Pseudomonas infections

Posted by sarahlynn1960 @sarahlynn1960, Mar 11 1:53pm

Hi,
I have pseudomonas. One is 2+ mucoid and the other is +smooth. The pulmonologist has prescribed Levaquin, and I’m afraid of it due to the potential tendon side effects. She says it’s the only drug that treats this stuff. She told me about this potential side effect, but said it was rare and she had never had a patient who had a rupture. I’m 65. Anyone who has used Levaquin, I’m interested in if it knocked the pseudo back, whether you had side effects, and whether you know of any other drugs that work on this without this risk. Thanks!

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Profile picture for irenea8 @irenea8

@blm1007blm1007
When the Augmentin did not work it was a clue that I may have picked up Pseudo since it does not respond to it. I had read that. I was surprised to learn that the prior sputum tests had NOT included testing for Pseudo. The strange thing about my journey is that up until 2020 I did "ok" with just coughing up mucus once a day routinely. I still had weight on and did ok if not great. Lived a fairly normal life. Something happened very rapidly in 2020 and my whole situation changed. I coasted along for almost 20 years without even nebulizing (did not even know about it stupid me) and then it hit big time. Still no clue why. My pulmo called it "hitting a tipping point" but that is rather vague.

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Just so you know I forgot to address my latest reply on this thread to you, Sorry. It went into a general post here.
Barbara

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Profile picture for irene5 Irene Estes @irene5

@blm1007blm1007 Those are all good questions. I started not feeling well in 2010 believe it or not. I continued teaching till 2014 and then retired. By 2016 my son in law an obgyn decided to take a CT scan because my regular PCP thought I was depressed because I retired. By then I had complained of exhaustion for several years and just not feeling well. God bless America. The scan revealed the MAC! So my MAC journey started in 2016 even though I had had symptoms for years: weight loss and dry cough. I started with a local pulmonologist who referred me to an ID doctor who I have to this day. ( Dr. Wessolossky at UMASS). It started as a wait and see focusing on good nutrition. Then my husband and I moved to Clarksville to take care of his dad. That was a huge deal because I still had 6 of the 10 kids living at home that we had to make sure were ok. They were adults pretty much. The youngest age 18 came with us. The rest moved out and found places or we found places for them. I started with a doctor in Clarksville (ID) who sent me to Nashville. The Clarksville doctor had started me on the Big3 right away and seven days a week. Thought I’d die. It was awful for me. The doctor at Vanderbilt put me on the Big 3 only 3 days a week. Better but still not easy. Then my father in law died, and we went back to Connecticut and found a new house . My daughter stayed in Tennessee at college. So now we are July of 2017. I was back under the care of my UMASS doctors - ID and Pulmonologist. Since the Big 3 hadn’t done enough I started in a clinical trial of Arikayce in 2019 I think. That got rid of the MAC but damaged my lungs. It is a great drug although time consuming. I know there are better drugs now. By 2022 I had aspergillosis fumagatos treated with Vfend and then a more pricey one Cresemba. 18 months of that! MAC came back along with pseudomonas in 2023. I was treated for the pseudomonas with doxy and prednisone. I stopped all inhalers in late 2024 due to increased understanding I guess that they can cause infections. Again - God bless America. Then in August of 2025 my husband of 55 years died. He had sarcoid. Neither of us were smokers. I hadn’t been feeling well for months and by 12/31 /25 I was illing a lot. I went back to UMASS and a bronch was scheduled for 2/18. Murphy’s law follows me a lot - a collapsed lung had followed a robotic surgery which had shown the aspergillosis so the doc and surgeon are very careful with me. They are the best at UMASS. Since then I am recovering from MRSA pneumonia which was found in my lungs. I am feeling a lot better and have not gotten the MAC results yet, but I have gained 4 pounds ( up to 75) so that is a great sign . We shall see. It takes a bit for the MAC culture to come back. I nebulize up to four times a day with medication and take Levoquin two times a week as a precaution. So that is my entire journey with dates and drugs and a little bit more. I will be 76 in April, and this journey started upon diagnosis in 2016. Basically it started before 2016 but for actually diagnosis it was 2016 for MAC. Bottom line is being positive is helpful and having a team that truly cares. Friends , family, and the good God above are key. As long as we all keep putting one foot in front of the other as much as possible we will survive this! I am blessed. Irene5

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@irene5 Did Doxy clear PA? This is the first time hearing Psudo treated with Doxy. May I know what does of Levoquin (2) times a week. Seems this is working very well for you.

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Profile picture for sarahlynn1960 @sarahlynn1960

We’re coming into Denver right now, and I’m very hopeful.

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@sarahlynn1960 Good luck!

