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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You acknowledge that you need to replace the Paxil you were taking for depression and anxiety—but right now it seems you're "putting the cart before the horse" and mostly worrying about how to get off whichever you try IF it DOESN'T help you.
Please remember that—
1) NOT everyone has difficulty getting off a drug; this site is for folks who ARE having, or DID have problems, so of course, it seems that quitting Effexor/venlafaxine is a nightmare. For some it is, but mostly because they're going too fast; quite a few here found "slow and steady" a successful strategy.
2) You learned something about tapering through your own experience getting off Paxil—that going too fast put you into a tailspin. Again, this reinforces the "slow and steady" approach to tapering if discontinuing a drug is needed.
3) You may learn very quickly that your post-Paxil choice IS, or ISN'T working. Usually, it is long-time use (or high dosages) that make discontinuing a drug difficult.
4) What drug will work for you is solely dependent on YOUR body—no one else's physiology, mental/medical issues, or past treatments are going to be like yours, so their experiences good, or bad aren't a prediction of yours.
You will set yourself up for success by reading up on how these possible next drugs work and for what conditions/issues they work best and having an in-depth talk with your prescriber. Good luck and much success going forward.
Most medical professionals only know what we shouldn’t do. Most know little to nothing about what we should do.
I really recommend Texas Duchess's most recent response to your questions. The bottom line is that you won't get the information you want without trying one of the drugs. It sounds like your apprehension is keeping you from taking the action that might give you relief. Give one of them a try and see if it helps (and ask your dr how long you should give it). If it doesn't help, then stop it and try another one.
Oops
@rosa66
I wanted to suggest you perhaps speak to your doctor regarding taking a medication with a longer half-life and see if s/he would recommend a longer half-life. Supposedly they make withdrawal symptoms easier.
Here are some half-life times for you.
Serotonin reuptake inhibitors
DRUG……….HALF-LIFE
Paxil………24 hours hours
Lexapro..27 to 32 hours
Celexa…..36 hours
Prozac……..4-6 days
Serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors
Effexor……..3-5 hours
Cymbalta….12 hours
Pristiq………..12 hours
Dopamine and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor
Wellbutrin……21 hours
The problem, I believe is that people have a different idea of what slow is and don't take into account their dose, age, sex, time on the drug etc.
I also think exercise and a healthy diet are important.
Best of luck,
Jake
Thank you for your thoughtful reply.
Since Paxil worked so well for so long for me, could a different SSRI work?
The SNRI’s add another component, rather than just the serotonin….what if don’t need the norepinephrine and how do I know
Wow….so shorter half lives are harder to taper off….Effexor would be worse than Paxil!
Since Paxil worked so well for so long for me, could a different SSRI work?
The SNRI’s add another component, rather than just the serotonin….what if don’t need the norepinephrine and how do I know
Thx for your thoughtful reply.
Since Paxil worked so well for so long for me, could a different SSRI work?
The SNRI’s add another component, rather than just the serotonin….what if don’t need the norepinephrine and how do I know
@rosa66
You have asked many questions that most if not all on this site are not able to answer.
You need to ask your questions to a physician or two who you trust or perhaps a medical library could assist you. But at some point, you're going to have to decide to try another medication, risks and all or decide to do without. There are no guarantees. People have said what helped them so why not ask your doctor if one could be helpful to you. Currently, you seem to be going around in a circle here and prolonging the care you need.
Best of luck,
Jake
Thank you.