Moderator Emeritus Rhiannon Posted September 18, 2013 Moderator Emeritus Posted September 18, 2013 As you can imagine, I've conversed with tons of people who were wondering how to taper. Usually they come to me asking for a really specific taper schedule--cut this much, hold this many days or weeks, cut this much, hold this many et cetera. And generally when we start tapering, we all start with the expectation that we can hold our taper and our bodies to a calendar schedule. Unfortunately, bodies were invented long before calendars, and healing doesn't follow a numerical schedule. (Just try telling a broken bone that it has to heal exactly 10% every two weeks.) And what I see is that the people who do best with their tapers are the ones who listen to and follow their bodies' internal wisdom, rather than some external notion of a "correct taper" or some schedule given to them by someone outside. Another thing I see that's practically universal is that people want to start with bigger cuts and shorter holds. We all want off these meds as fast as possible. Unfortunately, if you start out too aggressively, what usually happens is people crash and burn, suffer a lot, end up having to reinstate and then wait a long time to stabilize before they can begin to taper again. And it actually ends up taking longer. So these days I end up giving this same advice over and over. And I decided to just copy it and paste it and put it here so I can just refer people to it rather than retyping it every time. Rhi's General Taper How-To Advice: Start small and conservative. Start with a small cut and a long hold. Don't try to follow a calendar schedule; follow your body's schedule instead, by observing your own symptoms. Keep a daily journal of symptoms (ranking them on a numerical scale of 1 to 5 or something like that). Don't trust yourself to remember the way your symptoms wax and wane--the drugs and the withdrawal actually interfere with our ability to reliably perceive patterns. (Trust me on this. It's pretty much universal. Your mind will lie to you.) Write it down each day and you'll see the patterns emerge. Do a few small cuts and long holds this way until you have a feel for how your body is going to respond to cuts and how the withdrawal symptoms are going to unfold and play out and resolve for you. There are often delayed effects from a cut that don't show up right away, and if you taper too fast, those "lag time" symptoms can add up and hit hard, and it's too late to slow down because you already made the cuts. So take it slow with long holds, and allow the full pattern to play out, so that you become familiar with it. Collect data this way for two or three months. Once you have a track record, you can then decide if you want to try larger cuts and/or shorter holds. Experiment conservatively until you find your optimal rate of taper. This way you will become the expert on your own withdrawal process and you'll be able to tailor it to your own needs and your own life changes. Speaking from experience--both my own and that of many other people--not only will you actually be able to get off your meds just as fast this way as you would if you tried a fast, aggressive taper (because you'll be less likely to crash, get all messed up, and have to reinstate or hold for way long, or maybe end up on even more meds you had to add, et cetera)--you will also save yourself and your loved ones a lot of suffering. 2 Started on Prozac and Xanax in 1992 for PTSD after an assault. One drug led to more, the usual story. Got sicker and sicker, but believed I needed the drugs for my "underlying disease". Long story...lost everything. Life savings, home, physical and mental health, relationships, friendships, ability to work, everything. Amitryptiline, Prozac, bupropion, buspirone, flurazepam, diazepam, alprazolam, Paxil, citalopram, lamotrigine, gabapentin...probably more I've forgotten. Started multidrug taper in Feb 2010. Doing a very slow microtaper, down to low doses now and feeling SO much better, getting my old personality and my brain back! Able to work full time, have a full social life, and cope with stress better than ever. Not perfect, but much better. After 23 lost years. Big Pharma has a lot to answer for. And "medicine for profit" is just not a great idea. Feb 15 2010: 300 mg Neurontin 200 Lamictal 10 Celexa 0.65 Xanax and 5 mg Ambien Feb 10 2014: 62 Lamictal 1.1 Celexa 0.135 Xanax 1.8 Valium Feb 10 2015: 50 Lamictal 0.875 Celexa 0.11 Xanax 1.5 Valium Feb 15 2016: 47.5 Lamictal 0.75 Celexa 0.0875 Xanax 1.42 Valium 2/12/20 12 0.045 0.007 1 May 2021 7 0.01 0.0037 1 Feb 2022 6 0!!! 0.00167 0.98 2.5 mg Ambien Oct 2022 4.5 mg Lamictal (off Celexa, off Xanax) 0.95 Valium Ambien, 1/4 to 1/2 of a 5 mg tablet I'm not a doctor. Any advice I give is just my civilian opinion.
