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
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@ainsleigh - Hip hip hooray!
@texasdutchess- Hello. What supplements do you take?
I agree with @jakedduck1. The longer you are on a medicine that changes the chemicals in your brain the more it depends on them. They take over, replacing what's natural or missing, etc. SO time has a lot to do with withdrawal and it's affects.
Hey there Ainsleigh. Thank you so much for the HNY!!!!!! And same to you. Still plugging away one day at a time. Enjoy your day!!!!!!!
Hi everyone. I am currently on Venlafaxine anti depresant which i have been on for the past 6 week. I was on previously on it last year. But whenever i get a cold my antidepresants stop working and i am forced to try a new one. Although i have always been sensitive to antidepresants and they have always made me feel worse. I seem to have become really sensitive to how they make me feel. And to be honest i feel i would be better with out them. When i cut down on Venlafaxine i have the 37.5 tablets and take two then cut down a quarter of one tablet at a time. I can get down to approx 28mg with no bad effect but when i reduce to approx 19mg i get bad head tension, fatigue, unable to think clearly and the feeling of being spaced out. Im desparate to feel like myself. But i hate being on anything above 18mg because it makes me feel depressed and has effects on me that stop me leading a natural life. Is there anything i can do or take to counter this particular withdrawl reaction. Thank you
Hello, @john368, and welcome to Mayo Clinic Connect. Since you mentioned you are in a tapering process with venlafaxine, I've moved your post here to this discussion on "Tips on minimising withdrawal symptoms from Effexor (aka Venlafaxine)," so that you can talk with others who are in or have been in a similar process and may have some thoughts to share, especially about countering the withdrawal symptoms when you are at 19 mg.
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Does your prescribing doctor have any input on dealing with the withdrawal symptoms and whether your tapering schedule should be adjusted, @john368? Since you feel you'd be better off without antidepressants, what therapy is your doctor suggesting instead?
Thanks for the info about it being stored in body fat, I had no idea about that one. Exercise is a definite + for me while tapering. I have a lot less fogginess if I keep the natural endorphins going.
@cwis- Serotonin is one of many hormones that controls your appetite.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-antidepressant-diet/201007/reversing-antidepressant-weight-gain
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/depression/expert-answers/antidepressants-and-weight-gain/faq-20058127
There are a lot of reasons that weight gain can take effect. When we are depressed some of us tend to eat more, move less. It's very common for me to say, "Oh what the hell" and eat everything in sight. The I get more depressed because I've gained weight. Also as we grow older our bodies change and we tend, especially after menopause, to gain weight because we have lost most of our estrogen.
So far there is not one cause yet accepted for weight gain while taking antidepressants. There are many theories but since the brain is so complicated it's yet a mystery.
Here's another site to help. Feel free to google more and please share with us your findings!
Weight is not a problem, thankfully, for me.
@texasduchess- Are yo aware that one of the side effects of tamoxifen are hot flashes?