@Danny Boy ... With all due respect I think you need to get your facts straight, as things are getting a bit "frothy" here.
First up with Benzos. They do not cause tinnitus to worsen except perhaps in exceptional cases (that I have never come across)
unless stopped suddenly or tapered off too fast. That seems to be where the trouble lies. Even then, many people (myself included, and at numerous times) have dumped Benzos cold turkey with no increase in T. Not advisable after long term use, but I would say not a rare practice either.
I would also say, that Benzos may be one of the most common meds prescribed for tinnitus and the anxiety that goes along with it, especially at the beginning. I am not going to quote numbers, but of all the people who have posted their meds on this forum, or discussed meds, or have been suffering from anxiety, I can hardly remember any without a Benzo in the mix. My sense is, they are front-line defense at getting us through the roughest parts. Personally, I could not have made it without them and I suspect thousands upon thousands of others on, and now off TT, are the same...Just my 'educated' opinion.
OK, but
do know that taking Benzos with Retigabine is an "up for grabs" question base on potential effects on plasticity. My own conclusion, based on extensive review, is that it could be good and it could be bad. The "science" initially implied it could be a problem, but the facts on the ground after some years of patient review (epilepsy patients) was that it was a puzzling "non issue". However, if not on a Benzo and about to take Retigabine, I would stay off it just to keep the waters clear....If not on Retigabine, I would say you may well benefit greatly from a Benzo, taken sensibly. Just my opinion.
I also think if you had been around and followed every step of the way from the beginning on this thread, that you may not be quite so definitive about "results" and actions.
I wonder, have you read the posts put on near the beginning of all the warnings and "black box" quality of this drug?
This c/o jazz is not a bad one to be aware of:
http://www.fda.gov/downloads/Drugs/DrugSafety/UCM259619.pdf
I think new people joining this thread should be aware of these cautions and not just see the latest posts to make decisions off of...Most of us who have been on the thread for a while thrashed all those around and came to our own conclusions so do not bring them up any more, but new 'followers' might be advised to review those earlier posts.
@Telis ....yeah Telis, you are aware of what I am saying I believe, and that, what is it? seven, or eight people who have guinea pigged this drug is not much of N sample! Hell if we go off eight people then 25% of us did not have a positive reaction to Retigabine! I do not really want to classify my reaction as "bad", but a 50% increase in Hyperacusis is not exactly good is it?! Plus
@Danny Boy you are incorrect to say that "this will not increase your T"...it sure did for Hengist and it also did somewhat for me. I would say it increased my T by 10% and certainly made it more reactive, but I perhaps 'kindly' put that down to "wash-over" effect from increased Hyperacusis. Objectively I should have just said it increased my tinnitus right?!
@Telis just a tip on the H...Yeah it could be a factor, but remember that I think it could be do-able if you
keep out of sound exposure. The H reacts to sound, so if you eliminate sound you may be OK. It is was
not pleasant for me as indeed the "ear bruising" is scary as hell after what I have been through. However, it did dissipate after drug cessation so
if it even happens for you, you could just dump the drug. *[See below re speed of taper].
I am belabouring all this above because I have a vested interest in keeping our reporting on Retigabine as accurate and clear as possible. I truly believe in these Kv Channels as being a ticket out of for lots of T, but am also aware that these are early days until AUT00063 comes out. Our "supporting evidence" on Retigabine as an alternative for a Kv7 approach, should be as accurate as possible to allow potential researchers, and us, to make best use of what our trialees are accumulating through group experience.
As an end note, just in case anyone thinks that because the Trobalt did not work for me that I am now down on the drug. If you do think that you are flat out wrong.
a). I know I am a special case. I mean, how many people have had the same single tone of T for 58 years here? How many people have had three
additional permanent increases in volume on their T? That is hard core, freeway deep grooves in the "T brain" there! Very tough shit to deal with for
any remediation I would say.
b). I have actually become
more impressed with Retigabine as a potential T drug since I stopped! Yes truly. The latest research that Locoyeti found is amazing and very supportive of some of the key aspects we had been debating for months about Retig. I think the Kv7's have a darn good chance of getting fine tuned to help T almost as much as Kv3 apparently does with Autifony. No doubt I may be proven wrong there as Charles Large sure knows all about the Kv7's and zeroed in on Kv3, but still...for us, Retigabine is the only option right now in this category, and I think it has excellent street cred...Just don't go into it blind!
Best of luck to all, I am still very much following all of this and looking at Retigabine research. If I do take it again I will be tapering up at a much faster rate and bigger dose jumps. I have a sense that the speed of increase and decrease may not be as worrisome as we thought IF YOU HAVE NO LATENT EPILEPTIC TENDENCIES!!!...
and maybe you would just not know that right?!
@locoyeti may help us answer this particular question a bit more. Until we know more, caution is always warranted.
Zimichael