Nikki Posted September 18, 2013 Posted September 18, 2013 Someone once told me to "throw out the calendar". I have an issue with time. Intro: http://survivingantidepressants.org/index.php?/topic/1902-nikki-hi-my-rundown-with-ads/ Paxil 1997-2004 Crossed over to Lexapro Paxil not available at Pharmacies GSK halted deliveries Lexapro 40mgs Lexapro taper (2years) Imipramine Imipramine and Celexa Now Nefazadone/Imipramine 50mgs. each 45mgs. Serzone 50mgs. Imipramine
Moderator Emeritus Rhiannon Posted September 23, 2013 Author Moderator Emeritus Posted September 23, 2013 Rhi, just one question. Do many people find that a taper rate that was once optimal can become sub-optimal down the track? Just wondering if that's something people should be alert to? For me, the optimal rate of taper has varied a lot, depending on my overall health, stress levels, sleep quality, and factors I haven't been able to necessarily figure out, hormones and stuff. That's why I go slow and stay tuned in to my symptoms, so I can hold whenever things seem to be ramping up. I still screw it up from time to time but at worst I just get into a really bad wave and it passes if I hold long enough (like two months, this last time). I think a lot of other people have found this too. Especially stress levels. Plus I think a lot of people find they have to slow down at the lower doses, as well (although that may be partly because 10% cuts are so small when the dose is small, it's easy to overshoot if you don't actually do the math). Started on Prozac and Xanax in 1992 for PTSD after an assault. One drug led to more, the usual story. Got sicker and sicker, but believed I needed the drugs for my "underlying disease". Long story...lost everything. Life savings, home, physical and mental health, relationships, friendships, ability to work, everything. Amitryptiline, Prozac, bupropion, buspirone, flurazepam, diazepam, alprazolam, Paxil, citalopram, lamotrigine, gabapentin...probably more I've forgotten. Started multidrug taper in Feb 2010. Doing a very slow microtaper, down to low doses now and feeling SO much better, getting my old personality and my brain back! Able to work full time, have a full social life, and cope with stress better than ever. Not perfect, but much better. After 23 lost years. Big Pharma has a lot to answer for. And "medicine for profit" is just not a great idea. Feb 15 2010: 300 mg Neurontin 200 Lamictal 10 Celexa 0.65 Xanax and 5 mg Ambien Feb 10 2014: 62 Lamictal 1.1 Celexa 0.135 Xanax 1.8 Valium Feb 10 2015: 50 Lamictal 0.875 Celexa 0.11 Xanax 1.5 Valium Feb 15 2016: 47.5 Lamictal 0.75 Celexa 0.0875 Xanax 1.42 Valium 2/12/20 12 0.045 0.007 1 May 2021 7 0.01 0.0037 1 Feb 2022 6 0!!! 0.00167 0.98 2.5 mg Ambien Oct 2022 4.5 mg Lamictal (off Celexa, off Xanax) 0.95 Valium Ambien, 1/4 to 1/2 of a 5 mg tablet I'm not a doctor. Any advice I give is just my civilian opinion.
Moderator Emeritus mammaP Posted October 8, 2013 Moderator Emeritus Posted October 8, 2013 I would just like to point out that when I missed a dose of effexor I would get hypermania, right from the start of taking it.It can happen when tapering and easily be misinterpreted as feeling better and lead to another cut too soon when it is actually a withdrawal symptom. I cut too soon at first but soon discovered I had to wait until that passed and stabilised before the next cut.Just something to be aware of.MammaP,This is a great point. I think you meant "hypOmania"..? This is exactly what happened to me. I knew I should taper, but had not found this or similar websites. I cut Pristiq too rapidly, had some anxiety and was definitely hypomanic which, for me, meant I could keep up with other peoples' energy level and activities. For once, I had