Psycho-Babble Medication Thread 311793

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Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???

Posted by lepus on February 10, 2004, at 17:15:12

In reply to Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » jay, posted by Bob on February 10, 2004, at 16:52:06

> > Just wondering...as I heard some research that the 10 year mark is supposed to be the time that most people on meds find their 'optimal' treatment?? I feel like I am sometimes "close", but at many (and I *emphasize* that!) others I feel horrible and like I have gotten nowhere.
> >
> > Jay
>
> I've been on meds for about 12 years now, and I've never felt worse or more hopeless. Each new medecine I tried was as equally unacceptable as the last. No here I am on lithium, Celexa, and Welbutrin. I sleep to much, have mysterious undiagnosable muscle tension and pressure, irritablility, excessive weight, and complete loss of sexual desire. About the only thing that the meds are doing for me currently, is staving off suicide. Sometimes I still feel like checking out thought.
>
> Bob
>
>

On Depakote, Lexapro, Seroquel and Klonopin and I echo Bob's sentiments. The best I felt was off the meds only to be told when my anxiety came back this fall that I was just hypomanic for a year. I've been going through this since I was 11 and am 29 now.

Too young to throw in the towel I suppose, but too old to hope for a normal life.

When are the drugs companies going to look for something new??? I still think psychiatry is in an age of barbarism.

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???

Posted by Flipsactown on February 10, 2004, at 18:53:21

In reply to Who has been on meds for 10+ years???, posted by jay on February 10, 2004, at 16:43:02

I have been on AD's for over 12 years. I am currently in the process of maybe switching AD's. I have been on prozac, remeron, lamictal, paxil, celexa, effexor, zoloft, elavil and desipramine. Because of the "poop out" factor, every couple of years, I had to switch to another AD's. As far as reaching "optimal" treatment, I have yet to experience it.

Flipsactown


> Just wondering...as I heard some research that the 10 year mark is supposed to be the time that most people on meds find their 'optimal' treatment?? I feel like I am sometimes "close", but at many (and I *emphasize* that!) others I feel horrible and like I have gotten nowhere.
>
> Jay

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » lepus

Posted by Bob on February 10, 2004, at 19:32:29

In reply to Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???, posted by lepus on February 10, 2004, at 17:15:12


>
> Too young to throw in the towel I suppose, but too old to hope for a normal life.
>
> When are the drugs companies going to look for something new??? I still think psychiatry is in an age of barbarism.
>


God, I know what you mean. One of the hardest things for me to deal with on a daily basis is the tremendous loss. I look at all the people around me, and all those I know, and realize I will never get that back. Heck, even if I was completely better tomorrow (about a 1 in 1 billion chance or worse), I'm just way too far behind the game.

I too have felt that recently, the new drugs have fallen WAY off. In the nineties there was always something new out there, it seemed. Then it turned into promises of something right around the corner. Now, practically nothing. Heck, even the "me-too" drugs like Reboxetine are getting crushed. The drug companies won't look for something novel until they cannot make mad money on the current SSRI hypothesis anymore. It's too risky to try developing compounds about which almost nothing is known. It's a waste of money for them. I wouldn't be surprised if we don't have a breakthrough for decades, or even longer.

Bob


 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » lepus

Posted by Parisss on February 11, 2004, at 1:19:59

In reply to Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???, posted by lepus on February 10, 2004, at 17:15:12

I agree with all of you! I keep wondering when that "magic" combination will hit me and I can stop adjusting my medications.

I am about at the 15-16 year mark and no where closer to knowing what is right for me than when I started. Actually when I started I just took Prozac and Xanax and was fine. I am not sure how I spiralled from there.

Neanderthal for sure. I did try to "check out" in late December. I suppose if I really wanted to do it I would not be here saying that. I just want to be able to function (work and blend) without having to reveal my problem, get special treatment or having to hide when I can't cut it.

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???

