Tips on minimizing withdrawal symptoms from Effexor (aka Venlafaxine)
I have been taking Effexor/Venlafaxine for years and tried to get off it a few times but each time I try to give up the chemical withdrawal symptoms are a horror story and I give up giving up. Anyone got any tips or tried and tested strategies? Thank you
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Depression & Anxiety Support Group.
This is an update to my previous post. Notwithstanding the addition of Wellbutrin, my attempt to continue not taking Effexor was met with bad results. Aside from the headache, I spent an entire night without any sleep. I’m in consultation with my doctor, and it’s pretty clear this is going to be a long, very slow process. It’s just like me to think I could find a shortcut. I can’t. At this point, I’ll continue with the Wellbutrin and take Effexor every other day. When that changes, I’ll report it and describe the effect.
Hi, @notaround, and welcome to Mayo Clinic Connect. If you've not had the opportunity to do so, reading through some of the past posts in this discussion about going off of venlafaxine may be insightful.
Just wanted to learn a little more. I believe you are saying that ideally, rather than go off of venlafaxine, you'd like to stay on the medication, and that you are trying to see if your primary care provider would take over this prescription that was formerly managed by the psychiatrist? If so, does he or she require a visit for an assessment of your current status prior to him or her taking on the prescription and calling it in for you to the pharmacy?
@lisalucier No, I want off venlafaxine. It hasn't worked for my depression for a long time and for the past year I've been taking it only to avoid the withdrawal. The side effects aren't immediately serious but I recently realized that the persistent extreme fatigue and sleepiness I've been trying to get my doctor and psychiatrist to address for over a year might be caused by the med - it's on the label even but no one said it's possible as a cause. I don't trust doctors anymore. I've been burned too many times now. It feels like all mine do is bill me and tell me I have depression. I know that! I want to actually live instead of struggling through every hour of every day.
It's just worse because I'm tapering very fast since I can't seem to get refills, rather than by choice. I haven't heard anything from my PCP. No response in almost two weeks.
I'm scared because twice now I've had severe problems with withdrawal. Once I stayed at a friend's house for a holiday for 2 days and after 48 hours, I started to go into medical shock and was pretty sure I was dying (nothing at all like a panic attack). Recently, I had a small seizure and smell hallucinations. The recent event was from stepping down to 75mg suddenly from 150mg. I don't want to lose what little dignity I have.
I have read several pages of this thread (the oldest ten or so and the most recent 5 or so). It seems like the people who succeeded all had a cooperative doctor (and the financial ability to see them) and support, usually from a spouse. I want to know if I can do this without having those. Or maybe I'm doomed to fail.
@notaround — your situation is certainly not an easy one. However, you know from personal experience that tapering slowly is necessary to get off this drug successfully with the fewest side effects. Venlafaxine withdrawal symptoms — even with a slow taper — can prove challenging. As you underlined, finances are your primary barrier to finding a doctor to prescribe medication and guide you respectfully through the taper process. So tough!
Are there any community services in your area that you may be able to appeal to? Might you be able to extend your prescription by going to the closest ER? That might give you time to find a provider who can help.
@proserpine OMG--I, too, have had a sore on the top of my left thigh for some months now. At first, I thought it was an ingrown hair and it felt as though something was below the skin, but nothing could be expressed out. It keeps trying to heal over, but the area is now about the size of a pencil eraser across and the new skin is very thin and breaks when I change the dressing. I haven't had it checked by a doctor 'cause dealing with the Effexor withdrawal symptoms has been my priority. I've been taking ashwagandha for my anxiety symptoms and thought it might have something to do with this sore as ashwagandha reactions include skin rashes, itchiness and inflammation.
Many posters on here (including me) have anxiety and rage--often flash rage. I do have a temper, but didn't use to go from mildly annoyed to I-want-to-throttle-you in seconds. Effexor messes with your serotonin and norepinephrine; while reducing and after getting off Effexor, it takes your brain a while to figure out how to rebalance serotonin and norepinephrine. Serotonin is an important chemical and neurotransmitter in the human body that is believed to help regulate mood and social behavior, appetite and digestion, sleep, memory, and sexual desire and function. Serotonin deficiency is associated with several psychological symptoms, such as: anxiety, depressed mood, aggression, insomnia, irritability, low energy, low self-esteem and low sex drive. Norepinephrine is a naturally occurring chemical in the body that acts as both a stress hormone and neurotransmitter that's released into the blood when the brain perceives that a stressful event has occurred.
@texasduchess
Good morning!
Please, please get to a dermatologist to get that thing on your leg checked!
Ronnie (GRANDMAr)
I did reach out to my medical center's complaint department. They understand the problem with sudden withdrawal from meds and are going to help thankfully.
(My medical center IS the community resource. The fundamental problem is that they serve a major metro and not enough providers for all the patients.)
Just need to get through each minute of each hour of the day. Funny how this makes time feel excessive. I've been trying to keep working through this but having to leave early when I just can't keep going anymore. Thankfully my job has been understanding about the weird schedule. Don't need to be fired on top of being short on rent.
I'm really sorry to hear about your ordeal @notaround. I'm lucky to live in Canada with universal healthcare and a drug plan at work. I have friend in the US who is very sick right now and they are barely scraping by as a consequence. He has benefits that are helping but there are a family of four. It's ridiculous.
I came off Effexor quick, as you are likely aware from my posts above. I'm a stubborn person and when I get a thought in my head...anyway, I wouldn't suggest doing what I did. I'm certainly not through it yet, though I am feeling better overall. Framing helps somewhat - trying to put things into perspective. My husband's dad got hit by a car on Saturday, so I've been alone with a five year old the last few days. And my boss is very stressed, which means a stressful work environment. I'm trying to remember that being a good mom is more important to me than getting to work on time. That I'm adult, and I get my work done and that all this anxiety and rage will pass. It is a constant battle, I find, re-framing things positively when I feel so crappy - but it really is helping.
It's great that your medical centre has recognized the need to support you through this. Know that we're here for you too if you need to talk over your experience. Effexor is brutal. No one should have to do that alone.
@proserpine
You've had an awful time of it too for sure. Have you tried icing your side? I get stabbing rib pains (not cardiac - I got all wired up and tested and my heart is surprisingly perfect) and the ice helps until an NSAID kicks in, usually ibuprofen (I think it's called paracametol elsewhere). The trick is to use a thin ice pack so that it lasts just long enough to make it nice and numb, but melts before it can cause any damage.
From what I remember about neurology, I think antidepressants can screw up the nerves in the gut so normal feedback to the brain becomes conscious pain. That or all the physical anxiety/anger isn't helping. Maybe also try mint and fresh ginger tisane. I find the combination to help a lot with stomach problems.
Or a bath with Epsom salts. I do a warm towel on the back of my neck to help with the weird neck twisting that is probably withdrawal. Occasionally I'll get a feeling of tension in my neck and then my head twists sharply to one side. Not painful but annoying and I really hope that no one sees.
Get after the boils. That is a staph infection you are spreading about your body. You will need antibiotics, and must wash cloths, sheets, towels in hot water all after one use. That infection is hard to get rid of.