Tagamet dose?

jen2012
jen2012 Member Posts: 1,607 Member
Did a little searching but decided to pose the question here to see what everyone recommends.

Ann...did you just use tagamet before and after surgery? What dose?

Tans...your wife takes a high dose every day?

Anyone else have any thoughts or advice on tagamet?

Comments

  • Chelsea71
    Chelsea71 Member Posts: 1,169 Member
    I don't know much, but I do
    I don't know much, but I do know that Steve will be taking it if he ever goes for surgery. A lot of convincing evidence that is reduces the probability of spread during surgery. Ann Alexandria attributes lengthy remission to the possible use of Tagamet before and after surgery. I think she even received it intravenously during or immediately after her last surgery.
  • annalexandria
    annalexandria Member Posts: 2,571 Member
    Chelsea71 said:

    I don't know much, but I do
    I don't know much, but I do know that Steve will be taking it if he ever goes for surgery. A lot of convincing evidence that is reduces the probability of spread during surgery. Ann Alexandria attributes lengthy remission to the possible use of Tagamet before and after surgery. I think she even received it intravenously during or immediately after her last surgery.

    I actually was unable to get the IV form...

    my surgeon okayed it, but then it turned out that they no longer make it.  So I took it orally for one week before the surgery and about one week after (may have been a little longer, can't remember now).  I have to say that the oral route would have been difficult if this had been one of my huge, gutted-from-top-to-bottom surgeries where I couldn't eat for days after.  I was just lucky that my last surgery was just a rectal resection of a small tumor, and a hysterectomy ("lucky"...only at Camp Cancer).  I was able to eat and drink right away after surgery.  If I do it again, I would look into the possibility of a liquid version, just in case I couldn't get down the pills.  Dosage, btw, was 800 mg per day, based on the study included in the article below.  The folks in that study actually stayed on cimetidine for a year, but in other studies there was a significant increase in prognosis in groups that just took it for the two week window around surgery.  AA

  • tanstaafl
    tanstaafl Member Posts: 1,313 Member
    1200-1600 mg per day for
    1200-1600 mg per day for almost 3 years in stage IV. Guys have more male side effects with cimetidine, women can check their prolactin levels. The literature suggests there **might** be some dose dependence for maximum tumor effect. LEF recommends 1000 to 1600 mg. The Japanese research successes for stage III were with 800 mg.

    Cimetidine has big positives, especially short term immune response around surgery to prevent recurrences.

    Cimetidine has multiple therapeutic roles in immune response, antiangiogensis (VEGF-A), and ERB-1 signaling. Ultralow CA19-9 blood results (less than 2) are probably a contraindication for long term use due to (in)effectiveness in anti-angiogenisis.

    My wife also takes betaine hydrochloride and pancreatin sometimes to offset the digestive effect of suppressed acid production.
  • pete43lost_at_sea
    pete43lost_at_sea Member Posts: 3,900 Member
    tanstaafl said:

    1200-1600 mg per day for
    1200-1600 mg per day for almost 3 years in stage IV. Guys have more male side effects with cimetidine, women can check their prolactin levels. The literature suggests there **might** be some dose dependence for maximum tumor effect. LEF recommends 1000 to 1600 mg. The Japanese research successes for stage III were with 800 mg.

    Cimetidine has big positives, especially short term immune response around surgery to prevent recurrences.

    Cimetidine has multiple therapeutic roles in immune response, antiangiogensis (VEGF-A), and ERB-1 signaling. Ultralow CA19-9 blood results (less than 2) are probably a contraindication for long term use due to (in)effectiveness in anti-angiogenisis.

    My wife also takes betaine hydrochloride and pancreatin sometimes to offset the digestive effect of suppressed acid production.

    does nt cimetidine go nice with psk and or ahcc

    from memory don't the stage 3 studies use psk.

    now i am trying ahcc just for fun and psk.

    lucky i love mushrooms.

    any suggestions.

    I have been on cimetidine 400mg breakfast and dinner. 

    I wonder is breaky, lunch dinner could be worth it. total daily would then be 1200. 

    the old divided dose strategy or hit it hard break ad dinner 800mg each for a total 1600

    hugs,

    pete

  • luvinlife2
    luvinlife2 Member Posts: 172 Member
    Any advice welcome....

    My stomach tolerates just about everything.....except cimetidine.  I wish I could take this but one dose and I have severe abdominal cramps, nausea and unbelievely....diarrhea.  LOL...I'm always trying to keep my system moving and this one pill does it for me and more, unfortunately.  Does anyone have any ideas on anything I can take with it to curb the side effects or am I just out of luck with this one?  Tans how does your wife tolerate this?

    Thanks  Smile

  • tanstaafl
    tanstaafl Member Posts: 1,313 Member

    Any advice welcome....

    My stomach tolerates just about everything.....except cimetidine.  I wish I could take this but one dose and I have severe abdominal cramps, nausea and unbelievely....diarrhea.  LOL...I'm always trying to keep my system moving and this one pill does it for me and more, unfortunately.  Does anyone have any ideas on anything I can take with it to curb the side effects or am I just out of luck with this one?  Tans how does your wife tolerate this?

    Thanks  Smile

    fine

    She tolerates cimetidine fine.  I would be suspicious that the irinotecan is really a larger part of GI-nausea source, beyond 5FU and other drugs' interactions. 

