Medication for anxiety seems to cause anxiety

Posted by emmygirl @emmygirl, 6 days ago

Hi,

I have a strange issue. I was prescribed this drug but it actually causes me anxiety. I am trying to taper off but there is not a lot of information on how. I’ve seen huge numbers, get rid of one dose first, etc. I’m currently at 17.5 mg per dose 3x per day. Has anyone else had to taper this drug that can tell me how long the withdrawal symptoms last on a taper and will that happen once per day? Seems to hit at the mid day dose. I am currently tapering 2.5 mg per mid day dose and 1.25 in the evening. I’ve only recently found out that the drug works backwards which is why I need to get off. I’ve been on it for about 4 months. Withdrawing from Zoloft and Clonazepam covered up the fact this was adding to my anxiety.

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Profile picture for Arvind Natarajan @malebreastcancer47

@grammato3
I read a posts and response on this site daily. Its intriguing so many are needing anxiety or depression medications. I like to understand what someone’s root cause is to needing anxiety.

I have had ADHD, anxiety since childhood. Though I have a therapist, however finding the Alpha Stim helps more than a therapist as it keeps my mind present. Even I have researched and learned where my anxiety comes from, my mom. She is on meds full time, and warned me to fight vs settle with medications.

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@malebreastcancer47: I think it's great that you're inquisitive about this. Let me see if I can try to explain.

It's true that some people can and do manage their behavioral health issues without need for medication; they, like you, can frequently employ alternative methods such as you described, or biofeedback, meditation, even yoga. But there is evidence that some of these issues are due, at least in part, to chemcial imbalances in the brain, much the same way that diabetics have imbalance in glucose control and require insulin to maintain proper levels.

As a result, conditions like depression, anxiety, obsessive-compulsive disorder, trauma-related disorders and so forth can frequently benefit from mood stabilizers. Many of these belong to groups known as neurotransmitters that work in regulating mood, thoughts, and energy levels and can reduce symptoms to a level that allows an individual to engage effectively in daily activities or therapy and in some cases effectively allow symptoms from returning.

Did that help to explain?

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Profile picture for Susan, Volunteer Mentor @grammato3

@malebreastcancer47: I think it's great that you're inquisitive about this. Let me see if I can try to explain.

It's true that some people can and do manage their behavioral health issues without need for medication; they, like you, can frequently employ alternative methods such as you described, or biofeedback, meditation, even yoga. But there is evidence that some of these issues are due, at least in part, to chemcial imbalances in the brain, much the same way that diabetics have imbalance in glucose control and require insulin to maintain proper levels.

As a result, conditions like depression, anxiety, obsessive-compulsive disorder, trauma-related disorders and so forth can frequently benefit from mood stabilizers. Many of these belong to groups known as neurotransmitters that work in regulating mood, thoughts, and energy levels and can reduce symptoms to a level that allows an individual to engage effectively in daily activities or therapy and in some cases effectively allow symptoms from returning.

Did that help to explain?

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@grammato3 Fascinating. Appreciate the knowledge.

I was diagnosed with ADHD in college, share anxiety with my mom, however recently through neurofeedback, results show I also have SPD, sensory processing disorder. I knew what I exhibited but did not understand why. Now I have closure, it only took 50 yrs to learn. There maybe meds but my therapist said neurofeedback might be able to retrain my subc to self regulate. My Mayo oncology team is aware and offered options.

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Profile picture for emmygirl @emmygirl

@grammato3. It’s a long story. I had been on Zoloft for over 25 years. When we retired and moved to Florida both my husband and I agreed there was no reason to keep taking it. It’s not good to be on an Ssri for that long. I was also
still using Clonazepam at the time. My psychiatrist said “good luck” and that was it.

With the help of my general doc, I tapered off quite easily of the Zoloft. After about 8 months symptoms starting returning on the OCD slightly including insomnia. The new doc (not psychiatrist yet) figured it was just from the time I had been on Zoloft so he put me back on the same dose of 25mg right away. After one week, I was in the er with severe anxiety that I had never had in my life. They cut the dose in half in one week, then in half again. My old psychiatrist from Texas said get off of it now.

In the meantime my new psychiatrist added hydroxyzine, buspirone and lorazepam. The lorazepam was to replace the Clonazepam that was no longer working but with no taper. All three were supposed to help with anxiety.

I went thru 4 months of withdrawal of Zoloft and she finally reduced that to 1/2 lorazepam and 1/2 diazepam to start following the Ashton taper method while still taking hydroxyzine and buspirone, has been going on since last October. While all that was happening I also did TMS which is supposed to help with depression which I also never had and anxiety. They felt it would ease the withdrawal symptoms.

It helped. It wasn’t until I was off Zoloft and lorazepam and diazepam combo withdrawal and fully on diazepam that we discover I am paradoxical to both buspirone and hydroxyzine. Both make me highly anxious. We are now tapering off the mid day dose of the hydroxyzine to remove that dose of 2.5 and a very small taper on the diazepam of .75 spread across all three doses every day. I was told this was the best way to handle this.

I tried to do all three but was told that really wasn’t a good idea. Once the hydroxyzine mid day dose is gone, the remaining two doses will be divided evenly between am and pm by 12 hours to help relieve some of the every week 4 day withdrawal.

Now my OCD is worse as well.

It’s been a long journey and a lot of research by us since no one would have guessed that I would be one in 100k+ people that both of these drugs reacted backwards and to find out now when it’s necessary not only taper Diaz but hydroxyzine and buspirone.

If anyone else has any better ideas I would love to hear them.

Thank you Susan for caring enough to reach out. It’s been a long road so far and will continue for several more months. 🙏😔

I currently take propranolol as needed to help with the hydroxyzine and buspirone until I can safely taper off of those.

I caution anyone given Hydroxyzine or buspirone to make sure that if they do take it, taper! These are both nasty drugs.

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@emmygirl it’s strange how medications affect different people in different ways!

Years ago I was prescribed Xanax to relieve panic and anxiety attacks, and the first dose caused a panic attack worse than I had experienced before! I didn’t take another dose of it again!

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