| Fred's Treatment Experience |
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Thursday, 02 August 2007 21:59
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AHCS Editor/Administrator Linda McInnes did an exclusive interview with "Fred", on his treatment experience with hepatitis C, and his experience with alternative therapies. Also featuring Fred's written hep C treatment STORY following the interview. Interview: Let us start with a bit of a background story;
tell me about your first initial contact with hepatitis c.
What was your genotype and did you have any
stage of fibrosis?
Yes I was
diagnosed in 1994, and in 1996 there was a trial happening at the
Did you have any level of fibrosis?
Yes, my first biopsy showed level 2 fibrosis, both of my biopsies were back when they were a prerequisite to accessing treatment, I’ve done two lots of treatment. Your first treatment was interferon monotherapy,
can you tell me when you did this, and what the outcome was.
Yes I did
monotherapy for 6 months being genotype 3 and it was unsuccessful, I think my
ALT’s were always were on an average of between 170 to 200 in those days and in
the first two months of treatment it went down to 15 I believe, then in the
third month of treatment they went back up again and there was still detectable
virus at the end of treatment. What health problems did you have during
monotherapy? For me it
was mainly cognitive stuff, brain fog and just loosing my track of thoughts in
conversation with people.
Did you have any health problems after
monotherapy?
To tell you
the truth I didn’t really notice them so much because it wasn’t until after
monotherapy that I looked into alternative therapy and looking after my health
a bit better and changing my lifestyle, so I was actually feeling healthier
than I had previously.
You tried alternative therapies and this was after
treatment?
Yes it was
after treatment therapy in 96 I moved up into the Adelaide hills and actually
got more involved with a group of friends that I used to have who were into
alternative therapy for numerous things really, but yeah, I gained a great deal
of knowledge and experimented with quite a few.
What ones did you look into, was it colloidal
silver?
Yes I tried
colloidal silver for about 8 months to kill the hep C.
Did you find that of any benefit?
There were
benefits in the fact that I was actually using it to try kill the hep c virus
but I don’t think it has actually any power to do that now looking back but it
did actually kill the herpes virus as I used to get about 4 cold sores a year
on my lip and I didn’t have any cold sores for about 6 years, now I get the
occasional one, one every 2 years I’d say.
Have
you tried combucha tea?
Combucha tea, yes I have actually, I found that to be wonderful stuff, actually my sense of well being was wonderful, very noticeable while taking combucha tea. I did that for about 8 months also and I think I was actually, you are only supposed to take one glass per day, and I used to like the taste so much that I used to have 3 or 4 and after about 8 months my body just knew that it didn’t want it any more although I still like the taste of it, and my friend makes it and I have a glass of an evening, yes I think it has wonderful properties. *Warning: It has now been discovered that Combucha Tea is hepatotoxic (toxic) to the liver, please consult your health care professional before taking this product. Have you used St Mary’s Thistle?
Yes, I started using St Mary’s around
that time as well as the colloidal silver, and yes I think Milk Thistle does
have some beneficial properties for people with hepatitis c in protecting the
liver.
Can
you tell us your experience with a Chinese homeopath for acupuncture?
Yes sure, it was after my monotherapy
when I went to see a Chinese homeopath/naturopath and he was doing acupuncture
for my liver, which would be around the ankle area with acupuncture needles and
he also had an electrical machine that had an apparatus which looked like a
light bulb and emitted weak sparks. He
used to rub that around my liver area and he would do that for about 10 to 15
minutes each visit, he said that it would help to stimulate my liver. I believe that contributed to reversal in my
liver, there was a marked improvement in my liver fibrosis (the fibrosis
reversed from level 2 back to zero and I believe that, and the acupuncture and his homeopathic
medicines to be the thing that did that.
The next treatment you did was the combination
treatment, when did you do this?
I did the
combination treatment, it was in the year 2000, mid 2000, around July I think Actually
it was after the hepatitis c council held a forum called “Should I go on Treatment”. The forum was facilitated by Greg Dore (one
of
How long did you do the treatment for?
For 6
months.
Did you have any problems during treatment?
Yes, I
don’t think you can say it’s a walk in the park for anybody on treatment
really, but the main problem that I experienced was brain fog, feeling that
your head was in a different space, and most of the time I would feel
overwhelmed when people came to visit, mostly it would be well wishers and
people offering support but when I had more than one person at my house at a
time I found that really taxing quite overwhelming really, so it was that sort
of brain stuff that I found the most difficult. Of course there was lethargy and flu like symptoms and there was an itch
for a short period but it was the brain stuff really.