ENERGY, some appetite, slight sex drive (as compared to none). Then, months after finishing the "taper", I crashed in a big way. Yes Barb, hypOmania......I always get that wrong, lol. I was delighted when I thought I was better so quick, soon came down to earth though! The crash is horrific and devastating **I am not a medical professional, if in doubt please consult a doctor with withdrawal knowledge. Different drugs occasionally (mostly benzos) 1976 - 1981 (no problem) 1993 - 2002 in and out of hospital. every type of drug + ECT. Staring with seroxat 2002 effexor. Tapered March 2012 to March 2013, ending with 5 beads. Withdrawal April 2013 . Reinstated 5 beads reduced to 4 beads May 2013 Restarted taper Nov 2013 OFF EFFEXOR Feb 2015 Tapered atenolol and omeprazole Dec 2013 - May 2014 Tapering tramadol, Feb 2015 100mg , March 2015 50mg July 2017 30mg. May 15 2018 25mg Taking fish oil, magnesium, B12, folic acid, bilberry eyebright for eye pressure. My story http://survivingantidepressants.org/index.php?/topic/4199-hello-mammap-checking-in/page-33 Lesson learned, slow down taper at lower doses. Taper no more than 10% of CURRENT dose if possible
Moderator Emeritus Rhiannon Posted November 4, 2013 Author Moderator Emeritus Posted November 4, 2013 I get hypomanic with cuts sometimes too. I think that's a good point, to be aware that withdrawal can manifest in ways that don't always fit our pictures of "feeling bad." When that happens you have to stop and hold same as with any other withdrawal ramp-up. 1 Started on Prozac and Xanax in 1992 for PTSD after an assault. One drug led to more, the usual story. Got sicker and sicker, but believed I needed the drugs for my "underlying disease". Long story...lost everything. Life savings, home, physical and mental health, relationships, friendships, ability to work, everything. Amitryptiline, Prozac, bupropion, buspirone, flurazepam, diazepam, alprazolam, Paxil, citalopram, lamotrigine, gabapentin...probably more I've forgotten. Started multidrug taper in Feb 2010. Doing a very slow microtaper, down to low doses now and feeling SO much better, getting my old personality and my brain back! Able to work full time, have a full social life, and cope with stress better than ever. Not perfect, but much better. After 23 lost years. Big Pharma has a lot to answer for. And "medicine for profit" is just not a great idea. Feb 15 2010: 300 mg Neurontin 200 Lamictal 10 Celexa 0.65 Xanax and 5 mg Ambien Feb 10 2014: 62 Lamictal 1.1 Celexa 0.135 Xanax 1.8 Valium Feb 10 2015: 50 Lamictal 0.875 Celexa 0.11 Xanax 1.5 Valium Feb 15 2016: 47.5 Lamictal 0.75 Celexa 0.0875 Xanax 1.42 Valium 2/12/20 12 0.045 0.007 1 May 2021 7 0.01 0.0037 1 Feb 2022 6 0!!! 0.00167 0.98 2.5 mg Ambien Oct 2022 4.5 mg Lamictal (off Celexa, off Xanax) 0.95 Valium Ambien, 1/4 to 1/2 of a 5 mg tablet I'm not a doctor. Any advice I give is just my civilian opinion.
Lexy Posted November 4, 2013 Posted November 4, 2013 When tapering and the decrements are so small as in 1-2% monthly, are waves or WDs less intense? I've been micro tapering since the summer i am still getting WDs. From Jan to May of this year I was decreasing by 5-10% and symptoms were nausea, dizziness etc. Now I have mood swings, anxiety on some days, huge headaches. I don't know whether to go back to 5-10% cuts because I can dealnwith nausea and dizziness more than these latter symptoms. Started Effexor August 2012 Sept'12-150mg=extreme anxiety Oct'12 cut half-75mg severe wds Feb 2013 68.5mg. Mar'13- 65mg. Apr'13-59mg. May'13-57mg. June '13-52mg Aug'13 49.75mg. Sep'13-48.75. Nov'13-47mg Dec'13-45..5mg May 2014 42mg. Jun'14 40mg (depressive mood started). Aug'14 -40mg/ started brintellix 2.5mg Oct '14 -39 Nov'14 36.89 Dec'14 34.45 Jan 2015- 31 Feb'15 29mg. Mar'15 26.72. Apr'15 24.48. May'15 22.31mg. Jun'15 20.30mg Aug'15-18.89. Oct'15 16.96. Nov/16- 16.10. Dec/15- 15mg Jan 2016-14.22. May'16 11.45. Aug'16-9.60. Sep/16- 8.88mg. Oct/16- 8.39mg. Nov/16- 8.13. Dec/16- 7.89
