Posted Fri, 02/06/2009 - 15:36 by FQHelp
Quinolone usage in children has been limited following the observation of arthrotoxicity in juvenile animals... The arthropathy evolves within days to weeks of drug administration... it is hypothesized that the effect of quinolones in some animal species may reflect inhibition of mitochondrial DNA replication in immature chondrocytes
— Allan R. Ronald, Don E. Low
Fluoroquinolone Antibiotics, Birkhäuser, 2003, ISBN 3764365919, 9783764365912
Posted Tue, 02/03/2009 - 21:51 by FQHelp
The loss in mtDNA was associated with a delayed loss in mitochondrial function. Here, we report that the 4-quinolone drug ciprofloxacin is cytotoxic to a variety of cultured mammalian cell lines at concentrations that deplete cells of mtDNA. The IC50 values for ciprofloxacin varied from 40 to 80 micrograms/ml depending on the cell line tested. Cytotoxicity required continuous exposure of cells to drug for 2-4 days, which corresponded to approximately three or four cell doublings. Shorter times of drug exposure did not cause significant cytotoxicity.
— JW Lawrence, DC Claire, V Weissig, TC Rowe, Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, University of Florida College of Medicine
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Posted Tue, 02/03/2009 - 19:17 by FQHelp
The fact that Cipro and quinolones can cause permanent, untreatable tendon damage as highlighted by the need for a black box warning, that leaves patients with crippling untreatable pain, is only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the other severe and permanently disabling adverse reactions that Cipro and other quinolones can inflict. The product information sheets provided by quinolone manufacturers also fail to indicate that some individuals will suffer from multiple adverse reactions that will become permanent and untreatable.
— DBCipro, White Plains, NY
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Posted Tue, 02/03/2009 - 19:01 by FQHelp
I took Levaquin in Feb. of 2008 and did not experience anything until April. It comes on quickly - pain in all joints, neuropathy, headaches plus a multitude of other problems. I understand it is a long and arduous road back. As for me - I would NEVER take any fluroquinolone again. The FDA has posted a "black box" warning on these medications. It has ruined my life.
Posted Mon, 02/02/2009 - 21:51 by FQHelp
The Chicago teen-ager was also 16 when a physician told her mother to give her Levaquin, according to the girl's sister.
The sister, Mrs. Teri Noto of Roselle, Ill., said the teen-ager did not get through the full course of daily 500-milligram Levaquin pills.
"After five days, it was as if a bomb went off in her body," said the sister. "She collapsed at school and had to be half-carried out of the building."
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Posted Mon, 02/02/2009 - 18:17 by FQHelp
I took floxin 12 years ago for three weeks for a virus that attacked my liver. For the last two months I've had neurologic symptoms, some fatigue, numbness in head, neck, arm, knee, tight muscles, spasms.
Posted Mon, 02/02/2009 - 18:05 by FQHelp
Floxin has also a distinctive profile: many times floxin causes extremely delayed reactions at around the 18 months mark. Many persons take floxin without clear side effects, but after one and a half years, a full adverse reaction develops with plenty of floxing symptoms, in many cases of similar intensity to an intermediate reaction.
(Note that Levofloxacin is the same chemical as Ofloxacin, the atoms and chemical formula is exactly the same, only that Levofloxacin is shaped to be almost double in potency)
Posted Mon, 02/02/2009 - 16:42 by FQHelp
Yes, I've had tinnitus since September of last year. I was floxed in July 2003.
While being floxed and for several weeks afterwards, I had *extreme* discomfort from sound. Actual physical pain and a sensation of pressure in my ears. (Same thing with bright light.) Pretty much all sounds seemed louder to me than usual, and very loud sounds were excrutiatingly painful. A roomful of people talking was more than I could bear.
After about exactly two months of this pain from noise, the tinnitus started, suddenly, in the middle of the night. It woke me up out of a sound sleep.
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Posted Mon, 01/26/2009 - 11:24 by FQHelp
Of the 712 [pediatric] subjects evaluable for safety, 275 (52%) levofloxacin-treated subjects experienced one or more adverse event... Serious adverse events were reported in 33 (6%) levofloxacin-treated subjects...Two serious adverse events in levofloxacin-treated subjects resulted in fatal outcomes.
— John Bradley, M.D., Children’s Hospital and Health Center, San Diego, CA
Posted Sat, 01/24/2009 - 22:11 by FQHelp
We observed ultrastructural changes in rat tendons several months after a single oral dose of a fluoroquinolone. I have no doubt what we found in rats corresponds to the clinical symptoms observed in patients during [fluoroquinolone] treatment.