Klonopin & Gabapentin for sleep

Posted by weijamin @weijamin, Jan 30, 2023

Hi, I am 78, almost 79 & have been taking klonopin, .5 - 1mg for almost 30 yrs. Now it isn’t working so well, so Dr added gabapentin, 2-300mg.
It is working, but I understand the dependence w/ klonopin & in the past have tried to quit, but it has been too hard. Just would like to hear from others if anyone else is taking both of these meds, & what people think about their safety.

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Sleep Health Support Group.

These meds are safe when taken as prescribed. It's about quality of life, wouldn't you agree? And if these meds are helping you, then stay on them. It's about Quality of Life!

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Profile picture for horowitz71 @horowitz71

I'm glad you figured out that healthcare in the U.S. is a business. I've been all over the globe as an international pro surf bum. In the industrialized countries I visited, they ALL had socialized healthcare, universal healthcare, or similar care for not only their citizens, but even passersby like me. And in the countries that didn't, I paid cash for whatever care I needed; and the cost was always far below what doctors bill you for here.

I can relate well to your post. In fact, at first I thought I was reading something that I'd written and forgotten about. That's how closely your story is to mine. I once asked a psychiatrist who I was seeing reply when I asked him about the long-term effects of Depakote, Zoloft, and whatever Benzo he had me on, he gave a terse reply while typing his notes, not bothering to even look at me, "Can't be good." These days, I'm having to fight for my rights from the VA with whom it takes months to see a neurologist, and usually a quack, in order to get a diagnosis for Parkinson's Disease; probably a result of Agent Orange exposure while serving in Vietnam or drinking toxic water when I was stationed in Camp Lejeune. The young enlistees are being advised on how to get disability claims even before their enlistment period is up. It seems as if everyone one of them got severe PTSD no matter what occupation they have or had while in the service. I'm a Purple Heart vet and these kids enlisted. I'm receiving a 20% disability, which is not much. And the VA is ignoring Vietnam veterans like me, waiting for us to die. I'm currently experiencing withdrawal from years of taking Benzos which were prescribed by the VA, and the VA doctors, acting as gatekeepers tell me my illness is not service-connected, but as a result of bipolar med's I took over the years. Talk about a Catch 22. At my age, it really wouldn't matter much if I was prescribed as little as half a mg of Klonopin, but I am unable to find a doctor who will even consider prescribing benzos. I didn't expect nor did I want to live beyond eighty, but as I close in on that day, I'm wishing someone would put me out of my misery. I'm no longer able to drive, public transport is nonexistant where I live, and I sit at home all day, alone and isolated. This is not a way to live out one's life.

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horowitz71, I am so sorry you are being denied the medication that will help you. It's so wrong that doctors won't prescribe benzo meds anymore. I am lucky and have a prescription for Lorazepam, and my doctor knows I need it and that it works for me. All doctors now want to prescribe these new meds, the SSRI's..... they work for some people and don't for others. I don't know what to tell you.....it's just a very sad, and VERY WRONG thing that these doctors are doing by not prescribing them!

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Profile picture for horowitz71 @horowitz71

I'm glad you figured out that healthcare in the U.S. is a business. I've been all over the globe as an international pro surf bum. In the industrialized countries I visited, they ALL had socialized healthcare, universal healthcare, or similar care for not only their citizens, but even passersby like me. And in the countries that didn't, I paid cash for whatever care I needed; and the cost was always far below what doctors bill you for here.

I can relate well to your post. In fact, at first I thought I was reading something that I'd written and forgotten about. That's how closely your story is to mine. I once asked a psychiatrist who I was seeing reply when I asked him about the long-term effects of Depakote, Zoloft, and whatever Benzo he had me on, he gave a terse reply while typing his notes, not bothering to even look at me, "Can't be good." These days, I'm having to fight for my rights from the VA with whom it takes months to see a neurologist, and usually a quack, in order to get a diagnosis for Parkinson's Disease; probably a result of Agent Orange exposure while serving in Vietnam or drinking toxic water when I was stationed in Camp Lejeune. The young enlistees are being advised on how to get disability claims even before their enlistment period is up. It seems as if everyone one of them got severe PTSD no matter what occupation they have or had while in the service. I'm a Purple Heart vet and these kids enlisted. I'm receiving a 20% disability, which is not much. And the VA is ignoring Vietnam veterans like me, waiting for us to die. I'm currently experiencing withdrawal from years of taking Benzos which were prescribed by the VA, and the VA doctors, acting as gatekeepers tell me my illness is not service-connected, but as a result of bipolar med's I took over the years. Talk about a Catch 22. At my age, it really wouldn't matter much if I was prescribed as little as half a mg of Klonopin, but I am unable to find a doctor who will even consider prescribing benzos. I didn't expect nor did I want to live beyond eighty, but as I close in on that day, I'm wishing someone would put me out of my misery. I'm no longer able to drive, public transport is nonexistant where I live, and I sit at home all day, alone and isolated. This is not a way to live out one's life.

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https://get.ezcareclinic.io This is a website address for online doctors who prescribe benzodiazepines for anxiety. Good luck.

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Profile picture for mrroboto @mrroboto

I've been taken Clonazapam
for 12 years. Do I suffer everyday from no sleep, Anxiety, isolation or do I live
A life behind a mask . I will stay on
Clonazapam , because it has
Saved my life . I take it
When I need it.. it's addictive
so is eating, smoking. Alcohol
Etc..

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I have been on Clonazepam for 9 years. I take it at night to hush all those racing thoughts when I am trying to sleep. I didn’t realize how potent (take 2 mg.at night) Clonazepam was until I forgot 1 dose at night. The following day I was already experiencing withdrawal symptoms, amped anxiety, jittery but exhausted, nausea, restless, and no focus. I kept wanting to chew on my lips and cheeks. Once I took my dose the next night, I felt back to my normal.
I am in it for the long haul. I am 66 and I have not had to change my dose(1.5mg.) in 3years.