What health problems do you have since
finishing treatment?
There was
an old existing problem with my back but that was nothing to do with the
treatment, I believe a lot of people my age have a similar problem. I would like to say that at the end of
treatment there seemed to be a lot of emotional numbness or a flat mood sort of
thing that I found took some time to lift after treatment. Even though I had cleared the virus the
second time around and people used to say to me ‘you must be over the moon Fred’
and I’d say ‘yeah, I think so’. I
couldn’t really feel it, I just felt flat. Those mood things I believe personally and the cognitive stuff combined,
although it had improved week to week, I believe that took several years to
completely lift, whereas now I think that my short term memory is reasonably
good, I must say that it was some time after treatment for that to come about.
Do you think your reversal in fibrosis was
because of the alternative therapy?
At first I
believed it was due to the interferon, my liver specialist at the time said
that it could have been a possibility but secretly I suspected it was the
acupuncture, the combination of the acupuncture and the homeopathic medicines
and yes just a healthier life style.
Did you try any alternative therapies during
this second treatment?
I probably
reduced them, especially in the first two months I didn’t want to actually take
anything other than the interferon/ribavirin, just to, you know, I just felt an
obligation because its so expensive to do the treatment and I wanted it to work
and I wanted to follow the specialists advice. But two months into it I introduced the St Mary’s Thistle and a vitamin
B complex which I spoke to my specialist about and he was fine with that.
What advice would you give anyone contemplating
treatment?
It’s a very
individual thing and I believe its worth giving it a go even for the fact that
it reduces inflammation in the liver, some people believe that can last for a
year or two. And there’s a 50/50 chance
or greater than 50/50 chance that you can be rid of the virus, even though
there are side effects, they are temporary, so I believe it’s worth giving a
go. I’ve spoken to a lot of people who
have relapsed after treatment and they are very anti-interferon but I wonder if
they would feel the same if they had achieved a sustained response.
Which alternative therapies are you using now?
I would
probably use more if I could afford them but I stick mainly with a vitamin b
complex and I take a thing called DMAE, I cant remember what it stands for, but
its simply an amino acid that help with brain functions so I take that daily
with a multi vitamin, and I also supplement with a natural testosterone cream which
also helps with the cognitive functions and improves my stamina a bit. Also, with any alternative therapies one should always let their doctors know what they are taking.
What can you tell us about 5HTP and your
experience with it?
I found it
very helpful actually because I believe that even though I have cleared the
virus for I’d say up to 4 or 5 years or maybe even 6 there was a lingering low
level depression from the treatment that persisted, so I took 5Hydroxy Tryptophan
for about 18 months. I can’t afford to take it any more, I don’t seem to need
it now but it was very helpful at the time.
Did you find that maintaining your health with
alternative therapies to be quite costly?
Yes I’m
afraid so, with my volunteer work, I exist on newstart benefits which
unfortunately doesn’t leave enough money for some costly alternative therapies
that I would like to actually use.
For people that cannot afford therapies are
there any supplements or vitamins that you recommend they could start with to
help maintain their liver?
Yes
probably not the liver so much, but I find a multi B complex vitamin to be essential
I think and it has helped me all the way through and if you can afford it, St
Mary’s Thistle as its been proven in very large studies overseas, especially
Germany where it has actually reversed fibrosis in individuals with alcoholic
cirrhosis.
It has now been 6 years since you cleared the
virus, how are you feeling, do you still continue to see a health care
specialist?
No I’m
feeling great these days, its like a different life really, especially
considering I have some friends who are some reasonably heavy drinkers on the
weekends, I don’t visit them every weekend but when I do, I tend to drink quite
a few beers and the difference now, compared to before when I had hep C is
phenomenal. Its not a huge thing but to
me it’s a great improvement. But before
I would be, you know, I’d be not quite in bed for a whole week but I’d be in
bed for a couple of days with fevers and stuff like that, the hangovers were
shocking but my life is a bit different now there is quite a semblance of good
health.
Now we will move onto your volunteer work with
a Hepatitis C organization, you are a Peer Educator and visit drug rehabs, can
you tell me about this role?
Sure, I
really enjoy my role in that work, I find that I relate to the people and can
often pass on some vital information. It
can be quite surprising that the level of knowledge about transmission of blood
born viruses among injecting drug users who might share equipment is sometimes
quite low, especially among the young people who inject drugs. So I find it a vital role and I enjoy doing
it.
