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Cheeky79 Asked September 2023

Should I continue to give my husband new meds that neurologists prescribed? After only 2 days his stomach is upset.

I took my husband to his follow-up appointment to see his neurologist on Thursday. He prescribed Rexulti because of his new symptoms from Alz. After only 2 nights of taking the smallest dose he had pain and his stomach was upset from the meds. You are supposed to take the smallest dose to begin with and lead up to higher doses. He has a follow-up in 4 weeks to see how he did on them. Now he won't take them because he does not feel well. I did call the office the next day and they said to ride it out. But I don't think I will. I will call the doctor back on Monday. What do you think. Appreciate input .

AlvaDeer Sep 2023
https://www.rexultihcp.com/mdd/efficacy?

We aren't on this Forum qualified to answer individual's questions regarding medications, side effects and what to do about them; that is a matter for you and your MD only.

You can look up the side effects of this medication easily online, and can in fact look up support phone contacts for this medication. It is added on for some patients who are taking anti-depressants and is usually added onto another anti-depressant they are already taking. The usual side effects are mentioned along with even suicidal ideation.

I would not be "rising anything out" on the word of an office. I would take no further meds without discussion with the doctor.

Discuss this with your hubby's MD as soon as possible.

NYDaughterInLaw Sep 2023
Doctors don't understand how awful the side effects of many drugs are. Telling you to have your husband "ride it out" is dismissive of how he feels. Your husband's Alzheimer's is not going to be cured by any drug. If his stomach is hurting because of the pill - and he only just started at the lowest dose - I think I would stop taking it. A stomach ache is no joke. He's not going to want to eat, drink, etc., which is going to make things worse for him.
Cheeky79 Sep 2023
I agree.

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Grandma1954 Sep 2023
Have you tried giving him the medication at a different time of day? Or with food (or without)?
Have you gone on lie to the drug's site to see if there are suggestion for combating the side effects?
Your pharmacist might have some suggestions as well. (often it is more helpful to talk to the pharmicist than the doctor)
Is there another mdication that might help with the new symptoms he is having?

Honestly many of the medications that are given to "slow the progression" of dementia work for some but not for everyone.

The second medication that was prescribed for my Husband (Namenda) was one that you had to start with the lowest dose then gradually increase the dose. I found that with each dose change there was a change in him, and not a good one. He never mentioned a stomach upset, or not feeling well.
I spoke with the doctor and decided to titrate him down off the drug. So he remained just on Aricept for the duration. And I probably could have discontinued it long before I did. At some point the medications no longer are effective (if they did much to begin with as you never know how fast the decline would have been. It is a crapshoot either way)

I have been just reading some of the side effects and there is a Black Box warning that there is an increased mortality risk for "elderly patients with dementia"
Cheeky79 Sep 2023
He has been on seriquel the whole time. He has been having some hallucinations, thinking people are speaking to him but the few that occurred were in the middle of the night. One morning at 4 a.m. he
woke my son up and said there was a food delivery
for us. I told this all to the doctor that is why he prescribed the rexulti. He does not want to eat
because he had diarrhea and pain in his stomach. I gave him chamomile tea and yesterday just some saltines and ginger ale. I gave him the heating pad
to sooth his stomach pain.

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