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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@sandij
Yes, we have to learn to pace ourselves. That's the trick to getting to play another hour or day or what ever...
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Deal with the body and emotional temperment you have.
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Its a done deal, you have already tried to change it.
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I have been so successful in dealing with my MS because I learned when I put my MS right next to me, as my friend and did what was good for him (I get to call it...he is a him...Mr MS.) I got to play another day. If I didn't take care of him, well, HE messed up my life but good.
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Its our lives and our choice...take care of the body or not...
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Let me ask you, has what you have been trying working??? If not, take another action. It works!
Bright Wings
Yes, it's working.
Great...I am proud of you. BW
@nathan5
Hey, you tried! A lot of people on here have tried more than once. Nothing says you can't try again (in a year, or two). You learned a lot with this attempt and who knows? Maybe the manufacturer, or someone else will come up with a good way to get off Effexor. Hoping the anxiety counselling works and that you get back to feeling you can cope.
I understand that Effexor needs to "ramp up" before you feel better. "Sleep, energy, or appetite may show some improvement within the first 1-2 weeks. Improvement in these physical symptoms can be an important early signal that the medication is working. Depressed mood and lack of interest in activities may need up to 6-8 weeks to fully improve."--https://www.nami.org/Learn-More/Treatment/Mental-Health-Medications/Venlafaxine-(Effexor)
Nice to read that you're being gentle with yourself. A day off, a warm shower and a cozy electric blanket sound good no matter what ails you.
You're welcome! 🙂
Thank you so much! I will. 🙂
Hi I am new to this forum, I found it trying to investigate what was happening to me as I wean off of Effexor, I was on 225 for only about 6 months and dropped to 150 over 4 weeks on my own and now at 75 per doctors reccomendation for weaning off. The effects are indeed terrible, however one I am experiencing that I haven't read about yet is strong auditory hallucinations (mostly people randomly talking in the distance) - has anyone else experienced this in particular? Good luck to everyone going through the withdrawls from this drug - I wish I had known more about this prior to ever taking it, I can't believe this is prescribed for general anxiety when it seems to me it ends up creating a dependence and higher anxiety levels than ever when you stop - great for the drug manufacturer's but not so much for us patients.
@canadaanj
Now remember, we’re not just talking slow here, we’re talking slooooooow.
Small percentages!!!
Good luck,
Jake
@bd1323
Hello,
I bet you are indeed miserable.
So since you started your taper you have reduced your dose by nearly 85% in what 4,5,6 weeks. Your brain must be in shock big time.
Read the last 283 pages and 4200+ posts and see how successful people have been reducing quickly. I doubt you will find any. I wouldn’t reduce my dose by more than 10% but reduce it more if you want but but the faster your reduction the greater your chance for withdrawal symptoms. A lot of doctors say cut it in half and in half again. Read back and see how successful that has been. I mention this quite often, a psychiatrist in Europe tapered off at the 50% rate and was unsuccessful and now a fan of the 5-10% taper rate.
Good luck with your taper,
Jake
@bd1323
Yes, Effexor can cause auditory hallucinations--even while on the drug, not just when reducing the drug. A lot of anti-depressants can.
Your tapering schedule from 225 to 150 to 75 is very fast. A lot of us posting here have found out the hard way that you should taper off Effexor slooowwwly. When a taper is too fast (i.e., you experience withdrawal symptoms), the recommendation is to go back to the dose where you did NOT have the WD symptoms, stay there for weeks/months before attempting to taper again and when you do taper, to reduce your dose by a very small amount and take your time before reducing again.
Ask your doctor about a "Prozac bridge–"The only way doctors know to soften the blow when withdrawing from short half-life drugs [Effexor is such] is to add fluoxetine (Prozac)."–https://natashatracy.com/treatment-issues/withdrawal/antidepressants-effexorpristiq-venlafaxinedesvenlafaxine/
I agree the anxiety is awful. I never even had it until 6.5 weeks after I tapered off Effexor.