Posted by pseudonym on February 11, 2004, at 2:12:56

In reply to Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » lepus, posted by Bob on February 10, 2004, at 19:32:29

I have more hope that than. I know Cymbalta should be out soon (provided this recent suicide doesn't turn out to be fatal to the drug's introduction), and failing that pregabalin, and failing that ocinaplon. My primary DX is social anxiety and Klonopin is helping in this regard. Ocinaplon is being held up due to some FDA safety concerns over a case of jaundice which they conjecture might be drug related.

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???

Posted by Ilene on February 11, 2004, at 9:13:33

In reply to Who has been on meds for 10+ years???, posted by jay on February 10, 2004, at 16:43:02

> Just wondering...as I heard some research that the 10 year mark is supposed to be the time that most people on meds find their 'optimal' treatment?? I feel like I am sometimes "close", but at many (and I *emphasize* that!) others I feel horrible and like I have gotten nowhere.
>
> Jay

I've been on meds for about 16 years. The first drug I tried was desipramine. It worked! I think I was still dysthymic, but not intensely depressed. I stopped taking it when I was trying to have a baby; after he was born the desipramine didn't work anymore. Then I started Prozac, which worked until I moved about 9 years ago and my life fell apart. Since then I have taken a pharmacy's worth of drugs. The only thing that works is Klonopin, but it doesn't help my depression, just my anxiety

I've never read anything about a 10-yr. mark.

I.

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???

Posted by Sooshi on February 11, 2004, at 9:21:35

In reply to Who has been on meds for 10+ years???, posted by jay on February 10, 2004, at 16:43:02

I'm at the 15+ year mark, and it's only getting worse. I hate for the younger set to be reading these posts, though...and the discouragement they might feel. Do you think there will be better drugs/therapies on the horizon to help them, as there was to help me compared to the generations before? (Example: my mother, who was diagnosed a schizophrenic in the 1950's [she was Bipolar] and given megadoses of antipsyhcotics and ECT, and now has severe tardive dyskenesia & organic brain damage) I can only hope things will get better. I need things to get better, for the sake of my children, who might possibly inherit this monster.....

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???

Posted by Bill LL on February 11, 2004, at 9:30:25

In reply to Who has been on meds for 10+ years???, posted by jay on February 10, 2004, at 16:43:02

I have. For me, AD's have been very helpful. Especially for my anxiety. Before drugs I was suicidal. Now I am reasonably happy and can enjoy life.

According to a recent Newsweek magazine article, scientists now beleive that AD's probably do not work by increasing serotonin (and other transmiters). The new thinking is that AD's work by increasing the size of a portion of the brain called the hippocampus. Depressed people tend to have a smaller than average hippocampus (I think CAT scans were used).

In other words, the AD's do in fact affect receptors for serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine, but that's not how they reduce depression.

The article said that scientists will try to develope new drugs with this new depression model in mind.

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???

Posted by HenryO on February 12, 2004, at 1:45:51

In reply to Who has been on meds for 10+ years???, posted by jay on February 10, 2004, at 16:43:02

I have made the ten year mark. I'd say its true it has taken me that long to dial in the right med. But ten years ago there was about a quarter of the meds available.

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???

Posted by cubbybear on February 12, 2004, at 7:53:19

In reply to Who has been on meds for 10+ years???, posted by jay on February 10, 2004, at 16:43:02

Everyone who reads this board regularly knows that i've been taking MAOI Parnate for 20 years. It's been a life-saver from the start.

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???

Posted by terrics on February 12, 2004, at 15:40:59

In reply to Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » jay, posted by Bob on February 10, 2004, at 16:52:06

Over 20 yrs. I got worse with time, but new meds were developed or old meds were used for different disorders so since Aug. I am not too bad. I'm in my 50s so I do not think I'll ever be functioning optimally. terrics

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » cubbybear

Posted by Flipsactown on February 12, 2004, at 15:49:36

In reply to Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???, posted by cubbybear on February 12, 2004, at 7:53:19

Do you know if the MAOI Parnate is effective on unipolar depression? I have been on ADs for over 12 years and it appears that they all have pooped out and no longer effective. The jury is still out on lithium which was added 5 weeks ago to my prozac, remeron and lamictal cocktail. I will be getting my second blood level done tomorrow. Perhaps another increase in lithium dosage will get me to the therapeutic dosage. I am currently taking 900mg. Thanks in advance.

