If you’ve experienced a Diverticulitis attack or found yourself diagnosed with a case of moderate diverticulitis, you have most likely heard your doctor mention the medicine Flagyl. Used to treat everything from rosacea, H. pylori, bacterial vaginosis, dental infections, Crohn’s disease, and of course, diverticulitis, Flagyl has been the go-to drug for doctors attempting to treat diverticulitis without resorting to surgery.
How does it work?
Flagyl works by eliminating the bacteria in the colon…ALL the bacteria. It doesn’t differentiate between good or bad, it just wipes them all out. Kind of throwing the baby out with the bathwater if you ask me, but it gets the job done for some people. Unfortunately others find themselves hosting a whole new set of problems, as losing the good bacteria can cause yeast overgrowth, furry tongue, Candida, or even C-Diff [Clostridium difficile].
Add in the fact that patients descriptions of Flagyl sound like this: “worse than diverticulitis”, “worst tasting medication”, “made me vomit”, and “couldn’t taste food for a week” and it’s easy to see why people are out looking for another way. If all I had to choose between was the pain of diverticulitis, the uncertainty of surgery, or a medicine that makes me vomit every time I take it, I’d be scouring the Internet for another way – any other way!
But before we get into another way, let’s get the official look at Flagyl (so you don’t think I’m just making all this up!)
What Is Flagyl? (taken from About.com)
Flagyl is an antibacterial drug. It is used to kill any bacteria in the body that are causing infection.
How Is Flagyl Taken?
Flagyl is taken orally in tablet form. In order for Flagyl to effectively kill harmful bacteria, it is important to maintain a constant level of Flagyl in the blood. Therefore, it must be taken at regular intervals without missing any doses. Take Flagyl with 8 ounces of water. [Trick to avoiding the metallic taste - slide it inside a fruit roll-up]
Adverse Reactions (taken from Drugs.com)
The most serious adverse reactions reported in patients treated with Flagyl (metronidazole) have been convulsive seizures, encephalopathy, aseptic meningitis, optic and peripheral neuropathy, the latter characterized mainly by numbness or paresthesia of an extremity. Since persistent peripheral neuropathy has been reported in some patients receiving prolonged administration of Flagyl, patients should be specifically warned about these reactions and should be told to stop the drug and report immediately to their physicians if any neurologic symptoms occur.
The most common adverse reactions reported have been referable to the gastrointestinal tract, particularly nausea reported by about 12% of patients, sometimes accompanied by headache, anorexia, and occasionally vomiting; diarrhea; epigastric distress; and abdominal cramping. Constipation has also been reported.
The following reactions have also been reported during treatment with Flagyl (metronidazole):
Mouth: A sharp, unpleasant metallic taste is not unusual. Furry tongue, glossitis, and stomatitis have occurred; these may be associated with a sudden overgrowth of Candida which may occur during therapy.
Hematopoietic: Reversible neutropenia (leukopenia); rarely, reversible thrombocytopenia.
Cardiovascular: Flattening of the T-wave may be seen in electrocardiographic tracings.
Central Nervous System: Encephalopathy, aseptic meningitis, convulsive seizures, optic neuropathy, peripheral neuropathy, dizziness, vertigo, incoordination, ataxia, confusion, dysarthria, irritability, depression, weakness, and insomnia.
Hypersensitivity: Urticaria, erythematous rash, Stevens-Johnson Syndrome, toxic epidermal necrolysis, flushing, nasal congestion, dryness of the mouth (or vagina or vulva), and fever.
Renal: Dysuria, cystitis, polyuria, incontinence, and a sense of pelvic pressure. Instances of darkened urine have been reported by approximately one patient in 100,000. Although the pigment which is probably responsible for this phenomenon has not been positively identified, it is almost certainly a metabolite of metronidazole and seems to have no clinical significance.
Other: Proliferation of Candida in the vagina, dyspareunia, decrease of libido, proctitis, and fleeting joint pains sometimes resembling “serum sickness.” If patients receiving Flagyl drink alcoholic beverages, they may experience abdominal distress, nausea, vomiting, flushing, or headache. A modification of the taste of alcoholic beverages has also been reported. Rare cases of pancreatitis, which generally abated on withdrawal of the drug, have been reported.
Crohn’s disease patients are known to have an increased incidence of gastrointestinal and certain extraintestinal cancers. There have been some reports in the medical literature of breast and colon cancer in Crohn’s disease patients who have been treated with metronidazole at high doses for extended periods of time. A cause and effect relationship has not been established. Crohn’s disease is not an approved indication for Flagyl.
(taken from Wikipedia.com)
High doses and/or long-term systemic treatment with metronidazole is associated with the development of leukopenia, neutropenia, increased risk of peripheral neuropathy and/or CNS toxicity.
Metronidazole is listed by the US National Toxicology Program (NTP) as reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen. Although some of the testing methods have been questioned, oral exposure has been shown to cause cancer in experimental animals. The relationship between exposure to metronidazole and human cancer is unclear. One study found an excess in lung cancer among women (even after adjusting for smoking), while other studies found either no increased risk, or a statistically insignificant risk. It appears to have a fairly low potential for cancer risk and under most circumstances the benefits of treatment outweigh the risk. Metronidazole is listed as a possible carcinogen according to the WHO International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC).
Due to its potential carcinogenic properties, metronidazole is banned in the EU and the USA for veterinary use in the feed of animals and is banned for use in any food animals in the USA.
Now I don’t know about you, but reading the official description makes me feel like the remedy might just be as bad as the disease! Surely there’s a better way to cure diverticulitis than enduring all that…and maybe there is…
It’s called Great Taste No Pain and it was written by Sherry Brescia, a wife and mother who suffered a painful digestive disorder that was “incurable”, or so her doctors claimed. Not comfortable with the idea of changing her whole life to accommodate a disease that would never leave, she decided to dig deeper and find out the truth.
What she found was a wealth of knowledge that pointed to a very simple truth – it wasn’t WHAT we were eating that was causing these painful stomach problems, but WHEN we were eating it! Changing just a few simple things on her plate eliminated her stomach problems permanently and it’s not just working in her life. She has thousands of testimonials on her site of people cured from diverticulitis, Crohn’s, ulcers, GERD, gas, diarrhea, constipation, and every other stomach problem you can think of!
Will it work for you?
I can’t promise you it’s the magic bullet for your situation, but I can tell you that it’s worth a try. Before you have another attack, or schedule that risky surgery, or choke down another Flagyl pill, why not take a few minutes to try a cure that doesn’t involve thousands of dollars or weeks/months of discomfort?
It’s your call, but I don’t think you have anything to lose by simply trying it…
Click here to try Great Taste No Pain…
References:
http://www.topix.com/forum/health/diverticulitis/T7DN0MTRJS1QL97AC
http://www.end-diverticulitis.com/forum2/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=483
http://ibdcrohns.about.com/od/antibiotics/a/flaglfaq.htm
http://www.drugs.com/pro/flagyl.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metronidazole