chicken Posted January 2, 2015 Posted January 2, 2015 Rhi, You mentioned in another thread about getting to a very low dose and never getting off, let's say for example .3mg. How would this play out if you had to spend an extended time in the hospital or nursing home for another reason. I found that they will want to give you what is prescribed on the bottle rather than what you've tapered down to. This happended to me when I went in the crisis center. I had to give them my meds and they admistered them. I tried to explain that the doctor had tapered me down and was letting me take less than what was written on the bottle. They tried to say that I have to take what is written on the bottle. Anyway, what if you decide to stay on the a small dose and never get off and you end up in a nursing home. They are just going to give you your full dose no matter what. This is why I think it is better to try to get completely off if you can. Prozac 1999-2009 quit semi cold turkey. 2012 Placed on Seroquel 25 mg, Tranxene (Clorezepate) 3.75 mg 3x a day, Remeron 30 mg for anxiety/akathesia. Weaned off Seroquel and Tranxene .to Remeron 15 Mg. In May 2014 tried quitting Remeron at its lowest dose. Had severe withdrawals.Reinstated Remeron at 30 mg by doctor. August 5 2014 entered hospital. Doctor pulled the Remeron and bridged it to Pamelor (Nortriptyline) 40mg and Zyprexa 2.5mg.After removing the Remeron all my bad symptoms went away and I am stable. 9/11/14 - 7.5 mg tranxene, 40mg Pamelor, Zyprexa 2.5mg 12/29/14 - 20mg Pamelor, 1/6/15, 7/31/15 3.5mg, 8/10/15 3.2 mg, 9/15/15 2.2mg, 10/15/15 1.8mg (Feb 2016 - 1.4mg Pamelor only - OFF OF TRANXENE AND ZYPREXA SINCE DEC 2014 BENZO FREE Since 2014. Nortrityline (Pamelor) .8mg Aug 2016 March 2017 DRUG FREE
Moderator Emeritus mammaP Posted January 2, 2015 Moderator Emeritus Posted January 2, 2015 I don't think Rhi is suggesting that people just stay on Chicken, like the doctors do, it is in case some people just can't get off that last teeny bit. It is the same as you say, it is definitely best to get off if you can. I agree with you that it would be difficult for people who go into hospital or nursing homes, especially psychiatric hospitals and we hope that doctors would respect patients rights. I am going into hospital for surgery next month and will take my effexor beads with me but will not be handing them over! I don't have them on prescription now and as far as the gp is concerned I am off it. I have enough to last me my lifetime at the rate I'm on so it isn't much of a problem. Last time I was in hospital I was taking half the prescribed dose and just split the capsule in the bathroom, where there's a will there's a way **I am not a medical professional, if in doubt please consult a doctor with withdrawal knowledge. Different drugs occasionally (mostly benzos) 1976 - 1981 (no problem) 1993 - 2002 in and out of hospital. every type of drug + ECT. Staring with seroxat 2002 effexor. Tapered March 2012 to March 2013, ending with 5 beads. Withdrawal April 2013 . Reinstated 5 beads reduced to 4 beads May 2013 Restarted taper Nov 2013 OFF EFFEXOR Feb 2015 Tapered atenolol and omeprazole Dec 2013 - May 2014 Tapering tramadol, Feb 2015 100mg , March 2015 50mg July 2017 30mg. May 15 2018 25mg Taking fish oil, magnesium, B12, folic acid, bilberry eyebright for eye pressure. My story http://survivingantidepressants.org/index.php?/topic/4199-hello-mammap-checking-in/page-33 Lesson learned, slow down taper at lower doses. Taper no more than 10% of CURRENT dose if possible