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Profile picture for sweethighland @sweethighland

@irene5 Did Doxy clear PA? This is the first time hearing Psudo treated with Doxy. May I know what does of Levoquin (2) times a week. Seems this is working very well for you.

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@sweethighland Yes, the doxy plus prednisone cleared it. Golly I was sooo sick. Initially, I was on 700mg of Levoquin daily for a good amount of time and then 500mg twice weekly which is my now dose. (Irene5)

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Profile picture for irene5 Irene Estes @irene5

@sweethighland Yes, the doxy plus prednisone cleared it. Golly I was sooo sick. Initially, I was on 700mg of Levoquin daily for a good amount of time and then 500mg twice weekly which is my now dose. (Irene5)

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@irene5 Thank you very much Irene. May I know the dose of Doxy and duration. I'm so happy the medication are working out for your symptoms. I now understand doctors in the UK gave Doxy to patients for flare ups.

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So many of you have used doxycycline with no tendon issues? I’m just so scared of it

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Profile picture for sweethighland @sweethighland

@irene5 Thank you very much Irene. May I know the dose of Doxy and duration. I'm so happy the medication are working out for your symptoms. I now understand doctors in the UK gave Doxy to patients for flare ups.

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@sweethighland Hi sweet highland- so the dose was 100mg till I got better. ( plus the decreasing dose of prednisone. I know that sounds vague right, but I have been dealing with this for so many years that when I got so sick in 2023 the UMASS doctors and I did virtual visits as I was in Florida at the time which is a good 2000 miles away from my team in Massachusetts. I was also on a strong cough medicine which I am thankful about. If I had to think of a time frame it was probably a good month with close telephone monitoring . I had had an x ray in Connecticut prior to leaving ( at an ER) so they had access to that. After that I have been on Levoquin with nebulizing until my most recent visitor MRSA pneumonia. Now I will tell you I can no longer take doxycycline as I recently developed an allergy to it- swollen mouth /face and body rash. UMASS has noted that in my file!! That’s actually the only drug I have developed an allergy to!! Wishing you well. Irene5

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This thread has been very helpful for I was just diagnosed with pseudomonas aeruginosa following a bronchoscopy. I was offered either the quinolone family (I commented on that a couple of days ago) or Tobramycin and am scheduled to start “Toby” tomorrow.
Background:
2004 severe pneumonia following a trip to NYC that took 2 rounds of the Z-pack to shake. Meanwhile my mother had been fighting MAC and BE for 3 decades and went on and off levaquin which resulted in severe peripheral neuropathy. I was her advocate/caretaker while she lived in assisted living. She died in 2009.
In 2012 I was diagnosed with MAC and immediately started and completed the 18 month Big Three. Yes, it was awful but I stuck with it and CT plus bronchoscopy showed no sign for years. In fact I hiked in the Alps Switzerland and Peru different years with no problem. Then along came COViD which I so far have had 3 times. And this past October figured out I. Eeded to have oxygen at night so my oxygen level wouod stay above 90.
But now the wrinkle that no one here has mentioned: in 2019 I fell backwards and landed on my wrist on a concrete patio. As the osteo surgeon said, I “rearranged all the bones of my wrist “and fractured the smaller of the two lower arm bones. Following surgery, I was referred to an endocrinologist. Up to that point I had maintained osteopenia because I was very active (hiking, biking) and upper body strength routine including bands. But my daughter was deathly ill and ultimately died in 2021 so rather than take the time to research Prolia, I went ahead and started at at my doctor’s strong recommendation. In retrospect, this was a huge mistake because it lowers one’s immune response for at least two weeks folllowing the every six months infusion. So……. Although MAC had started to make a reappearance, I had been doing well with occasional treatment with anox-clav. But at this point and with covid, I lost ground. Then I broke my foot and could not walk for several months. Terrible time of my life. Then my daughter died. I miss my adult daughter terribly.
Anyway, after another probable bout with covid last spring I then had surgery for a complete hysterectomy and began a long downhill slide with flares. Nothing seemed “right” and the 7% saline neb that had worked so very well just wasn’t cutting it in spite of participating in an excellent pulmonary rehab program the previous Fall.
So now here I am with MAC, BE and now pseudomonas. And I had to postpone my Prolia infusion which means my little osteoclasts are already busily munching away on my bones.
I hope to start “Toby” tomorrow and pray that it will zap the pseu aer so I can be cleared to take the Prolia although I would much prefer to take something else and am looking into alternatives.
BTW I did try Brinsupri last fall but developed hives on the third day so stopped.
And I am 81.
Any comments re any thing I have said here or other courses of possible action are welcomed. I am so sorry that we all need to be here. Sending love.

