*The following is an individual’s story of surviving fluoroquinolone toxicity. It is not medical advice. Please see the disclaimer at the bottom of the story. Thank you, and please be cautious with all treatments.
I’ve delayed writing this for quite a while.
I have had the terrible fear that my recovery was tenuous, short-lived, like an anvil of pain and sorrow was still hanging over my head on a thin string, just waiting for an excuse to fall. But I’ve given it time, a lot of time, and it hasn’t fallen.
I have been poisoned, lied to, and gone unbelieved—and yet I am here to say it gets better for most, to say many floxies do recover and heal and find meaning through this journey.
All that may seem well-intentioned but facetious, so let me just tell the story, my story, which is not yours but might be a cousin of yours, and hopefully you will find some kind of solace in that.
My early birthday present in June 2014 was levofloxacin. After recovering from an ear infection in late May with the help of Omnicef, I was still experiencing nasal congestion and mucus in the corners of my eyes upon waking. My pediatrician examined me, concluded I had a sinus infection, and prescribed a ten-day round of levofloxacin, the generic for Levaquin.
Each pill was 500 milligrams. There, on the list of side effects dutifully printed out by Walgreens, was a warning: sudden tendon rupture could occur in people 60 or older.
I wasn’t 60 or older. I wasn’t even 21. That would happen in a little over a week.
I took a dose before going to work. At night, peculiar pains stole through my legs, the heads in a whack-a-mole, popping in and out in different places. I tried to focus on their origin, but they evaporated just when my attention found them.
It was on a walk, late in the afternoon the third day of so-called treatment, four or five hours following the pill, when the damage threshold for my mitochondria broke.
An unbearable tightness coiled around the back of my right knee. I limped home. I put ice under my knee, thinking somehow I had strained it. It’s funny how our first impulses of blame tend to fall on ourselves, even for things we did not do.
Then I remembered the half-read printout from Walgreens. Frantically I checked it. There was little, if anything, about people my age, but it said to call your doctor if you experienced any adverse effects.
I did so the next morning. She said nothing of the sort had happened to any of her patients in the twenty years she’d been practicing. There was a tint of doubt in her voice, but not enough to keep her from switching the prescription to Augmentin.
As far as I can tell, I had no negative responses to the Augmentin—and I had 20 days’ worth, to combat a sinus infection I would later learn was never there in the first place.
Most illnesses are acute. They last less than a week. You might take a day or two off work, but that’s it. You’ve got bills to pay, work to do, social activities to partake in.
Fluoroquinolone toxicity is not acute. It usually gets worse before it gets better.
And it got worse for me. There was a general weakening of my muscles and my fitness. Things I once did with ease left me breathless. Various parts of my body began twitching, almost in a morbid choreography, passing the electrical baton to other areas.
About a month and a half after being floxed, I went for a bike ride. I was young, after all, and young people are invincible. I pedaled slowly, as if I were trying to cross a gulf of air on a tightrope. It seemed to be going okay. Then I got off while the bike was still rolling, and my right foot hit the ground fairly hard. I would have absorbed it just fine if I had been healthy, but I was not healthy. Perhaps on the outside, but not the inside.
The next day it felt like my achilles tendon was trying to snap. When I read Ruth’s story several months ago, she described a pain that was like a thin sheet of cells tearing, and then the pain would disappear. I recognized that pain; that was my ankle.
I didn’t bike again that summer, and it made me restless. I have two outlets for stress in my life: writing fiction and biking. Floxies don’t do well with restlessness.
Autumn sliced into summer, stealing away its warmth and humidity. It would have stolen mine, too, as it does to many other Chicagoans, but levofloxacin had already done it. Three pills had left me unable to exercise, run, swim, or be creative.
Because the symptoms were not just physical. They were mental. I was depressed, anxious, and constantly on the internet, looking for answers, looking for treatments, looking for people who have done this and gotten through to the other side.
I found Floxie Hope in August. I clung to it. I monitored it every day, to see if someone new had put a hopeful message in a bottle to drift across the ocean of cyberspace and reach me. (Some days I did; that is why I am writing this now.)
There are far too many small instances of weakness and decline to delve into here, or anywhere. They are best left to the dustbin of memory, safely undisturbed. But I do recognize certain events that delayed my recovery, and certain events that helped it.