Meimeiquest Posted January 2, 2015 Posted January 2, 2015 "Real" medical facilities can't give drugs based on labels, it has to be specifically ordered by someone licensed to prescribe. Doctors etc. can order "patient may self-administer xyz." And pharmacists can find a way to "whip up" the doctor's orders. But you know the country song "All I Want is Done"? We could all dance to that! 1st round Prozac 1989/90, clear depression symptoms. 2nd round Prozac started 1999 when admitted to dr. I was tired. Prozac pooped out, switch to Cymbalta 3/2006. Diagnosed with bipolar disorder due to mania 6/2006--then I was taken abruptly off Cymbalta and didn't know I had SSRI withdrawal. Lots of meds for my intractable "bipolar" symptoms. Zyprexa started about 9/06, mostly 5mg. Tapered 4/12 through12/29/12 Wellbutrin. XL 300 mg started 1/07, tapered 1/18/13 through 7/8/13 Oxazepam mostly continuously since 6/06, 30mg since 12/12, tapered 1.17.14 through 8.26.15 11/06 Lithium 600mg twice daily, 2.2.14 400mg TID DIY liquid, 2.12.14 1150mg, 3.2.14 1100mg, 3.18.14 1075mg, 4/14 updose to 1100mg, 6.1.14 900 mg capsules 7.8.14 810mg, 8.17.14 725mg, 8.24.24 700mg...10.22.14 487.5mg, 3.9.15 475mg, 4.1.15 462.5mg 4.21.15 450mg 8.11.15 375mg, 11.28.15 362.5mg, back to 375mg four days later, 3.4.16 updose to 475 (too much going on to risk trouble) 9/4/13 Toprol-XL 25mg daily for sudden hypertension, tapered 11.12.13 through 5.3.14, last 10 days or so switched to atenolol 7.4.14 Started Walsh Protocol 56 years old
Moderator Emeritus Rhiannon Posted January 2, 2015 Author Moderator Emeritus Posted January 2, 2015 MammaP thanks for digging this up! I write stuff and then lose it in the mists of forum time. I stuck a link to it in the Best Of thread in Off Topic so hopefully I will be able to find it in the future. And yes what everyone said about getting off meds. Of course ideally I hope to get off everything, but if I can't I'm still better off at low doses. I think doctors can write prescriptions for any dose to be compounded, the important thing would be to make sure your family or whoever's going to be looking after you (if you can't yourself) knows what your doses are. I've been thinking of getting a MedicAlert bracelet and having my doses listed there, just haven't gotten around to it yet. Started on Prozac and Xanax in 1992 for PTSD after an assault. One drug led to more, the usual story. Got sicker and sicker, but believed I needed the drugs for my "underlying disease". Long story...lost everything. Life savings, home, physical and mental health, relationships, friendships, ability to work, everything. Amitryptiline, Prozac, bupropion, buspirone, flurazepam, diazepam, alprazolam, Paxil, citalopram, lamotrigine, gabapentin...probably more I've forgotten. Started multidrug taper in Feb 2010. Doing a very slow microtaper, down to low doses now and feeling SO much better, getting my old personality and my brain back! Able to work full time, have a full social life, and cope with stress better than ever. Not perfect, but much better. After 23 lost years. Big Pharma has a lot to answer for. And "medicine for profit" is just not a great idea. Feb 15 2010: 300 mg Neurontin 200 Lamictal 10 Celexa 0.65 Xanax and 5 mg Ambien Feb 10 2014: 62 Lamictal 1.1 Celexa 0.135 Xanax 1.8 Valium Feb 10 2015: 50 Lamictal 0.875 Celexa 0.11 Xanax 1.5 Valium Feb 15 2016: 47.5 Lamictal 0.75 Celexa 0.0875 Xanax 1.42 Valium 2/12/20 12 0.045 0.007 1 May 2021 7 0.01 0.0037 1 Feb 2022 6 0!!! 0.00167 0.98 2.5 mg Ambien Oct 2022 4.5 mg Lamictal (off Celexa, off Xanax) 0.95 Valium Ambien, 1/4 to 1/2 of a 5 mg tablet I'm not a doctor. Any advice I give is just my civilian opinion.
