Effexor withdrawal
Hello everyone, I have been in effexor for fifteen years been on 150 for seven. Finally found out a lot of my issues were do to ADHD so was on the wrong med. Finally think I found a good ADHD medsso been trying to lower my dose of effexor with psychatrist help. I went from 150 to 75. During the first few weeks felt vertigo and Shakey that went away. Then about four weeks into it felt body shocks. Now I feel like itchiness in scalp and tingling and brain zaps. Is this a normal side effects? Also thinking I jumped to big of a dose so thinking about going up 37.5 then taper off again from there. I do have a psych and he recommended that he is fantastic. It's been hard and stressful. But I am getting through it. Thank you for listening. Blessings.
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Is there something else to replace the Effexor that was prescribed.
@wendymykkanen I have been put on Pristiq because it's very similar to effexor. I'm not sure it's helping.
@mmsm I was on Effexor XR for many years and stopped taking it as well. I did experience brain tremors and many other symptoms. I also relapsed. This was back in the early 2000's. I swore I would never get back on it. After I got sober in 2017, I did really well until many things happened, traumatic things. I went into a depression hole. I did NOT want to have to take anything, but I had to get out of the hole. My doctor started me on duloxetine (generic Cymbalta) it is an SNRI. I am on the lowest dose, 30 mg. It has helped and it also helps with some of my Long COVID symptoms. I am not advocating for anyone taking anything, just wanted to share my experience. I hope the supplements go well. There is a lot to be said for nature and what diet and exercise, etc., can do. Vitamin B12 injections have also helped me. Thank you for posting.
I've been off of it for 19 months now. I posted in spring that I took myself off the medication after reading a peer-reviewed study that described what I'd been experiencing pretty much in detail: massive depression that led to an emergency trip to the psych ward, unconstrained rage, eating, sleep, and hygiene disorders, paranoia, substance abuse and more. I basically suffered a severe mental health crisis. The study said what happened to me is a rare but known occurrence with bipolar 2 patients on antidepressants (bipolar 2 is my diagnosis, and I feel it's correct). Effexor was singled out as the one most frequently tied to it.
I had already been knocked down from 75 to 32.5 and added mood stabilizers after the hospital visit, but as a medical step, not as a taper. So I did quit from a low dose. I initially went cold turkey in a rage fit wanting to wreck my life, yet started feeling like my head was clearing out within days. Curious, I went digging and found the study, and decided I would ride it out and never take the medication again.
I experienced nausea and vertigo for about two weeks if I recall correctly, and the brain zaps persisted for at least six. Like someone was putting a small cattle prod to my skull. I was never told when I was prescribed the drug by either my GP nor the pharmacist that if I decided to discontinue use, I could possibly experience severe withdrawal symptoms, which in fact I did. But mentally I could tell my mood was improving by the day. That made the misery worth it. For treatment I mostly got out walking every day, three to six miles, and kept my focus on the end goal: being free of it.
I'm pretty bullheaded, a mixed blessing, but in this instance it helped. Within weeks I was no longer fantasizing about self-harm; sleep, eating, and hygiene disorders resolved themselves; I lost interest in alcohol and weed and stopped without really trying; it all went away on its own. (The three things I'm most thankful for, in order, are 1) I'm still here, 2) my wife not leaving me when the rages were going on, and 3) that I dodged needing alcohol recovery; I was guzzling vodka and enormous amounts of weed nightly. Not anymore. It wasn't forced, I simply quit wanting it.)
The emotional gushes set in after about two months, and they still occur all this time later. But I feel my emotions now. Something I'd lost. So I'm actually thankful for them. I lost my sister, father, and mother in pretty rapid succession and bulldozed through the period without shedding a tear. The tears finally fell when I could finally feel again. I still well up over both sad things and joyful things. But after years on that drug, I'm feeling life again, and for this I'm grateful.
Stick with the withdrawal. If the drug is hurting you, dealing with the side effects is better than suffering further harm. And it's OK to feel those emotions. They'll help you regain your connection to life.
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2 Reactions@depressedbutnotdead
I'll add that going through what I did, and it lasted for about three years, gave me an empathy and regard for mental health patients that I would never otherwise have gained. I was never judgmental, but I didn't understand. Then I fully internalized during the last three years of my crisis as things got worse and worse and worse and every day became hell. I didn't want to face it.
I was incredibly fortunate to discover that it was externally caused. Most people suffering mental illness don't have that kind of luck. It goes on for years, for decades, for their entire lives sometimes. That they find the strength to get out of bed and pull themselves through every day of their lives is something I am in awe of. They have wells of strength that most of us never need to draw from. They aren't weak. They're powerful as hell.
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2 Reactions@vicdenlee Thank you. This gives me hope and makes me realize I am not imaging this Trauma.
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1 ReactionFirst, find a different doc. That doc isn't very informed. Symptoms should gradually start to fade. You might notice that they come and go. The pattern will be that intervals between symptoms showing up will start getting progressively longer. Eventually, they will just stop when your brain has recalibrated to the new normal of no meds.