Welcome to medications.com

My son, Wilson, is a bright, easy-going, athletic 12 year old wh...

Posted at 5:49 PM on May 07, 2008 by anotherconcernedmother, #30294
My son, Wilson, is a bright, easy-going, athletic 12 year old who has a history of asthma and allergies. After several asthmatic episodes from age one year to about four, he was prescribed Singulair. The asthma triggers seemed to be change of season or congestion from a cold, but not from exercise or physical exertion. As I recall, his asthmatic episodes seemed to decrease after he was on 5-10 mg of Singulair, and even more so with each passing year. Over the years, of my three sons, Wilson was the one to catch any virus that came around and missed more school time than both of his brothers combined. Often, he was the only one to get sick from a virus, which never passed to anyone else in the family. About five years ago, Wilson started complaining of stomach aches. He was tested and was prescribed Prevacid on and off since then with varying success. In the last couple of years, headaches would come and go. He was re-tested for allergies and blood work with no conclusive results. About 2-3 years ago he would complain that he “felt funny…like he needed to do something.” Further conversations revealed that he was expressing anxiety. He’s a good student, has lots of friends at school, and is popular among his sports team mates. Occasionally, a teacher here and there over the last couple of years would note that he did not participate enough in class, or did not appear to be attentive. We thought perhaps he is shy. Still his good behavior, agreeable personality and diligence otherwise earned him good grades overall. He loves school and was very unhappy having to stay home when he was sick. This past winter, he seemed to catch a virus about once every month and a half which caused him to miss 2-3 days of school. Headaches and stomach aches were common with each illness (sometimes nausea), and sometimes these same symptoms when he was not ill. He would only complain when they were prolonged or significant. Trips to the doctor did not result in anything conclusive. Again, Wilson was only too happy once he returned to school. He claims that sometimes in school he feels like he’s in a fog and has difficulty concentrating. He gets plenty of sleep and sometimes sleeps up to ten hours during the weekend. We attributed it to adolescence and a busy schedule. He claims that this year is the easiest for him at school, and his social life with his friends is very active. His friends’ parents like him and find him to be an agreeable child. Other adults mistake his sometime mumbling answers and lack of eye contact rude. We concluded that he is just shy. He is the most hyper of his brothers, and has difficulty sitting still and constantly exclaims that he’s bored. We chalked it up to being an active boy. His grades are good in school and we never get complaints about bad behavior. The last illness started a week ago, and he’s still out of school. The doctor said he had no significant allergy symptoms, other bacterial infections, and his blood work all returned with normal results for white blood counts, liver and kidney functioning and anemia. He can’t return to school because of his constant headaches (which cause pain in different parts of his head), nausea, constant stomach aches, no matter what he eats, and feelings of anxiety, mostly in the evening hours. He’s also complaining of dizziness, leg cramps and other muscle soreness. The notable difference in this illness is the anxiety. My husband and I take turns staying home with him, but if we left him alone for a half an hour at a time while the other was in route picking up a sibling, he became very anxious. In the past, he seemed to enjoy some alone time at home so he could play his computer games. He also becomes easily dizzy with shooting pains in his muscles. The doctor said that viruses can manifest themselves in later stages in the form of sore muscles. However, he was concerned about Wilson’s feelings of anxiety. The anxiety had not been as prevalent in prior illnesses. I finally signed onto the internet reading all the stories about other parent’s observations of their children on Singulair. My husband cautioned me about “internet diagnosing” with symptoms and stories that can be easily taken out of context in hope of self-diagnosis. I’ve always thought that Wilson’s doctors have had good judgment. Both my primary physician and allergist don’t think that Singulair has caused these symptoms, but agreed to take him off as long as we monitored any effect on his asthma. I don’t know what to think. I want the cause of these problems to be the Singulair, because it’s an easy answer. Today will be the first day he’s off the medication. He probably won’t go to school again tomorrow. We’ll wait and see what happens…
REPLY TO THIS POSTING | Send Private Mail | Add as friend | Flag as inappropriate
 