nz11 Posted January 5, 2015 Posted January 5, 2015 This is brilliant advise yes i totally agree 'start slow is the way to go' as in 2.5 % say and hold. And watch for a good 6 -8 weeks to see if the coast is clear. Yep wdl symptoms are delayed and cumulative imo so i'm on the same page here. And yes i kept a journal...for just over two years. Journal is a great idea too. Thought for the day: Lets stand up, and let’s speak out , together. G Olsen We have until the 14th. Feb 2018. URGENT REQUEST Please consider submitting for the petition on Prescribed Drug Dependence and Withdrawal currently awaiting its third consideration at the Scottish Parliament. You don't even have to be from Scotland. By clicking on the link below you can read some of the previous submissions but be warned many of them are quite harrowing. http://www.parliament.scot/GettingInvolved/Petitions/PE01651 Please tell them about your problems taking and withdrawing from antidepressants and/or benzos. Send by email to petitions@parliament.scot and quote PE01651 in the subject heading. Keep to a maximum of 3 sides of A4 and you can't name for legal reasons any doctor you have consulted. Tell them if you wish to remain anonymous. We need the numbers to help convince the committee members we are not isolated cases. You have until mid February. Thank you Recovering paxil addict None of the published articles shed light on what ssri's ... actually do or what their hazards might be. Healy 2013. This is so true, with anything you get on these drugs, dependance, tapering, withdrawal symptoms, side effects, just silent. And if there is something mentioned then their is a serious disconnect between what is said and reality! "Every time I read of a multi-person shooting, I always presume that person had just started a SSRI or had just stopped." Dr Mosher. Me too! Over two decades later, the number of antidepressant prescriptions a year is slightly more than the number of people in the Western world. Most (nine out of 10) prescriptions are for patients who faced difficulties on stopping, equating to about a tenth of the population. These patients are often advised to continue treatment because their difficulties indicate they need ongoing treatment, just as a person with diabetes needs insulin. Healy 2015 I believe the ssri era will soon stand as one of the most shameful in the history of medicine. Healy 2015 Let people help people ... in a natural, kind, non-addictive (and non-big pharma) way. J Broadley 2017
Moderator Emeritus Songbird Posted January 5, 2015 Moderator Emeritus Posted January 5, 2015 Do many people find that a taper rate that was once optimal can become sub-optimal down the track? Just wondering if that's something people should be alert to? From what I've seen, some people seem to be able to do the regular schedule taper no problem, others seem to crash suddenly at a certain dose. I believe that for many people, some dose ranges can be more difficult than others, so tapering rates can be changed to suit. For example, I never had any trouble getting down to 10mg from higher doses, I could do big drops down no problem. Under about 8mg it got much harder and I had to do much smaller drops with much longer holds until I was doing really tiny drops of 0.05mg. Since I got under 4 mg things have begun to get a little bit easier and I've been able to taper a little bit faster. Basically I adjust based on how things are going for me. If things become difficult I change to smaller drops, if things get easier I'll try a slightly bigger drop (I mean slightly, they are still small drops). Each time I hold until I feel stable and ready for the next drop, no matter how long it takes. There were some years I only did a couple of drops because it took me many months to stabilise and I didn't dare drop again while feeling so unstable. 2001–2002 paroxetine 2003 citalopram 2004-2008 paroxetine (various failed tapers) 2008 paroxetine slow taper down to 2016 Aug off paroxetine 2016-2017 citalopram May 20mg Oct 15mg … slow taper down to 4.8mg 2018-2023 Feb 4.6mg slow taper down to 1.0mg 2024 Jan 0.9mg Mar 0.8mg May 0.7mg Aug 0.6mg Oct 0.5mg
Moderator Emeritus Rhiannon Posted January 8, 2015 Author Moderator Emeritus Posted January 8, 2015 Yep, that's why I say your body is the only expert and true guru when it comes to tapering. Just be careful to go slow enough that if your body says "enough!" you haven't already gotten too far ahead of its ability to adapt and recover. Started on Prozac and Xanax in 1992 for PTSD after an assault. One drug led to more, the usual story. Got sicker and sicker, but believed I needed the drugs for my "underlying disease". Long story...lost everything. Life savings, home, physical and mental health, relationships, friendships, ability to work, everything. Amitryptiline, Prozac, bupropion, buspirone, flurazepam, diazepam, alprazolam, Paxil, citalopram, lamotrigine, gabapentin...probably more I've forgotten. Started multidrug taper in Feb 2010. Doing a very slow microtaper, down to low doses now and feeling SO much better, getting my old personality and my brain back! Able to work full time, have a full social life, and cope with stress better than ever. Not perfect, but much better. After 23 lost years. Big Pharma has a lot to answer for. And "medicine for profit" is just not a great idea. Feb 15 2010: 300 mg Neurontin 200 Lamictal 10 Celexa 0.65 Xanax and 5 mg Ambien Feb 10 2014: 62 Lamictal 1.1 Celexa 0.135 Xanax 1.8 Valium Feb 10 2015: 50 Lamictal 0.875 Celexa 0.11 Xanax 1.5 Valium Feb 15 2016: 47.5 Lamictal 0.75 Celexa 0.0875 Xanax 1.42 Valium 2/12/20 12 0.045 0.007 1 May 2021 7 0.01 0.0037 1 Feb 2022 6 0!!! 0.00167 0.98 2.5 mg Ambien Oct 2022 4.5 mg Lamictal (off Celexa, off Xanax) 0.95 Valium Ambien, 1/4 to 1/2 of a 5 mg tablet I'm not a doctor. Any advice I give is just my civilian opinion.
