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Eugene
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Doug
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Where did you get Baclofen prescribed from? Doctors I meet with thow up their hands bit knowing what to do about this. No one seems willing to suggest Baclofen so I'm curious how you get your doctor or what type of doctor got you there.
Thanks!
John
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No doctor suggested baclofen to me. I read about it in a published article as one of the only known medications that can help ease the issue. The citation to the article is in a previous post from me. I asked the second urologist I went to see if he would prescribe it for me. Of course, he did not hear of SRPE but was willing to prescribe it for me. It comes in 20mg tablets. That's what you should get. Start with 20mg just before bed and then if that is not effective bring it up to 30mg by snapping a pill in half. I am at 40mg now. As people have been mentioning and as I have found, the baclofen seems to be less effective after several months so you may have to increase the dosage over time. Hopefully, you will get some good night sleep.
Good luck.
Eugene
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Doug,
interesting your SRPE started while you were already using a CPAP machine. This would be in contrast to the positive results reported for two individuals in the article by Ferre in 2012. I don't really suspect I have sleep apnea so have been hesitant to go for a sleep exam. But if I were convinced at least some people have been 'cured' of SRPE by using a CPAP machine I might go.
Anyone on this site have success getting rid of SRPE on a CPAP machine? I imagine those people might have left the site. :)
Eugene
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My best method is urination, even if just a little. So, I head straight to the toilet bowl, sit down, and try to urinate not easy with an erection but with some strategic sitting can be done. I can then return to bed and the erection is already starting to go down. If I simply walk around or swing my legs while in a standing position it really does not go away at all, so these methods I found to be ineffective.
Eugene
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- Tucking my legs up into a ball to curve my back (mixed results).
- Breathing deeply and slowly, in through my nose and out through my mouth (seems to work if done long enough).
- Willing my penis to go down, and focusing on the feeling of the muscles relaxing and how it would feel if it was going flaccid (mixed results).
- Taking Benadryl or other anti-histamine products before bed (seemingly ineffective).
- Applying pressure to the muscle between the anus and scrotum with fingers (unsure if it does anything, but the muscle is certainly "tight" at the time I wake up).
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You are the first person to mention how long you have had SRPE, 7 years. I have had it for a year. So perhaps now all of us have some indication that our SRPE may be a long term issue.
Interesting you are taking amitryptaline, a tricyclic anti-depressant usually prescribed for depression, anti-anxiety or even bipolar disorder. It is very nice it works for you, yet some articles report it was not effective when tried on their patients with SRPE.
Two questions:
1. Was amitryptaline prescribed for you for a psychological issue or specifically to see if it would help with SRPE?
2. Do you have any side effects from taking it?
Eugene
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The reason being I've read a few peer-reviewed articles dismissing its effectiveness. But who knows, maybe it'll prove to the go.
I posted as 'What we Know' initially and I still stand by my assertion that Clonazapam and Baclofan are the way to go. The only problem being the necessity to escalate the dosage (I now need 1mg of Clonazepam and 20 mg of Baclofen). And I can't keep escalating this without issues, surely.
Eugene mentioned collating data through a medico. I think it really is time but I don't know how to preceed with anonymity.
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Most importantly regarding Amitryptaline is that you don't develop a tolerance and therefore I have not increased dosage since I started taking it 2 years ago. This drug has been around for decades and so they data on its side effects is extensive. The brand name before patent expiration was Elavil.
Keith
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