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NousDefionsDoc 03-03-2004 14:18

Lariam
 
WASHINGTON (Army News Service, March 3, 2004) - The surgeon general of the Army told Congress that there is no correlation between the anti-malaria drug Lariam and a recent spike in suicides in combat zones.

Julia Mead 01-21-2007 16:18

my intro
 
Thank you so much for permitting me to join. I'm a graduate student at Columbia University, researching my masters thesis on the history and neurotoxic side effects of an anti-malarial drug, mefloquine hydrochloride. It was marketed under the name Lariam. Mefloquine has been prescribed to military personnel deployed overseas, as well as Peace Corps volunteers and civilian travelers, for decades. I am interested in speaking with active-duty personnel and vets of any overseas conflict who have taken mefloquine and experienced its side effects. These can range from temporary discomforts, such as dizzyiness and nausea, to more severe, including psychosis, hallucinations, depression, and suicidal ideation. It has also been linked to vestibular (balance) problems and seizures.
Through postings on other sites, I've been contacted by dozens of vets and active duty personnel and am amazed at how generous they've been with their time and stories. Those stories are enormously helpful to my research.
Please send e-mail to <jcm2043@columbia.edu> and I'd be happy to tell you more about my thesis. And do include your phone number so I can save you the long-distance call to NY.
Regards to all,
Julia Mead

zipgunlead 01-31-2007 06:03

Lariam
 
The surgeon general can say what he will but I have had some weird boogerman dreams after taking it. Anyone else here have that occur ?

Team Sergeant 01-31-2007 06:54

zipgunlead,

You might want to send an email to the "graduate student at Columbia University" (see the post above yours).;)

Team Sergeant

By the way, Welcome aboard!

Eagle5US 01-31-2007 07:47

Quote:

Originally Posted by zipgunlead
The surgeon general can say what he will but I have had some weird boogerman dreams after taking it. Anyone else here have that occur ?

I have been taking it off and on since 1989, and prescribing it about the same amount of time, so my experience with it sould be considered somewhat limited.
So...in my limited experience, I have had lots of folks with side effects off of doxy, and zero folks with reported side effect after Lariam. Personally I have had no ill affects at all. In my limited experience...

I guess the real question should be is the ONLY TIME you have wierd boogerman dreams after taking Lariam, or have you had weird boogerman dreams othertimes as well? CHildhood? Teen years? Bad dream as an adult? Times of stress or worry? After a bad movie? Bad date perhaps?:D
And yes, by all means...WELCOME ABOARD!

Eagle

The Reaper 01-31-2007 09:05

Quote:

Originally Posted by Julia Mead
Thank you so much for permitting me to join. I'm a graduate student at Columbia University, researching my masters thesis on the history and neurotoxic side effects of an anti-malarial drug, mefloquine hydrochloride. It was marketed under the name Lariam. Mefloquine has been prescribed to military personnel deployed overseas, as well as Peace Corps volunteers and civilian travelers, for decades. I am interested in speaking with active-duty personnel and vets of any overseas conflict who have taken mefloquine and experienced its side effects. These can range from temporary discomforts, such as dizzyiness and nausea, to more severe, including psychosis, hallucinations, depression, and suicidal ideation. It has also been linked to vestibular (balance) problems and seizures.
Through postings on other sites, I've been contacted by dozens of vets and active duty personnel and am amazed at how generous they've been with their time and stories. Those stories are enormously helpful to my research.
Please send e-mail to <jcm2043@columbia.edu> and I'd be happy to tell you more about my thesis. And do include your phone number so I can save you the long-distance call to NY.
Regards to all,
Julia Mead

Julia:

Do you want to hear from people who took it for extended periods with no ill-effects as well?

TR

Mav 01-31-2007 09:15

When I was in Bagram five years ago, I was the only person who didn't have any obvious side effects from Mefloquine. Everyone dreaded Mefloquine Monday... I really didn't see any side effects, that I can tell.. tho I only took it for about 8 months..

CRad 01-31-2007 11:46

Malaria vs Treatment

Malaria -
VA Medical Center, Psychology (116-B), Iowa City, Iowa 52246, USA.

