These past few weeks have been awful with Marley. Her third grade teacher had about exhausted every trick in her book. The resource room teacher was afraid of Marley just coming into her room to get out of her daily activities. She expressed concern to me when Marley confided in her she “hated school.”
Marley has been irritable, miserable, anxious and sometimes
downright defiant. Like when she got up
from her desk at school and turned to face the class and said, “I’m outta
here!” and left. Who knows where she was
going…she just didn’t want to be there anymore.
She screamed and cried about everything.
Every single day I was getting a call from the school. Their absolute last ditch effort to get her
to comply…..mom’s threats of taking something cherished away.
I knew her anxiety was through the roof when she started
chewing on her fingernails again and simply tearing off the skin around her
fingers. We had worked so hard to get
that in check earlier this year….to see it back again was heart-breaking. Things were simply getting worse despite my
best efforts to reward, bribe, and even threaten her with removal of cherished
items.
When things like this happen, I always look to what has
changed. An environmental factor? A new supplement? More expectations placed on her? Maybe.
Could it be yeast?
No…we’ve had that in check for a while and she has been on Syntol with good
results before this started. And no
recent antibiotics to speak of.
Could it be PANDAS?
No, she hadn’t been sick and there wasn’t any OCD about it.
Then I thought back to when I started her on CoQ10. It was about a week before all this started
to happen. Since Marley has low energy and CoQ10 is excellent for mitochondrial issues, I thought this would be a slam
dunk….but I was beginning to think again.
So, I took her off the CoQ10 for about 3 days. She was a bit less irritable but still cranky. So back on it she went. Then…the shit hit the fan. She had a meltdown at school when another
student got to publish his story on the iPad.
She walked out of the classroom again. I was called and went over to the
school (with my 2 year old in tow) to talk her down. After I left, she escalated again and had to
eat lunch in the principal’s office and spent the afternoon in the resource
room. She was a mess. It was a Friday. There was an emergency team meeting called
for the next week. What were we going to
do?
But…by that point, I was pretty sure I had it figured
out. It was the damn CoQ10. But why?
All my research said that a rare side effect of CoQ10 was irritability,
but no reasons why. My husband said –
“Pull it! Don’t give her any more” and
of course I didn’t give her anymore, but I needed to know why this was
happening. If only I knew why, I could
fix it.
I started to dig. Thank
God for my network of biomed moms. One
told me to go directly to the electron transport chain and look there.
Turns out that CoQ10
works to metabolize succinic acid, which requires B2 and CoQ10 to be
metabolized in the electron transport chain. Once it uses more B2, then it
decreases the supply of B2 available for the metabolism of other amino acids to
make neurotransmitters, especially, serotonin.
And we know serotonin is the "feel
good" neurotransmitter. Serotonin plays an important part in the
regulation of learning, mood, sleep, etc. And experts say serotonin may
have a role in anxiety, migraines and appetite.
So I pulled out her last Organic Acids profile from last
year. Sure enough….there it was. Her suberate was high meaning that she needs
more B2. Riboflavin or B2 also helps to
metabolize fatty acids. Out of
curiosity, I looked back at her labs over the years at her suberate
levels. It was high dating back 7
years!
I took a week doing this research and meeting with her team
at school…but I was pretty sure I had it under control. She was off the CoQ10 and not so irritable
but still not very happy.
And so, starting on Saturday morning, I started her on a
broken down form of Vitamin B2 called Riboflavin 5’-Phosphate Sodium. She was a bit better on Saturday. Sunday, she was happier. By Monday, she was excited to go to school
and read her non-fiction book she wrote on Chipmunks to an audience of parents
at her author appreciation day. (She is
NEVER excited to go to school on Mondays.)
By Tuesday afternoon, I got an e-mail from her teacher saying…”whatever
you are doing at home--- keep doing it!
Another awesome day at school today!”
No more nail biting…no more anxiety…no more crankiness.
Once her B2 levels are up to sufficient levels, I should be
able to reintroduce the CoQ10 without problems.
I’ll give her body time to get adjusted before I go there again.
And there you have it.
When I say that I treat my daughter’s autism using biomedical
interventions…this is what I mean. We
need to understand what is going on in the body in order to treat it. Simply throwing an antidepressant at the
problem does not allow the body to heal on it’s own. And if I would have taken her to a
psychologist or neurologist that’s what I would have gotten. Her neurologist flat-out told me he doesn’t
know how to read the amino acid tests and that is the lab tech’s job. (Needless to say, he is no longer her
neurologist.)
Well, in our house, it’s MY job to read the amino acids
tests and do the research because unfortunately, no one else is going to do it.
Here’s my girl reading her non-fiction book on Chipmunks!