In late August, the week before returning to college, I got all four of my wisdom teeth pulled. The surgeon was kind, understanding, and gentle as a person can be when they are extracting bits of reluctant bone from your head. He agreed that he would not prescribe me any fluoroquinolones after the surgery.
He did prescribe me dexamethasone, to keep down the chipmunk cheek swelling many people experience after a four-tooth extraction. Dutifully I took it, though I had read somewhere or other that fluoroquinolones and steroids don’t play well.
The weakening accelerated. My ankles felt brittle. I no longer walked on curbs, because I feared if one foot slipped, so would my achilles tendon. Whenever I got in the water to try swimming, the tightness behind my knee would always be there.
Even my fingers were atrophying. Just pressing the lock button on my car hurt.
And then I found something that I credit with saving me. Because it did. Actually, I found it through Ruth, whom must have been guided by God to find it herself: MitoQ.
I am not a salesperson for MitoQ, but I am a grateful customer. I started taking it in February, one dose a day, and I have only seen consistent, dramatic improvement.
It is wonderfully powerful. I do not consider myself sick anymore, and that is only after four months since starting it. I ride my bike. I swim. I run. I play sports. I laugh, I eat, I write, I live. It is expensive for a supplement, but the gift of recovery is priceless.
It is exceptionally rare in medicine, especially do-it-yourself medicine, to identify causation. So many factors interfere between cause and effect. But this is one situation where the relationship is undoubtable. MitoQ has freed me from the shackles of fluoroquinolone toxicity, and I tell everyone I know about it, even those who suffer from other afflictions such as multiple sclerosis, POTS syndrome, or chronic fatigue.
Some people heed my story with wide eyes. Some people receive it with narrowed ones. Eventually I realized I can’t decide for them whether they ever knowingly take a fluoroquinolone. It’s not my body. It’s not my life. But it does little good to get angry at those who have heard you and still take the Cipro their doctor gave them for some green mucus that lasted a couple days. They are just trying to rid themselves of their affliction, however temporary, the same as we are, and they happen to trust their doctor.
You can ask them to reconsider. You can ask them to discuss it again with their physician. You can give them information. You can’t extract the drug from their blood.
Speaking of drugs: I spent a lot of money on supplements and alternative treatments, as I’m sure you all have. I was born with a wooden spoon, not a silver spoon, and so I’ve learned firsthand which ones are probably worth it and which ones aren’t.
This is not meant to be a comprehensive, definitive list of what works and what doesn’t. It’s not meant to be professional medical advice. I’m not a doctor. I’m not a nurse. But it is a comprehensive, definitive list of what worked and didn’t work for me.
As always, your mileage may vary.
WHAT DIDN’T WORK:
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Vitamin D (2,000 IU daily). I never noticed any difference between taking it and not; however, if you’re in a place with harsh winters/little sunlight, definitely keep up on it.
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Vitamin C (500 mg daily). I only still take it for my immune system.
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Cissus quadrangularis (500 mg daily). This is a plant extract that some bodybuilders swear by for injury recovery, but it didn’t work for me.
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Vitamin E (200 IU daily). This supposedly has antioxidant properties, though I didn’t benefit from them.
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Magnesium lotion (Ancient Minerals). Many floxies report this being effective on twitching muscles, but I never experienced that benefit. It doesn’t mean you won’t!
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B Vitamin Complex. This only gave me diarrhea (too much biotin can do that).
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Magnesium citrate (250 mg per dose, one or two doses daily). Magnesium in any form is great to take, but this form is harder to absorb than liquid configurations.
WHAT DID WORK:
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MitoQ (mitoq.com). I take one dose in the morning. Be consistent.
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Liquid magnesium (300 mg), from liquimins. It’s in a big blue bottle: (http://www.traceminerals.com/products/liquid-tablet-minerals/liquid-magnesium). I just mix it into my water, orange juice, or other drink of choice. There’s a fairly strong sweet taste to it—surprising for a metal—but you’ll get used to it. One tablespoon a day.
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Good multivitamin. I’m not sure it matters which brand.
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Quercetin with bromelain (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B002JNK8EY). Quercetin helps with histamine regulation, so it’s nice for allergies. Bromelain is naturally occurring in pineapple; it helps down-regulate inflammation. Now Foods is based the next town over from mine, and they are a very reputable manufacturer.
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Time. This is the hardest to accept. We floxies feel we’ve wasted enough time already. Haven’t I lain in bed enough? Haven’t I lost enough fitness? But we can be patient, we must be patient; it’s not really a choice.