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Profile picture for mrroboto @mrroboto

My mother was almost 90
She took them for 40 years.
Without them she wouldn't
Have made it to 70.. I got my mother's genes and I've been on klonopin 15 years..life safer for me.. I will continue until
My Doctor takes me off them .
I'm not concerned at all.
I know people who take
6 mg daily...

On avg I take 0.5 mg
2 - 4 times daily ..

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Some days I take a bit more I try to stay on same times everyday even if I don't have anxiety .morning,
Afternoon, bedtime ..I wake up I take another one. Taking them is a no brainer for me .when my
Anxiety hits it's a nightmare and I refuse to not get help even if it is an addictive
Medication ..I don't abuse them I take them as needed and my Anxiety and sleep us amazing..

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Profile picture for cindisue @cindisue

mrroboto, you are 100% right!! These meds are needed for those of us who suffer from these issues.

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Exactly, gives me back my life ..without them I'd be a wreck.

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Profile picture for cindisue @cindisue

horowitz71, I am so sorry you are being denied the medication that will help you. It's so wrong that doctors won't prescribe benzo meds anymore. I am lucky and have a prescription for Lorazepam, and my doctor knows I need it and that it works for me. All doctors now want to prescribe these new meds, the SSRI's..... they work for some people and don't for others. I don't know what to tell you.....it's just a very sad, and VERY WRONG thing that these doctors are doing by not prescribing them!

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Thank you for your understanding. Anything that makes me feel connected helps a lot. My usual routine now is to go a couple of days without sleeping and then crashing for 10-12 hours. I'm getting used to it.

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Profile picture for weijamin @weijamin

I have been taking klonopin-started off at 1mg 3 x day, now at 1 mg at night only, but not working well as I have been on klonopin for almost 30 yrs so Dr added 300mg gabapentin. It is working, but not really feeling good about it. These are the only meds I take as my health is excellent otherwise. I have tried to get off klonopin many times, but could only get it down to 1 mg…..then it just became to difficult to stop all together. So, I’m thinking, at this age(almost 79) I’ll probably just keep on…any comments are appreciated.

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I was on Ativan 2 mg 3 times a day, then was switched to Klonopin. Now I'm on .5 mg Klonopin twice a day. It isn't enough. I've been on benzodiazapines 30 years-Im 65 now and I, too think I will stay on it, too. I also take Lyrica 300 mg twice a day which is similar to gabapentin. When I take them together at night, I can get at least 4 hours of sleep if not more.

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Does anyone take Klonopin for anxiety? That's why I've been on benzodiazapines for years. I have extreme anxiety and can't leave the house without taking one. I had a very understanding Dr years ago and when she put me on Lyrica (which is like gabapentin) my life changed. As long as I took my medication I could go out, drive- pretty much things I could never do before. I was also on an antidepressant. I moved from Montgomery back to Birmingham and I've been without my meds. I'm back to where I was before. I see a psychiatrist on July 17 and I hope she will help me get back on my my meds. Also, Klonopin has post acute withdrawals, so when you think the withdrawals are over, usually they aren't. It comes back with a vengeance. I didn't understand what was happening to me until I found out from an addiction specialist. Please be mindful of that.

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Profile picture for ellerchim @ellerchim

I also take lorazepam off and on for several years and when you ask for it they make you feel like a drug addict. I don’t have an addiction problem Never have. I take these when I need them which might be several times a month. Even the pharmacist has an attitude when he refills it. I have to agree with you on everything. I just had a stroke in my eye and have been to 4 retina specialists who have each given me a different diagnosis and if I asked questions I am either smirked at or consistently talked down too. Something needs to be done about their uppity god like attitude with their patients. I am tired of taking this abuse. I cannot get a straight answer from any of them and they make me feel like I am a bother. They refuse to send me to any specialist as to what happened to me because they think they are above anyone. The whole medical profession needs up hauling. I can’t tell you the last time I was treated with respect or concern from a Doctor. Obviously I am not the only one. Wish you luck.

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Unfortunately, it appears as if far too many of us are being treated with contempt instead of compassion. Years ago, when I was first diagnosed bipolar and my cocktail of meds began to grow, I asked my psychiatrist, a prominent old man who headed the Board of Behavioral Sciences in the county, "What are the long-term effects of taking all these meds?, to which he replied , without even looking up from typing his notes, "can't be good." A neurologist I saw told me that my tremors and other symptoms of Parkinson's were due to the medications I'd been taking over the years--prescribed by the VA and symptomatic of troops who served in Vietnam and were exposed to Agent Orange; so, she was the first of many gatekeepers for the government whose job it was to deny health claims to vets. I'm frustrated, isolated, and irritable--afraid to leave the house (I have a roof over my head, for now, thank goodness). There are many homeless veterans camped out nearby, and their number is rapidly growing. Now, the government wants to privatize the VA--a ruse to siphon money up the line from doctors and patients to the healthcare corporations. I hope you get the care you deserve. The good economic times are over for the working class and even a good portion of middle-class. It's now come down to survival. The only way to beat the billionaires, trusts, and monopolies is at a grass roots level. We're a force only if we stick together, something Americans have been indoctrinated not to do, as we're taught for early on to value rugged individualism instead of cooperation. I feel like an evangelist whenever I need to visit the VA, where I hang out all day after appointments to try to organize veterans of all ages and backgrounds to understand how important it is to keep both our political parties from destroying the VA by underfunding and privatization. We all need to fight for a just cause in what will soon be extremely rough times.

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