Moderator Emeritus dalsaan Posted January 9, 2015 Moderator Emeritus Posted January 9, 2015 Rhi you once posted a link to a site where you can by small numbers of pipettes for microtapering. I cant find the link, do you have it handy and do you have any recommendations on what to buy? I want to be able to drop very small amounts like .05 ml if possible D Please note - I am not a medical practitioner and I do not give medical advice. I offer an opinion based on my own experiences, reading and discussion with others.On Effexor for 2 months at the start of 2005. Had extreme insomnia as an adverse reaction. Changed to mirtazapine. Have been trying to get off since mid 2008 with numerous failures including CTs and slow (but not slow enough tapers)Have slow tapered at 10 per cent or less for years. I have liquid mirtazapine made at a compounding chemist. Was on 1.6 ml as at 19 March 2014. Dropped to 1.5 ml 7 June 2014. Dropped to 1.4 in about September. Dropped to 1.3 on 20 December 2014. Dropped to 1.2 in mid Jan 2015. Dropped to 1 ml in late Feb 2015. I think my old medication had run out of puff so I tried 1ml when I got the new stuff and it seems to be going ok. Sleep has been good over the last week (as of 13/3/15). Dropped to 1/2 ml 14/11/15 Fatigue still there as are memory and cognition problems. Sleep is patchy but liveable compared to what it has been in the past. DRUG FREE - as at 1st May 2017 >My intro post is here - http://survivingantidepressants.org/index.php?/topic/2250-dalsaan
Member cymbaltawithdrawal5600 Posted January 9, 2015 Member Posted January 9, 2015 http://survivingantidepressants.org/index.php?/topic/235-using-an-oral-syringe-and-other-tapering-techniques/#entry8103 What happened and how I arrived here: http://survivingantidepressants.org/index.php?/topic/4243-cymbaltawithdrawal5600-introduction/#entry50878 July 2016 I have decided to leave my story here at SA unfinished. I have left my contact information in my profile for anyone who wishes to talk to me. I have a posting history spanning nearly 4 years and 3000+ posts all over the site. Thank you to all who participated in my recovery. I'll miss talking to you but know that I'll be cheering you on from the sidelines, suffering and rejoicing with you in spirit, as you go on in your journey.
Moderator Emeritus Songbird Posted January 9, 2015 Moderator Emeritus Posted January 9, 2015 You can do 0.05ml drops with a 1ml syringe, that's what I've been doing. Some pharmacies stock 1ml syringes, so when I find them I usually buy several at a time as eventually the numbers wear off. 2001–2002 paroxetine 2003 citalopram 2004-2008 paroxetine (various failed tapers) 2008 paroxetine slow taper down to 2016 Aug off paroxetine 2016-2017 citalopram May 20mg Oct 15mg … slow taper down to 4.8mg 2018-2023 Feb 4.6mg slow taper down to 1.0mg 2024 Jan 0.9mg Mar 0.8mg May 0.7mg Aug 0.6mg Oct 0.5mg
Moderator Emeritus Rhiannon Posted February 1, 2015 Author Moderator Emeritus Posted February 1, 2015 You can also dilute the meds more so you can get the same dose with a bigger volume. (Like if you have twice as much total solution, you'd have the same amount in 0.1 mL that you would get in 0.05 mL if it was more concentrated.) Started on Prozac and Xanax in 1992 for PTSD after an assault. One drug led to more, the usual story. Got sicker and sicker, but believed I needed the drugs for my "underlying disease". Long story...lost everything. Life savings, home, physical and mental health, relationships, friendships, ability to work, everything. Amitryptiline, Prozac, bupropion, buspirone, flurazepam, diazepam, alprazolam, Paxil, citalopram, lamotrigine, gabapentin...probably more I've forgotten. Started multidrug taper in Feb 2010. Doing a very slow microtaper, down to low doses now and feeling SO much better, getting my old personality and my brain back! Able to work full time, have a full social life, and cope with stress better than ever. Not perfect, but much better. After 23 lost years. Big Pharma has a lot to answer for. And "medicine for profit" is just not a great idea. Feb 15 2010: 300 mg Neurontin 200 Lamictal 10 Celexa 0.65 Xanax and 5 mg Ambien Feb 10 2014: 62 Lamictal 1.1 Celexa 0.135 Xanax 1.8 Valium Feb 10 2015: 50 Lamictal 0.875 Celexa 0.11 Xanax 1.5 Valium Feb 15 2016: 47.5 Lamictal 0.75 Celexa 0.0875 Xanax 1.42 Valium 2/12/20 12 0.045 0.007 1 May 2021 7 0.01 0.0037 1 Feb 2022 6 0!!! 0.00167 0.98 2.5 mg Ambien Oct 2022 4.5 mg Lamictal (off Celexa, off Xanax) 0.95 Valium Ambien, 1/4 to 1/2 of a 5 mg tablet I'm not a doctor. Any advice I give is just my civilian opinion.