Approximately 250,000 Vietnam veterans suffered cerebral malaria, an illness that often results in damage to subcortical white matter and fronto-temporal areas of neocortex. Case reports dating back 2500 years indicate that survivors of cerebral malaria show depression, poor memory, personality change, and irritability/violence. The purpose of the present study was to compare the neuropsychiatric status of Vietnam veterans who had suffered cerebral malaria in the remote past (i.e., 1966 to 1969) with that of Vietnam veterans wounded in combat who had not suffered malaria or other neurological conditions. Findings indicate that cerebral malaria results in multiple, major, substantially underappreciated neuropsychiatric symptoms in Vietnam veterans, including poor dichotic listening, "personality change," depression, and, in some cases, partial seizure-like symptoms. Findings strongly suggest that history of malaria should be considered in any medical, psychological, or psychiatric workup of a Vietnam War veteran because a positive response could result in substantial changes in diagnosis and treatment.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/q...&dopt=Abstract


Treatment -

The most frequently reported adverse events are nausea, vomiting, loose stools or diarrhea, abdominal pain, dizziness or vertigo, loss of balance, and neuropsychiatric events such as headache, somnolence, and sleep disorders (insomnia, abnormal dreams). These are usually mild and may decrease despite continued use.

Occasionally, more severe neuropsychiatric disorders have been reported such as: sensory and motor neuropathies (including paresthesia, tremor and ataxia), convulsions, agitation or restlessness, anxiety, depression, mood changes, panic attacks, forgetfulness, confusion, hallucinations, aggression, psychotic or paranoid reactions and encephalopathy. Rare cases of suicidal ideation and suicide have been reported though no relationship to drug administration has been confirmed.


http://www.rxlist.com/cgi/generic2/mefloq_ad.htm

Warrior-Mentor 01-31-2007 16:13

Quote:

Originally Posted by zipgunlead
The surgeon general can say what he will but I have had some weird boogerman dreams after taking it. Anyone else here have that occur ?

x2. And only while I was on it.

Know a TL who did room clearing (without a gun) while sleepwalking on it...

CRad 01-31-2007 16:37

Quote:

Originally Posted by Warrior-Mentor
x2. And only while I was on it.

Know a TL who did room clearing (without a gun) while sleepwalking on it...

There are teams guys who did the same thing before the lariam name ever came up. If you want specifics either e-mail or pm

The Reaper 01-31-2007 18:24

Quote:

Originally Posted by Warrior-Mentor
x2. And only while I was on it.

Know a TL who did room clearing (without a gun) while sleepwalking on it...

Restoril and some other sleep aids will do that as well.

I wonder how many of these people were on other meds, or were drinking at the same time?

TR

Irish_Army01 02-02-2007 05:07

We get it going to Liberia,..Bad dreams being one of the major side effects..
The Doc's will only let you take it up to a maximum of 9 months on any deployment..our deployments are usually 6 months ..and extend for another 6..

when on larium you can only extend for another 3 months.

rwt_bkk 02-18-2007 21:57

I had an optimoligist working for me in Laos. He took Lariam and developed a bad case of tremors. He thought is was time to quite surgery and was going to retire. Then after returning to the states the tremors ceased. Later he went to a seminar on Lariam and found it was one of the side effects.

Personally I spent 9 years in a area that was 80% malarial without contacting marlaria (only got it once in 1969 on a 7 day trip to the same area). I have relied on doxycycline and artemesia only (never had to take the artemsia). I have also treated more than 10,000 people for malaria in an environment where Lariam is much too expensive. I rely totally on doxy and artemsia and get very low reoccurance rates and no side effects from the artemsia treatment (combined with doxy for adults and non-nursing mothers).

A lot of the people that came over were taking Lariam as perscribed by the stateside doctors, but one of my understandings were that it was very hard on the liver too limiting it's usufulness for those of us that had to live in these areas for years at a time.

Personally I would look for alternatives..

Irish_Army01 06-13-2010 05:34

I know this thread is a little old but just FYI, A member of the Irish Army has started a Facebook page looking for Personal with side effects to come forward.


There has been 9 suicides over the last two years, (last one a Sgt still on his leave from Chad 3 weeks ago) all have been on larium.

http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?...23004011065529

zauber1 06-17-2010 20:41

Use during Desert Storm?
 
Was this used during Desert Storm? I had been in the big Army for over 10 years and never ever had a bad reaction to anything that was injected, inserted or otherwise administered to my body. Then during the inprocessing phase of recall to active status, SOMETHING that I took or was injected with gave me a severe anaphylactic reaction (tremors, shakes, hypothermia) and I was nonchalantly labelled, "Oh yeah, Charlie. We've got another one over here doing the same thing." I was rushed to the post hospital and given more Benadryl than I have ever seen in injectable form for four days. Then released without explanation...
Could it have been Lariam given as a prophylactic?


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