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Activities and routines. Whatever activity you enjoy and can still do, do it. Write. Read. Paint. Walk (carefully). Sing. Listen to music. Play music. Talk with friends. Watch a movie. Fight the brain fog with brain food. Pain is worse if it’s all you feel.
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Take care of yourself otherwise. Brush and floss your teeth. Wash your body and your hair. Get dressed in the morning, even if it takes you a while. Lounging around in your pajamas 24/7 isn’t good for anyone.
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Don’t withdraw from the world (as much as you can). It’s a primal instinct to retract yourself when you are injured. Floxies ARE injured. But try to expand your sphere, even if it hurts. Talk to family, talk to friends, talk to neighbors, help them if you can.
It may be obvious, but I will never return to my pediatrician. I’m not sure how much blame can be assigned to her. She did prescribe levofloxacin, of course. As a physician, she also tries to base her decisions on empirical data. If the data on adverse drug reactions in the fat little book of prescription medications every doctor seems to carry isn’t accurate to begin with, is it really all her fault? Can everyone be expected to independently verify every piece of data all the time?
No, they can’t. But I still won’t return to her practice. Forgiveness may come—eventually—but it’s not eager to arrive yet. It will have to happen, I know. It will. Often the poison of withholding forgiveness is worse than the crime being forgiven. And don’t we floxies have enough experience with poison?
I was lucky enough to find an allergist in August who not only practices nearby, but was sympathetic in trying to understand my situation. There was no immediate dismissal, no turning to the computer, no perusing the fat little book to see if I was telling the truth or not. He blocks off two hours for every intake appointment. He listens.
I suppose that’s what all of us, floxed or not, are trying to find. Listening.
And out of listening comes comprehension, and out of comprehension compassion, and out of compassion recovery. If not physical, at least emotional.
One of my coworkers likes to recite a certain motivational phrase: success through a positive mental attitude. Out of that, I’ve come to find, all good things flow.
P.S. I need to write this little postscript just to thank Lisa for all of her dedication and hard work. MitoQ saved my body; Floxie Hope saved my mind.
If I can be so bold as to suggest a bit of music therapy: Mumford and Sons have an absolutely gorgeous song called “After the Storm”:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z3RP1VbUaaA
“There will come a time, you’ll see
With no more tears
And love will not break your heart
But dismiss your fears
Get over your hill and see
What you find there
With grace in your heart
And flowers in your hair”
** The story above is truthful, accurate and told to the best of the ability of the writer. It is not intended as medical advice. No person who submits his or her story, nor the people associated with Floxie Hope, diagnoses or treats any illness. The story above should not be substituted for professionally provided medical advice. Please consult your doctor before trying anything that has been mentioned in this story, or in any other story on this site. Please also note that people have varying responses to the treatments mentioned in each story. What helps one person may not help, and may even hurt, another person. It is important that you understand that supplements, IVs, essential oils, and all other treatments, effect people differently depending on the millions of variables that make each of us unique. Please use appropriate caution and prudence, and get professional medical advice.
gandolf381 please contact me i am interesting in your reseachrs i have informations for you
I don’t really know where to put my story so I’ll just leave it here…
First of all, I’m glad that you’re feeling better, Brett!
I was only mildly floxed – if there is such a thing. I’m still unsure what would have happened if I didn’t stop my medication in time. Maybe nothing? Maybe I’m just paranoid? Or maybe I was nearly hit by a train. And if it’s the latter I can certainly thank it to you all, who have shared the terrible effects this drug caused in your systems and your heroic battles trying to recover. I wish you all the best luck!
I’m 34 (male) and I live in Hungary, Europe.
4 years ago I had prostatitis. I was prescribed Levofloxacin (7 pieces, I believe 500mg). I was fairly scared as I read the warning about possible side effects (I always read it). I think tendron rupture scared me the most so I decided that I’ll be careful about my tendrons as much as I could.
I’ve never had side effects from medicines before (except for stomach ache after antibiotics courses when I was a child – doctors didn’t give you probiotics aside antibiotics back then).
I figured I’ll take the pill at night so that my tendrons won’t be stressed while the drug is in action. (I can’t tell if it has any significance regarding the severity of side effects whether one takes the pill in the morning or at night.)