Brighid Posted February 1, 2015 Posted February 1, 2015 Wow, Songbird, your eyes are better than mine! One drop on a 1 ml syringe is as small as I can manage to measure. Rhi, do you happen to know whether it's possible to dilute a compounded liquid for the purpose of measuring smaller increments? I've asked a couple of pharmacists and gotten different answers. 1990 - mid-2000s: on and off several ADs, including Prozac, Effexor, Celexa, and Wellbutrin. Many side-effects and hard withdrawals. 1990 - mid-2000s: Klonopin 0.5 mg per day prn for sleep & anxiety. mid-2000s - 2011: switched dosing to Klonopin 0.25 twice-daily for the above plus back pain (!) Never increased dose. 2011 - began taper with missteps; then @ 5% of current dose every 2 wks, using combo of pill and compounded liquid. 2012: yearlong hold at 0.165 bid to undergo specialized PT for pelvic floor syndrome, prob triggered by high muscle tone from taper. 2013: resumed taper @ 5% of current dose per month, from 0.165 down to 0.155 bid. 3/2013 - 6/2014: another year+ hold due to bad foot fracture & family trauma (sudden deaths). 6/2014 - 1/2015: resumed taper at 5% month; from 0.155 down to 0.125 bid (half original dose; or 1/4 of 0.5 tab). Held two months. 3/2015: Started 0.125 compounded tablets pure clonazepam, twice a day. Supplements: fish oil, probiotics, cranberry, Vit C, Vit D, turmeric, magnesium powder, tablets, oil. Also occasional baby aspirin. Exquisitely sensitive to meds. Working full time. In my late fifties. My intro thread: http://survivingantidepressants.org/index.php?/topic/8733-brighids-intro-my-slow-mo-clonazepam-taper-hits-a-speed-bump/?p=145214
Moderator Emeritus Rhiannon Posted February 2, 2015 Author Moderator Emeritus Posted February 2, 2015 Brighid, I am assuming it is. My PA (who is kind of an idiot) is insisting on putting me onto liquid diazepam instead of the tablets, so I'll be experimenting with this myself very soon (like, this week). But the pharmacist's knowledge trumps mine on this one. Maybe you should ask a few more and go with the majority vote. Started on Prozac and Xanax in 1992 for PTSD after an assault. One drug led to more, the usual story. Got sicker and sicker, but believed I needed the drugs for my "underlying disease". Long story...lost everything. Life savings, home, physical and mental health, relationships, friendships, ability to work, everything. Amitryptiline, Prozac, bupropion, buspirone, flurazepam, diazepam, alprazolam, Paxil, citalopram, lamotrigine, gabapentin...probably more I've forgotten. Started multidrug taper in Feb 2010. Doing a very slow microtaper, down to low doses now and feeling SO much better, getting my old personality and my brain back! Able to work full time, have a full social life, and cope with stress better than ever. Not perfect, but much better. After 23 lost years. Big Pharma has a lot to answer for. And "medicine for profit" is just not a great idea. Feb 15 2010: 300 mg Neurontin 200 Lamictal 10 Celexa 0.65 Xanax and 5 mg Ambien Feb 10 2014: 62 Lamictal 1.1 Celexa 0.135 Xanax 1.8 Valium Feb 10 2015: 50 Lamictal 0.875 Celexa 0.11 Xanax 1.5 Valium Feb 15 2016: 47.5 Lamictal 0.75 Celexa 0.0875 Xanax 1.42 Valium 2/12/20 12 0.045 0.007 1 May 2021 7 0.01 0.0037 1 Feb 2022 6 0!!! 0.00167 0.98 2.5 mg Ambien Oct 2022 4.5 mg Lamictal (off Celexa, off Xanax) 0.95 Valium Ambien, 1/4 to 1/2 of a 5 mg tablet I'm not a doctor. Any advice I give is just my civilian opinion.
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