Posted by Quintal on February 23, 2007, at 2:25:48
In reply to Who is in denial?, posted by Declan on February 23, 2007, at 1:47:33
>Seriously, though, don't take opiates unless you absolutely have to. They are addictive - especially for depressed people. I have a lifelong addiction to these drugs that I have only been abstain >from for a few years at a time. They always come back to haunt me, especially when I relapse on my depression / anxiety. I have been clean from heroin for a long time, but I don't think I will >ever be able to kick the pills. They do come in handy if I am in a deep black depression. Rips me right out but dumps me right back when the high wears off.
Everything in that paragraph suggests opiates are acting as reliable and powerful antidepressants, so where is the wishful thinking? In that tolerance will very likely develop and depression will return with a vengeance? In truth this is a very likely outcome with any conventional antidepressant. Everyone who has got to the point of considering an opiate will have experienced this already with conventional antidepressants. All of your pessimistic assertions apply equally to benzos, and as I said earlier in the thread, amphetamines. It seems to me that it is more the 'narcotic' label that colors our perception of what happens when opiates are used to treat depression.
There are augmentation strategies that can be used, as well as other drugs that limit, slow down, or prevent tolerance such as lamotrigine that can be taken concomitantly in the hope of prolonging the antidepressant response.
I'm not sure what it is I'm accused of being in denial of.
Q
poster:Quintal
thread:734151
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/20070219/msgs/735290.html