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Profile picture for sharonednaramsey @sharonednaramsey

I was prescribed Levaquin practically every few months and usually 2 weeks at a time for several years before the Bronchiestasis was diagnosed. I have Achilles tendonitis that is next to impossible to heal. I think it’s related because it is a known side effect. At the same time my sister has taken it as much as me and has no tendinitis issues.

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@sharonednaramsey I have Psuedomonas now and I’m on
IV Zosyn for 3 wks … I have a ruptured achilles tendon (5 years) and so far the IV meds have not bothered it. I take a little Voltaren and rub around the ankle that does swell alittle and keep the swelling and any pain down . Have to be careful with Voltaren as it can be toxic to the skin.

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Profile picture for desertdwellerjh @desertdwellerjh

This thread has been very helpful for I was just diagnosed with pseudomonas aeruginosa following a bronchoscopy. I was offered either the quinolone family (I commented on that a couple of days ago) or Tobramycin and am scheduled to start “Toby” tomorrow.
Background:
2004 severe pneumonia following a trip to NYC that took 2 rounds of the Z-pack to shake. Meanwhile my mother had been fighting MAC and BE for 3 decades and went on and off levaquin which resulted in severe peripheral neuropathy. I was her advocate/caretaker while she lived in assisted living. She died in 2009.
In 2012 I was diagnosed with MAC and immediately started and completed the 18 month Big Three. Yes, it was awful but I stuck with it and CT plus bronchoscopy showed no sign for years. In fact I hiked in the Alps Switzerland and Peru different years with no problem. Then along came COViD which I so far have had 3 times. And this past October figured out I. Eeded to have oxygen at night so my oxygen level wouod stay above 90.
But now the wrinkle that no one here has mentioned: in 2019 I fell backwards and landed on my wrist on a concrete patio. As the osteo surgeon said, I “rearranged all the bones of my wrist “and fractured the smaller of the two lower arm bones. Following surgery, I was referred to an endocrinologist. Up to that point I had maintained osteopenia because I was very active (hiking, biking) and upper body strength routine including bands. But my daughter was deathly ill and ultimately died in 2021 so rather than take the time to research Prolia, I went ahead and started at at my doctor’s strong recommendation. In retrospect, this was a huge mistake because it lowers one’s immune response for at least two weeks folllowing the every six months infusion. So……. Although MAC had started to make a reappearance, I had been doing well with occasional treatment with anox-clav. But at this point and with covid, I lost ground. Then I broke my foot and could not walk for several months. Terrible time of my life. Then my daughter died. I miss my adult daughter terribly.
Anyway, after another probable bout with covid last spring I then had surgery for a complete hysterectomy and began a long downhill slide with flares. Nothing seemed “right” and the 7% saline neb that had worked so very well just wasn’t cutting it in spite of participating in an excellent pulmonary rehab program the previous Fall.
So now here I am with MAC, BE and now pseudomonas. And I had to postpone my Prolia infusion which means my little osteoclasts are already busily munching away on my bones.
I hope to start “Toby” tomorrow and pray that it will zap the pseu aer so I can be cleared to take the Prolia although I would much prefer to take something else and am looking into alternatives.
BTW I did try Brinsupri last fall but developed hives on the third day so stopped.
And I am 81.
Any comments re any thing I have said here or other courses of possible action are welcomed. I am so sorry that we all need to be here. Sending love.

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@desertdwellerjh first may I extend my condolences on your loss ..I pray for some comfort at this difficult time .
I had Psuedomonas last year with 4 infections , UTI , Lung, Sinus and Eye. I have been under A Rhumotologist care in addition to my cardio and pulmonary DRs. He did an extensive work up and found high Inflammatory markers in y bones, my blood and my lungs . He proceeded to set me up on Remicade infusions and I Went for my blood work for the Infusion Center. During that interim I went for check up with my ENT Dr and he took a culture of the left Maxillary and it came back with Psuedomonas again. So my Rhumotologist stopped the infusion process and I was referred back to Infectious Disease Dr . So that’s where I am now back on Zosyn IV for 3 wks ….The Rhumotologist says he will not start anything with me until he receives a letter that says I am clear of the sinus infection. Honestly I don’t think the Disease Center knew last yr that it was gone after my treatment . My white blood count came back to normal and I think that’s what they relied on. I have an appt tomorrow with the ENT Dr and the Infectious Disease Dr has called him and requested that he do another culture to see where we are. I’m so hopeful to be able to start the infusions for the High Inflammatory markers because I’m told I will feel much better … so time will tell. I will be 85 in June . Sounds like we’re working along the same lines huh?
All the best ! ❤️ Kay B.

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