    My wife takes ~5 grams  of glutamine, divided by 2-3x, which helps restore the GI lining for 5FU (UFT) - LV, without the irinotecan.  Glutamine can help with irinotecan, as does likely does your IVC.  Although highly experimental for her low residue state, we use MK-4 (+ vit c), along with a lot of other things, instead.  <a href="http://csn.cancer.org/node/255388#comment-1341815">also my reply</a>

  • pete43lost_at_sea
    pete43lost_at_sea Member Posts: 3,900 Member
    tanstaafl said:

    fine

    She tolerates cimetidine fine.  I would be suspicious that the irinotecan is really a larger part of GI-nausea source, beyond 5FU and other drugs' interactions. 

    My wife takes ~5 grams  of glutamine, divided by 2-3x, which helps restore the GI lining for 5FU (UFT) - LV, without the irinotecan.  Glutamine can help with irinotecan, as does likely does your IVC.  Although highly experimental for her low residue state, we use MK-4 (+ vit c), along with a lot of other things, instead.  <a href="http://csn.cancer.org/node/255388#comment-1341815">also my reply</a>

    i too was put on slow release glutamine

    but after reading seyfried cancer as a metabolic illness in got concerned about glutamine role as a cancer fuel as an alternative to glucose, so i backed off, this was at a time my markers were increasing constantly. i cannot say it was glutamine. its just another contradictory view. attempting to heal the stomach lining a nobel goal.

    just doing it in the least cancer friendly way, is all i am still attempting.

    hugs,

    pete

  • luvinlife2
    luvinlife2 Member Posts: 172 Member
    tanstaafl said:

    fine

    She tolerates cimetidine fine.  I would be suspicious that the irinotecan is really a larger part of GI-nausea source, beyond 5FU and other drugs' interactions. 

    My wife takes ~5 grams  of glutamine, divided by 2-3x, which helps restore the GI lining for 5FU (UFT) - LV, without the irinotecan.  Glutamine can help with irinotecan, as does likely does your IVC.  Although highly experimental for her low residue state, we use MK-4 (+ vit c), along with a lot of other things, instead.  <a href="http://csn.cancer.org/node/255388#comment-1341815">also my reply</a>

    Thanks :)

    I'll ask my Dr. about the glutamine.  It's the cimetidine as the only 2 times I've had those side effects were after I took one 400mg pill each time during the 3rd week after my irinotecan/avastin infusion.  That's my good week!   Irinotecan and Xeloda never seem to bother me much.  I never have nausea or abdominal cramping with these drugs.  I'm interested in the glutamine and will check it out Smile

  • Chelsea71
    Chelsea71 Member Posts: 1,169 Member

    I actually was unable to get the IV form...

    my surgeon okayed it, but then it turned out that they no longer make it.  So I took it orally for one week before the surgery and about one week after (may have been a little longer, can't remember now).  I have to say that the oral route would have been difficult if this had been one of my huge, gutted-from-top-to-bottom surgeries where I couldn't eat for days after.  I was just lucky that my last surgery was just a rectal resection of a small tumor, and a hysterectomy ("lucky"...only at Camp Cancer).  I was able to eat and drink right away after surgery.  If I do it again, I would look into the possibility of a liquid version, just in case I couldn't get down the pills.  Dosage, btw, was 800 mg per day, based on the study included in the article below.  The folks in that study actually stayed on cimetidine for a year, but in other studies there was a significant increase in prognosis in groups that just took it for the two week window around surgery.  AA

    Hi Ann. Too lazy to read the
    Hi Ann. Too lazy to read the study. Was 800 mg based on your weight or other individual factors? Did you take it all at once or gradually throughout the day?
  • jen2012
    jen2012 Member Posts: 1,607 Member
    Thanks all for the info!  I

    Thanks all for the info!  I will bring it up with the doctors soon.  

    Ok....am I missing Ann's link?  I'd like to email to the doctor.  

  • annalexandria
    annalexandria Member Posts: 2,571 Member
    Chelsea71 said:

    Hi Ann. Too lazy to read the
    Hi Ann. Too lazy to read the study. Was 800 mg based on your weight or other individual factors? Did you take it all at once or gradually throughout the day?

    Too lazy to read the study...

    that I FORGOT to post??  What a slacker you are, Chelsea!  Anyhoo, the 800 mg was not an individualized dose, just copying what was done in the study.  I took it in two doses, AM and PM, 400 mg. each.  And if anyone is feeling motivated and wants to read the study I was talking about, it's included in the article below, along with some other info about cimetidine and why they think it works for this.  AA

    http://www.lef.org/magazine/mag2009/dec2009_Preventing-Surgery-Induced-Cancer-Metastasis_01.htm

  • annalexandria
    annalexandria Member Posts: 2,571 Member
    jen2012 said:

    Thanks all for the info!  I

    Thanks all for the info!  I will bring it up with the doctors soon.  

    Ok....am I missing Ann's link?  I'd like to email to the doctor.  

    See it up there, Jen?

    I am an idiot, and can't manage to complete a single task without getting off-track.  Oh well, I have chemo to use as an excuse for the rest of my life!  AA

  • jen2012
    jen2012 Member Posts: 1,607 Member

    See it up there, Jen?

    I am an idiot, and can't manage to complete a single task without getting off-track.  Oh well, I have chemo to use as an excuse for the rest of my life!  AA

    Ha...i figured you forgot to
    Ha...i figured you forgot to post it...until Chelsea mentioned it...then i thought i was just losing it! :) thanks for adding it!