Long term effects AFTER withdrawing from Effexor
I am wondering if anyone has had any experience like this. I weaned off Effexor three years ago. After doing so I have gradually developed what is now becoming debilitating chronic pain. I am wondering if there is any way that being on Effexor for 15 years could have caused me to develop this pain now that I am not on it anymore. Thanks for your thoughts. I can’t seem to find any direct related research on this.
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@4cat- Good for you- please don't make yourself sicker! This has gone on too long!
I had a telehealth visit with my dr this morning. He doesn’t believe my symptoms are related to withdrawal. I have an in office visit scheduled for Monday for blood work and physical exam. 🤞🏼
@4cat- Good for getting in touch. Let me know what your doctor says.
First thing doctor wanted to do is put me back on venlafaxine. Absolutely not! I will let you know when I have results from bloodwork. He mentioned testing for food allergies.
I just find it peculiar that my symptoms began during withdrawal. I have read that after long term use it can take up to a year for withdrawals to subside. Yikes! A close friend is a nurse that told me, a couple of months ago, that any long term medication your body adapts to it on every level and can have significant impact on us when stopped.
I was on Effexor for 7 years, no one advised me to taper off slowly, and after a 4 day tapering off I was left with high blood pressure, chronic pain, and lack of concentration and confusion 2 years later. Nothing seems to have returned my ability to concentrate.
I also had something like "brain shivers". Mentioned it to my doctors and they pooh-poohed it as they'd never heard of it.
Felt like a buzz of electricity was going down the inside center of my brain and "crackling"! The weirdest thing.
Never thought of the possibility it could be a medication side effect.
I feel for you. These complicated cases, doctors are reluctant to take time to address. 😢
I am not a physician or psychiatrist but if I were having your symptoms...Have you talked to your dr or perhaps get a second opinion for an alternative medication to help alleviate your symptoms. Or going back on a low dose and then stepping down.
Those sound like brain zaps. They subsided for me after the initial, horrific month of withdrawals. B*nadryl helped tremendously for me.
Antidepressants got me out of my head. It also eliminated social anxiety; something I didn’t know I had, didn’t know anything about or understand until several years after being medicated. Antidepressants changed my life for the positive. In the 21&1/2 years I was on them, through counseling and education, the areas of my life which caused my depressive state were healed and/or eliminated. Which is why I chose to stop them.