So I took the first pill. Later I woke up in the middle of the night feeling anxious and unable to tell whether I’m too cold or I’m too warm. It was strange but I managed to go back to sleep soon. Early in the morning my little son started to cry so I rushed to his room and it felt as if my knees were made of rubber. That reassured me that I indeed need to be very careful about my tendrons (I have a history with weak joints unfortunately).
I felt very drained and lethargic throughout the week. I had a stressful work environment back then, I just wanted to survive.
I needed to visit the doctor again after a few days for prostate massage. I told him that my prostatitis improved a lot (it really did), but I also told about the weakness in my joints and my lethargy. He said that those were normal side effects. I was happy that I only needed to endure 3 more pills. But he told me that I will need to take another 7 pills after these. I really felt bad about that.
After the 5th day I started to feel a weird feeling in my knees – as if they were poked with needles but only very mildly. I started to worry so I searched the net for Levofloxacin side effects. Needless to say, I was horrified by what I found.
I didn’t take any more pills. My tendrons were hurting (especially next to my shin).
My doctor was abroad next week. When he came back and I saw him again I told him that I stopped the medication due to side effects. He thought it was muscle pain instead of my tendrons and maybe it was, I cant tell.
He gave me Ciprofloxacin instead! However I could tolerate this one better. I think it was smaller dose. And this time I took calcium and magnesium 4-5 hours after every pill. (This time I took the pills in the morning and took Ca and Mg at night so that my tendrons could refill.)
In the end I didn’t get badly floxed, but I’ll never again take Levofloxacin unless it’s life and death. I’m also very cautious about medicines my children have to take. I won’t let them take this drug because I read that Levofloxacin can cause permanent cartilage damage in children.
I remember that it was uncomfortable to go down the stairs for weeks after the medication. I also remember shouting at the top of my lungs at my poor kid – something I never did before or after my medication. I remember realizing probably a few days after of the course that “wow, I have emotions again!”. I never realized they were gone. For months I got tired easily and I felt as if I was 10 years older.
In the end I’m not really sure how severely I was affected. My joints have always been kind of bad anyway.
And how I got here after 4 years? I was travelling on the bus the other day when I thought “I used to have deeper feelings. What happened?” and then I remembered Levofloxacin and the time when all my feelings were gone. Have they all returned? I’ll never know.
Does MitoQ work for people who cannot tolerate Ubiquinol or CoQ10 orally? I suffer severe depression and heart palpitations when I try these supplements and was wondering if MitoQ is without the side effects that come with other forms of CoQ10.
Hello im Arthur, i have been floxed.
Its 4 months out, the first ones were, a nightmare.
U have a share of experience with toxicity because of Accuttane severe side effects.
each day is a battle, for those out there suffering from it Never give up, tell yourself each day no matter what that you can and you will rise above this.
My love goes out for each one of you suffering from this, you are not alone and won’t ever be.
yes, can you please specify the type of MitoQ you purchased? there are several varieties…. t hanks
I am knew to looking this all up because I had a friend tell me her friend experienced permanent nerve damage on Levaquin this year. It scared the hell out of me because I’ve been struggling with what feels like arthritis, tendonitis and fatigue all wrapped up into one since being on Levaquin in the last month.
I just went through an episode of bacterial pneumonia (I believe). My doc thinks I had bronchitis. When my son ended up with bacterial pneumonia not long after I was still suffering I was clear it had to be that. I was originally on a z-pak. It did nothing really. Doc put me on a ten day course of prednisone. I went 7 days and it was not doing a lot, so he had me stop it.
A friend of mine who had pneumonia had taken Levaquin and told me it was the only thing that helped her. I’m allergic to amoxycillin (I get hives), so I suggested Levaquin to my doc as a next step. I was given no warnings about it by my doc and none by the pharmacist. I just got a paper print out but those things are ridiculously long and you have no idea of the percentages or “chances” you will get it. I got a 10 day/500mg dose for ten days.
Before the Levaquin I was physically able to go up and down stairs with no issues. But I developed itchy calves for a few days, was concerned it was about to be hives and contacted my doc right away. My doc said if it continued to stop. It actually subsided so I continued it. At first I thought only the muscle weakness and tendon swelling were an issue. I think I popped my left knee tendon at some point and an elbow. The knee that is occurred on was one that I had been hit by a car on and have muscle damage.
