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Recommended dosage of Provigil

Which way of taken Provigil is more efficient?

1. It can be taken in a morning, 1 tablet each day, or when the shift starts ( if prescribed for shift work sleep disorder)

2. It can be taken in small portions during the day.

A few studies with a placebo group as well have been done, to establish which way it performs at its best. The reason for the study is that this medicine works better and more effective two hours after taking it, but sleepiness affects people suffering from narcolepsy whole day.

It has been proven, that option 2,( which is small portions of Provigil) works better that option 1 ( 1 dose a day)

Please discuss with your doctor which option suits you better.

Provigil and Cerebral Palsy

One patient was misidentified with cerebral palsy but was replaced by one patient who was omitted from the list. Four patients fell outside the study parameters and were excluded from the 120 identified cases. This resulted in 116 patients, of whom 59 were noted to have received Provigil at some time between January 1, 2000, and December 31, 2003. Fifty-seven patients never received Provigil during the review period.

In the Provigil-treated group, 29 of 59 patients (49%) were noted to have gait improvements. Six patients (10%) began walking or taking independent steps after starting Provigil. An additional two patients (3%) independently began standing up and walking during aqua therapy. Otherwise, they only used walkers to walk.

In the preProvigil treatment period, 19 of 59 (32%) of the Provigil-treated patients and 14 of 57 (25%) of the non-Provigil-treated patients walked independently and 18 of 59 (30%) Provigil-treated patients and 6 of 57 (11%) non-Provigil-treated patients had assisted ambulation.

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Provigil and Jetlag

About two-thirds of travellers report having jetlag. Symptoms of jet-lag include daytime tiredness, difficulty initiating sleep at night (after eastward flight) or early awakening (after westward flight), disturbed night-time sleep, impaired daytime alertness and performance, gastrointestinal problems, loss of appetite, and inappropriate timing of defecation and urination.

Such symptoms can seriously impair a person’s performance and ability to function, in part because of the reduction in sleep quality and quantity, and because performance and alertness rhythms will take several days to resynchronise. In the long-term (eg, after 4 years), chronic disruption of circadian rhythms from regular transmeridian travel might result in cognitive deficits (decreased short-term memory, slower reaction time) and changed physiological parameters (such as cortisol concentrations).

Because of their rapidly changing and conflicting light-dark exposure and activity-rest behaviour, shiftworkers can have symptoms similar to those of jetlag. Although travellers normally adapt to the new time zone, shift-workers usually live out of phase with local time cues.

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Head-to-Head Trials

Study authors Dr. Stephen V. Faraone and Dr. Stephen J. Glatt note that stimulants have been the mainstay of ADHD pharmacotherapy for decades. Several nonstimulant medications have also been shown effective – tricyclic antidepressants, bupropion, Provigil, monoamine oxidase inhibitors, guanfacine, atomoxetine, and clonidine.

However, it’s been difficult to compare different drugs or drug classes due to the lack of head-to-head trials.

Drs. Faraone and Glatt, both from SUNY Upstate Medical University in Syracuse, New York, searched the medical literature for double-blind, placebo-controlled studies of ADHD in adults published after 1979, in which subjects were followed for at least 2 weeks. They identified 18 articles that involved more than 2000 subjects and evaluated 13 drugs.

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