Reply 5 months ago on May 07, 2008 by catherineevans, #8069

Alot of these symptoms resemble my granddaughter's for the two years she was on Singulair. We did not make the connection with the drug until the story broke on ABC. She has been off since March 28 and the anxiety, mood swings, acting like she was coming out of her skin, headaches, stomach aches have all greatly improved. I would say she's gone from a 10 to a 3 on the scale. She was not on any other drug during this period and her behavior was so bizarre that we took her to a counselor who asked about medications and she didn't make the connection with Singulair either so Merck keeps these side effects very hidden when they promote this drug to doctors or they downplay them. I hoep you see results as we have, I feel we have our beautiful granddaughter back.

Send Private Mail | Add as friend | Flag as inappropriate
 
Reply 5 months ago on May 07, 2008 by dawniesue80, #8074

My son had all these symptoms too! He has been off singulair for 3 weeks and I cannot believe the dramatic change! He was not on any other medication either. I started noticing a difference on day 3 when he started acting happier. It was amazing!! You are going to notice some huge differences. Please keep us updated, good luck to you and your son.

Send Private Mail | Add as friend | Flag as inappropriate
 
Reply 5 months ago on May 08, 2008 by sp2008, #8086

I hope things will be getting better! if you would like to keep us posted we have a support board for memebers here. You can join us at
http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/Singulair_side_effects_friends/

Send Private Mail | Add as friend | Flag as inappropriate
 
Reply 5 months ago on May 09, 2008 by robinj, #8130

i CAN'T WAIT To HEAR HOW YOUR son, Wilson does-PLeASE post!!!
Good luck and God bless!
I am a 43 year old who has had alleries since I wa a kid- My Doc rx Singulair in December when I was a mess- Within 3 days I felt like a totally different person, angry and aggressive...it was awful. My Doctor still doesn't believe me when I told him it was the Singulair-It took a GOoD 5 days to feel normal again, and I was only on it for about 4 days!!!
Anyway, my 14 year old has terrible seasonal allergies-his eyes practically swell shut! Take him to very expensivr big time Allergy Specialists.....he immediately wants to prescribe Singulair... I say no way!-Doc thinks I'm crazy- said it was about 4 kids in millions that had behavioral problems on this drug- How can physicians be this out of touch??? The problem is...singulair works well on allergies when nothing else does- so they prescribe it......BUT at what cost?

Send Private Mail | Add as friend | Flag as inappropriate
 
Reply 5 months ago on May 09, 2008 by allergychild, #8135

My 6 year old daughter daughter has virtually matching symptoms - all of them. We've recently been convinced by a neurologist that she has ADD and have started her on medication for it with no improvement. She is also on a restless leg medication. Please post the results of discontinuing your son's singulair! How wonderful would it be if that was the explanation!

Send Private Mail | Add as friend | Flag as inappropriate
 
Reply 5 months ago on May 09, 2008 by allergychild, #8136

My 6 year old daughter daughter has virtually matching symptoms - all of them. We've recently been convinced by a neurologist that she has ADD and have started her on medication for it with no improvement. She is also on a restless leg medication. Please post the results of discontinuing your son's singulair! How wonderful would it be if that was the explanation!

Send Private Mail | Add as friend | Flag as inappropriate

Make a reply to this posting:

Type your reply to this side effect post:




ADVERTISEMENT

This registry is a place to share positive or negative side effects of using Singulair. If you directly experienced a side effect while using Singulair, then we encourage you to enter it here. Please note that entries here are the experiences of individual users, and in no way means that you or anyone else will experience the same side effect, since the same medication affects people in different ways. Please always contact your physician.
-- Please see our disclaimer

© 2002-2007, Skylabs Inc.  |  About Us  |  Disclaimer/Terms of Use  |  Advertise  |  Contact Us  |  Site Map  |  Developed by: W3matter.com