However, I’m severely depressed, have been having suicidal and hopeless bouts and I have not slept. I had heart palpitations too now that I think about it. I have not had any Achilles issues at all. I feel it all in my knees and my hips. I’m probably less likely to have Achilles issues because I’ve pulled the tendons in my ankles SO many times in my life and I have fairly loose calves that I may be “lucky” on that score. But the knees and hips are the problem. And the mental health part. I’ve battle depression in my life before and I was just FINE in the last few years after extensive therapy. I also have to take thyroid medication for Hashimoto’s Disease. I feel like I went back to ground zero. I cry all the time, and I feel like my life is over. I already had an impaired immune system and this just cut me at the knees, literally.
I’m already a single mom of a child with autism (Aspergers). I’m 49 years old, he’s about to turn 18 and I have no health insurance because I can’t afford it. I’m already scared I won’t be able to take care of him if this health set back is permanent. I’m SO ANGRY that I so capriciously was able to put this toxin in my body after YEARS of being vigilant about not putting antibiotics in my body (for fear of damaging my immune health from the good bacteria die off). I had a good understanding with my doc about this.
I really feel hopeless and am PRAYING my reaction is not as severe as others. I’m praying that I can improve my health and possibly repair damage. I’m not feeling confident and I AM already feeling reclusive, to be honest. I’m scare to death and I have no idea if that is “normal” scared to death or I have brain damage. It’s maddening.
I spent YEARS researching and working on repairing my son’s immune system when he was first diagnosed with autism, going homeopathic, holistic and organic… I did it ALL and made such progress only to know that some things are not going get better.so I immediately went researching what I could do to repair the damage. I”m doing the same now and I just can’t believe this is happening.
Miranda, it sure sounds like fluoroquinolone toxicity, and prednisone can exacerbate it. Some things you can do right away: avoid fluoride, take magnesium (if you avoid the citrate you won’t have the diarrhea problems), avoid gluten and buy organic. This is especially important with meats, so you don’t accidentally get more antibiotics. Take probiotics, because these drugs ravage the good gut bacteria, which leads to a host of problems. I would urge you to find a good naturopath or integrative physician, esp one familiar with fluoroquinolone toxicity—because most western medicine doctors are woefully ignorant on the damage this family of drugs does. If you want to post the general area where you live, someone on this post might be able to refer you to a door practitioner.
ack! GOOD practioner, not door
Brett
Which mito did you order
They have several
Brett, is there any way to get in touch with you now? I’d love to hear from you. I haven’t been floxed, but I have been similar poisoned by MRI contrast. I will include my contact information. Much love to you for sharing this.
-Brooke
thank you
how long did you have this and I hope it works for me my knee doc did me in skin infection like to killed me.still is I feel very very lucky ?
well that s great , good to read about you , you’re the real man good luck
Hey i got floxed recently i really dont know what to do to help me the vitamins i take dont work alot i feel pain in my back alot n headaces n i vomit alot please let me know what helped the most for your recover ? My email is alexandravalencia990@gmail.com
Brett is a great writer. Very nice.
This sounds alot like what I’m going through. I am allergic to Penacillin. So I’ve been prescribed cipro and levofloxacin but could never get through the whole script because I felt like I was going to die. First it was the restlessness. Not able to sleep.now I have migraines almost everyday. And all my joints will hurt if used I little too much. This has been going on for 6 years now. But for some reason I feel a bit better in the summers. I’m 36 now and the problem seems to be getting worse as the years pass. It is so difficult to get through each day. I feel so depressed and anxious all the time. I take a prescription to help me sleep.I’m getting shakey. And feel older than I am. I can barely get out of bed. Leave the house. Spend time with my family. Anything….it’s been getting very discouraging. Until I read this. Because I’ve been trying to describe what I’m going through and everyone looks at me like I’m nuts. I’ve even been called a hypochondriac. Thank you for sharing!
Hello Brett, could you please tell how many ills of tavanic you took? I took only one and having same issues. And doctors did blood tests, and says antibiotic already left body so they don’t blame it.
It has been 1 week since my one dose tavanic, and I am in idea of suicide. I have a 3 year-old kid and my living like this only damages people around me. When I see it takes years to recover from this ilness, I dont see another way…
What brand and dosage for MitoQ?
It took me three weeks to feel normal again and be able to work out. Above anything else I had severe depression and panic and anxiety attacks. This is one nasty drug. I am now thank God back to normal but I am taking vitamin mineral supplements every day with magnesium.