> anyone been prescribed these? my opthalmologist said it looks like i
> had some iritis in the past year, and i also have very dry eyes. so she
> prescribed these two drops. i notice the precautions on xibrom says to
> use with caution in patients with RA. any experience here?
>
> diane
don't know if she's had trouble with dry eyes, but you do recall who the
Iritis Queen is, don't you?

Signature
Nann
remove the Gator cheer to email me
Simply the thing I am shall make me live --- William Shakespeare
Diane - 27 Apr 2006 20:34 GMT
quack?
Paul T. Holland - 27 Apr 2006 23:25 GMT
Duckie - 28 Apr 2006 06:59 GMT
Give that woman a gold star. Never had dry eyes. And never heard of
xibrom. I use one drop of predforte in my right eye every day now. It
is our way of keeping the chronic iritis in that eye from flaring. Seems
to be working. Thank heavens I have thick corneas as the pressure in
that eye reads 24 and only 9 in the left eye.
Maybe xibrom is to keep a flare from happening. Did she tell you what it
was for?
Duckie
> quack?
hi di!
re the xibrom: a sterile, topical, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug
(NSAID) for ophthalmic use.
"Contains sodium sulfite, a sulfite that may cause allergic-type reactions
including anaphylactic symptoms and life-threatening or less severe
asthmatic episodes in certain susceptible people. The overall prevalence of
sulfite sensitivity in the general population is unknown and probably low.
Sulfite sensitivity is seen more frequently in asthmatic than in
nonasthmatic people.
There is the potential for cross-sensitivity to acetylsalicylic acid,
phenylacetic acid derivatives, and other NSAIDs. Therefore, caution should
be used when treating individuals who have previously exhibited
sensitivities to these drugs."
"All topical nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) may slow or
delay healing. Topical corticosteroids are also known to slow or delay
healing. Concomitant use of topical NSAIDs and topical steroids may
increase the potential for healing problems."
"With some NSAIDs, there exists the potential for increased bleeding time
due to interference with platelet aggregation. There have been reports that
ocularly applied NSAIDs may cause increased bleeding of ocular tissues
(including hyphemas) in conjunction with ocular surgery."
while it is a very low percentage [actual % not verified] the problem is
that many simply do not know if they have a hypersensitivity to any of the
ingredients.
"Each mL of Xibrom contains 1.035 mg bromfenac sodium (equivalent to 0.9 mg
bromfenac free acid). Bromfenac sodium is designated chemically as sodium
2-amino-3-(4-bromobenzoyl) phenylacetate sesquihydrate, with an empirical
formula of C15H11BrNNaO3 ·1½H2O.
Active: bromfenac sodium hydrate 0.1035%. Inactives: benzalkonium chloride
(0.05 mg/mL), boric acid, disodium edetate (0.2 mg/mL), polysorbate 80 (1.5
mg/mL), povidone (20 mg/mL), sodium borate, sodium sulfite anhydrous (2
mg/mL), sodium hydroxide to adjust the pH, and purified water, USP."
separately; is the issue of:
"Use of topical NSAIDs may result in keratitis. In some susceptible
patients, continued use of topical NSAIDs may result in epithelial
breakdown, corneal thinning, corneal erosion, corneal ulceration or corneal
perforation. These events may be sight threatening. Patients with evidence
of corneal epithelial breakdown should immediately discontinue use of
topical NSAIDs and should be closely monitored for corneal health."
there have been several reports of elderly simply not telling their doc
because they didn't recognize what was happening and there wasn't anyone
else at home to take a look...
and, 'anyone' with a propensity for bleed should not use this drug.
be well
paul
> anyone been prescribed these? my opthalmologist said it looks like i
> had some iritis in the past year, and i also have very dry eyes. so she
> prescribed these two drops. i notice the precautions on xibrom says to
> use with caution in patients with RA. any experience here?
>
> diane
Diane - 28 Apr 2006 03:46 GMT
thanks paul. wow. this "cure" sounds like it's worse than the disease.
but i guess all our remedies do if we read all the side effects.
how are you and susie doing?
diane
Duckie - 28 Apr 2006 07:02 GMT
Boy you are good Paul. I never had luck with the nonsteroidal drops and
I have a list of them. Most of them burn like mad. Some burn a little
the first time and get worse and worse with each dose. ugh... After
three days of that agony, I tossed that one in the trash. Doesn't make
for good compliance.
Hope it works for you Diane without that nasty side effect.
Duckie
> hi di!
>
[quoted text clipped - 62 lines]
>>
>>diane
Diane - 28 Apr 2006 14:07 GMT
my eyes are burning anyhow. that was the only symptom i've had and i'd
chalked it up to allergies. the doc said the main symptom of iritis is
an aching in the eye. is that what you had, duckie? obviously, i need
to call her and find out more about what i'm using. she gave me all the
info, but i didn't write it down and i had an insurance problem with
the scripts. by the time i got the meds, i'd forgotten all she said.
fog.
diane
Duckie - 29 Apr 2006 01:14 GMT
Aching. yes. If the eye is red, I close my eye and put my pointer
finger on the lid. Push gently. If I can feel something that feels
'full' and slightly painful, then I know I am in trouble. It translate
to the same feeling that poking a finger joint which is inflamed would
feel like -- full - swollen...
Red is a warning; sensitivity to light; blurry vision and that fullness.
Pain is my last symptom. Every morning I close first one eye and then
the other - checking for vision loss. Then I get out of bed. ) That was
:) with the colon key broken. grrr
Duckie
> my eyes are burning anyhow. that was the only symptom i've had and i'd
> chalked it up to allergies. the doc said the main symptom of iritis is
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>
> diane
Diane - 29 Apr 2006 14:29 GMT
thanks for that info duckie. i can't say i have those symptoms, tho if
i press on my eyeball (through the lid) it feels "full" because it's an
eyeball <g> but i guess if i had the feeling you're describing it
would feel differently. my main sympton is burning. i THINK what she
said was that she could see evidence that i'd HAD iritis. since no doc
has ever said that before, i'm assuming it must have happened sometime
this year. anyway, i tried to call her yesterday but her office was
closed. i'll call monday, and i see her again in two weeks for checkup
and full discussion. i hope yours never comes back.
diane