You also co-facilitate a course called “Living
well with hepatitis C” run through Relationships
Sure, the
living well with hep c workshops I find are very helpful, especially for people
who were actually struggling with their health with hep c, some people may find
it basic stuff but its giving people tips and clues to help manage a chronic
illness, it gives people strategies for dealing better in most areas of their
lives like chronic fatigue, depression, interacting with health care
professionals etc. The courses run for six weeks, each weekly session runs for
2 and a half hours. The workshops are
run through MOSAIC Counseling which is a part of Relationships Australia
SA. MOSAIC are counselors who deal with
all issues around hepatitis C and HIV. The MOSAIC Counseling team are just fantastic and we refer people to
them for counseling from the Council quite often.
What do you think the future is in regards to
Hepatitis C?
I think it’s
quite positive, there seems to be quite a number of scientists and researchers
now on the job looking for to develop a vaccine and better treatments. Hopefully the treatments get a lot better and
we won’t have to rely on interferon at all. Although it’s still the best thing we have at the moment, I believe that
if one can do some other treatment that doesn’t have such serious side effects
and just get away from interferon altogether – that would be great as it’s
quite a difficult thing to go through.
Is there anything you would like to add to this
interview?
Yes,
especially about the future in regards to hepatitis c treatment, I’d like to
see better treatments and a vaccine developed, mostly I would like to see the
existing services for people with chronic hep C improved, I think there needs
to be more practical support for people who advance to serious liver damage,
perhaps something like a respite house where people can go for a week or two
and have meals cooked for them and such. I feel that there’s a need to help some people to get away from the
stresses of life and illness if even for a short while, I believe would be very
beneficial. I have observed people who
have progressed to serious liver damage that seem to go downhill faster because
the stresses of life are just too hard to deal with. Unfortunately the Hepatitis
C Councils around
I just
think that especially for people on treatment who live on their own or even
people who live with their families that find it hard, if only we could have
like a respite house in the country maybe somewhere, and just go there for a
couple of weeks or a month and have everything taken care of, a bed, nice food
and a peaceful atmosphere just to get away from worries, because on treatment,
stress can be the biggest, you know the hardest thing to deal with and more so
for people who have progressed to serious liver damage.
You think that family members aren’t coping
with the ones that are on treatment?
Oh I think
it’s a very difficult thing, the relationships come under an incredible strain
for people that are on interferon and I think that for people on interferon it
seems like its quite invisible in the beginning, there is a irritability that
builds up and even when people are trying to help you, one can get quite angry
and snappy at times and lash out and its very difficult for family and friends to
support one that’s on treatment where the person is actually very irritable and
a bit confused, you sometimes don’t quite realize that family members are
trying to help. Its not anger so much,
but you just wish people would just leave you alone. You feel like saying “this is just all too
hard for me to deal with, all your concerns”, its difficult, it sounds bizarre
but I’ve heard this reported so often.
A respite centre would help alleviate this
problem?
I believe
so, I believe just to get away for 2 weeks, especially a month where you could
just have someone else to just pay your bills, look after your house for you,
to just get away and be with others who support each other who are also on
treatment. I think would be an incredible asset while on treatment, and of
course for people with who are getting quite ill.
Since your diagnosis, you have obtained quite a
bit of knowledge about Hepatitis C, where did you obtain this information?
The Hep C
Council, for sure, in the early days the knowledge was quite poor really, I
wasn’t really reading the transmission routes and things like that, so I
visited the Council with a new girlfriend and they gave me every copy they had
of the Hep C Review, the magazine that’s brought from the Sydney Hep C Council
and I just soaked all that knowledge up like a sponge and just found that there
was a desire to keep learning more. So I
started volunteering at the Council, and it’s been wonderful actually, yes the
Hep C Council, and the phone line there is great for people ringing up and just
wanting to have a chat and find out a bit more, yes a great source of
information.
And you also run a support group called
“Calming the C” at the Hepatitis C Council.
The Council
runs a group, I just kind of facilitate sometimes, but yes that’s a wonderful
source of information too, especially for people considering doing treatment
and people that are currently on treatment, it’s great for them and works well.
So there is quite a lot of support out there
from the Hepatitis C Council.
Yes, I can’t imagine what life for people with hep C would be like without the Hep C Council.
FREDS TREATMENT STORY As published in Issue 21 Of the Hepatitis C Community News 2002
http://www.hepcaustralia.com.au/forums/viewtopic.php?t=198 |
| Last Updated on Saturday, 12 April 2008 08:15 |