardiac potassium channel known as the hERG channel at high doses. This can throw the heart into a type of ventricular tachycardia called torsades de pointes, where the heart muscle quivers rapidly but doesn’t fully contract enough to pump blood. This often develops into cardiac arrest, but can also cause damage from starving the heart muscle of oxygenated blood.What does cardiotoxic actually mean? Does it irreversibly damage the heart muscles or does it just make it pump incorrectly?
Honestly that paper is really suspicious.
Their protocol is 3X daily loperamide 2 mg and 1 20 mg omeprazole per day. Doesn’t seem like a lot.
More worrying are the drug doses of the case study patients. The people who were addicted to heroin all were reported to be doing >1 gram per day. The people who were addicted to morphine were reported to be doing 0.5-5 mg per day.
None of the patients were reported to have a severe withdrawal score, and everybody had very much stabilized by the end of the week or treatment. This seems an outsized effect for the amount of loperamide used.
All taken together (and including the niche journal I’ve never heard of publishing it), I really don’t trust the findings in this paper.
It blocks a cardiac potassium channel known as the hERG channel at high doses. This can throw the heart into a type of ventricular tachycardia called torsades de pointes, where the heart muscle quivers rapidly but doesn’t fully contract enough to pump blood. This often develops into cardiac arrest, but can also cause damage from starving the heart muscle of oxygenated blood.