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Anyone feel worse on rebif?

Posted: Tue Dec 23, 2003 7:36 am
by momsboyz
I've been on rebif for 4 months and feel like a train wreck. Stiff, sore, tired, dizzy, eye pain. Anyone have suggestions? Does it get better?

rebif

Posted: Thu Jan 22, 2004 12:49 pm
by paul32
ive been on rebif for 2 years and you are the first person who i have heard is experiencing eye pain like me! i find what minimises this side effect is not to strain your eyes at all by for example sitting at the PC too long/reading too much and definitely stay out of bright daylight/sunshine.

too soon to tell

Posted: Fri Jan 23, 2004 12:11 pm
by NAUAuntie
worse than what? :?
I haven't tried any other - just dxd in April 2003 and began Rebif in June. I haven't had what I would consider a new episode since beginning it, but I have several side effects, including site reactions.
I have trouble finding new sites to inject, since it takes so long for each site to heal. I even tried my arm the other day, without being able to pinch the skin, and boy did it hurt, and my arm hurt for days!
I also run a fever almost every time, for a couple of hours. I inject at night just before bed, and take Arnica Montana and Ibuprophen with it, and it has helped. I also rub Arnica gel onto the site immediately after injection, and that seems to help it heal faster.
I have no reason to change right now, but it is really too soon to tell if this is the 'right' treatment for me.
Hugs
Auntie Jane

Posted: Thu Apr 22, 2004 7:21 am
by Guest
Im on it and have been for a year and a half and its definitely making my dizziness worse the day after injection. i wish i could come off it but it is working quite well so ill just have to suffer it i suppose.

Posted: Thu Apr 22, 2004 10:23 am
by great
Yes, I did feel worse for Rebif. I used it for two years, no major side-effects, no fever-like symptoms. Only the quality of sleep was not as good as before. As I then was newly diagnosed, I thought that it is the MS that is progressing. I felt my legs were cast in lead, I used a cane, my walking was difficult. My MS had so far been rather benign, but I started relapsing 5-6 times a year.

My neurologist decided that interferonbeetas (he said that there is really no difference between the brands) are not good for me.

Now, after two years without Rebif I played 16 (not 18 though) holes of golf (walking, without a cane, pulling my trolley) , my legs feel ok, I sleep well. The year before last I had three relapses, now during last year only once.

It just takes some courage to figure out how you felt before the medication, and it is painful to give up the hope of doing 30% better. Anyway, I feel GREAT after stopping it.

But I am sure for some people it is a good drug, and I sincerely congratulate everybody who feels better than before with it.

Posted: Thu Apr 22, 2004 2:16 pm
by Arron
Great, it's wonderful to hear of your improvement. To what do you credit your rehabilitation? Simply getting off of Rebif, or are you taking something else?

Posted: Thu Apr 22, 2004 11:49 pm
by great
Arron, as MS is so unpredictable, it is naturally impossible to say if it only was getting rid of Rebif that made me feel better. When the stiffness from the legs is away, gait and walking becomes more natural. When the legs feel very heavy and stiff, one starts dragging the feet and that is more energy-consuming than "normal" walking.

I am not taking any other drugs for ms, but I have regular physiotherapy.

At the same time as I stopped using Rebif I was in Singapore. The Singapore General Hospital's high-tech neurology department has an acupuncture research unit and I was fortunate to get 10 acupuncture treatments in two week's time. That was incredibly efficient and I seriously plan to go back there if I get worse. But they do not say that MS can be cured by acupuncture, but some symptoms can be alleviated.

Posted: Fri Apr 23, 2004 7:06 am
by Guest
Great, I'm glad to hear of your improvement. I have been on Rebif for 8 months now and still feel awful. I keep thinking I have to give it a chance. I am on the 22mcg now to see if that made a difference. So far not! My legs are heavy, dizzy, feel disconnected, generally yucky. I am seriously concidering quitting the rebif. Maybe I'll see about Copaxone.

Thanks all!

Posted: Fri Apr 23, 2004 7:21 am
by momsboyz
Sorry the above post was mine. For some reason the site didn't log me in!

Posted: Fri Apr 23, 2004 8:10 am
by AnnW
I tried it for eight months before saying enough is enough. I was also on the 22mg dose, but I quit at Christmas and haven't looked back. My neuro said that these drugs only work for about 30% of people, so I must have been one of the 70% :?
Ann

Posted: Fri Apr 23, 2004 8:43 am
by momsboyz
Ann, it's great to see I'm not alone. I felt much better without the Rebif. It's awful that the treatment makes you feel worse than the disease.
Did you go on anything else since quitting the Rebif?

Posted: Sat Apr 24, 2004 6:16 am
by AnnW
I am one of the lucky patients on an 'informed consent' basis for the goat serum.

This IS working :lol:

Ann

Posted: Thu May 06, 2004 8:31 pm
by jazzcat
Hi all,

I've been on Rebif for close to a year. I've tolerated it well and haven't experienced anything other than site reactions (bruising and/or redness) or during the first day on it blurry vision.

I have been stable on it. No relapses since, only a little tingling that comes and goes usually upon waking.

I don't like the injections and dread them. I really dreaded giving them before going to bed. Since I didn't feel any of the flu-like sypmtoms I decided to try taking it in the morning. I find this easier than giving it at night.

Well, here's wishing you well,

jazzcat

rebif

Posted: Fri May 07, 2004 9:54 am
by Felly
Too early to say if it is having any positive affects but I'm on my fourth week of rebif injection and I have had no side affects and no injection site reactions.

I am really surprised how easy it is to self inject (I am not using an autoinject as I prefer to see what I am doing) and there has been no pain, redness, bruising, swelling- in fact you have to look very closely to see where the injection went in just a few hours later.

Of course, the thing with rebif is that injection site problems can come at any time so I can't be too blase. It also helps to have good titration, so not starting on the optimum does immediately.

However, self injection really is not that bad - honest.

Felly

Posted: Fri May 07, 2004 1:49 pm
by jazzcat
Hi Felly,

Which dosage are you on? I found the lower dosage (20) to be easier than the higher one (44). The higher one has given me more bruising and discoloration, although I've found an ice pack before and after helps.

Glad to hear you are not experiencing bad side effects. Keep us posted.

jazzcat