Flipsactown

> Everyone who reads this board regularly knows that i've been taking MAOI Parnate for 20 years. It's been a life-saver from the start.

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???

Posted by terrics on February 12, 2004, at 16:15:31

In reply to Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » cubbybear, posted by Flipsactown on February 12, 2004, at 15:49:36

Lithium was the last thing added to my pile of meds. I never thought it would help, but it does. terrics

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » jay

Posted by noa on February 12, 2004, at 19:31:08

In reply to Who has been on meds for 10+ years???, posted by jay on February 10, 2004, at 16:43:02

I guess I'm at or over ten years now. Started and stopped Prozac twice in late 1980's when it was seen as something that could be used in a time limited way (6-12 months) to 'readjust' the system. Well, no, this didn't exactly work for me. I got better but had more recurrences afterward.

Then, medication in earnest started about 10.5 years ago. I'd say it took about 6 or 7 of those (painful) years to get a combination that worked, together with figuring out some related health problems contributing to the depression.

There's still been some minor "tweaking" of the cocktail since then, like when I added fish oil and discovered that after a while I could lower one of my ADs because of the benefit from the fish oil, or minor changes in some of the smaller players in the cocktail.

6 or 7 years to find the med cocktail.....then the recovery could actually begin. So, yeah, now that it's 10.5, I'm feeling like I'm getting a stride back.

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » jay

Posted by jerrympls on February 12, 2004, at 19:32:25

In reply to Who has been on meds for 10+ years???, posted by jay on February 10, 2004, at 16:43:02

> Just wondering...as I heard some research that the 10 year mark is supposed to be the time that most people on meds find their 'optimal' treatment?? I feel like I am sometimes "close", but at many (and I *emphasize* that!) others I feel horrible and like I have gotten nowhere.
>
> Jay


I've been on meds since 1992. Still have refractory depression.

Jerry

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » Flipsactown

Posted by cubbybear on February 13, 2004, at 5:15:42

In reply to Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » cubbybear, posted by Flipsactown on February 12, 2004, at 15:49:36

> Do you know if the MAOI Parnate is effective on unipolar depression?

Forgive my ignorance, but I'm not sure what unipolar means. Does it mean that the depression does not have a manic part? If so, then I guess my depression is unipolar, since I definitely am not bi-polar or atypical. If I were to stop the Parnate, within a few months I'd plunge back down into major depression, with bad anxiety as one of the symptoms, but no manic behavior or feelings. Hope this helps.

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » Flipsactown » cubbybear

Posted by Flipsactown on February 13, 2004, at 6:39:11

In reply to Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » Flipsactown, posted by cubbybear on February 13, 2004, at 5:15:42

Cubbybear,
You are correct. Unipolar is major depression without mania. I have heard and read about MAOI's but am uncertain how they work. Just in case the lithium, recently added to my cocktail of meds, does not provide adequate depression relief, can you please tell me more about Parnate and how it works? I do know MAOI'S adverse effects on other drugs.

Flipsactown

> > Do you know if the MAOI Parnate is effective on unipolar depression?
>
> Forgive my ignorance, but I'm not sure what unipolar means. Does it mean that the depression does not have a manic part? If so, then I guess my depression is unipolar, since I definitely am not bi-polar or atypical. If I were to stop the Parnate, within a few months I'd plunge back down into major depression, with bad anxiety as one of the symptoms, but no manic behavior or feelings. Hope this helps.

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » Flipsactown

Posted by Parisss on February 13, 2004, at 11:08:50

In reply to Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » Flipsactown » cubbybear, posted by Flipsactown on February 13, 2004, at 6:39:11

Cuddybear, thanks for that clarification for Flip, I am trying to catch on to the acronyms in context so that I don't ask too many questions and look stupid. You all seem to know what they all mean! I think a good post for Dr. Bob would be to explain all of them at the beginning menu of the board?

Also, I took Lithium and have to say it gave me ongoing extreme diarhea and shakes. Coming off of it (after it reached a toxicity level in my system and landed me in the ER) I had the shakes so bad for months that I could not even sign my name or hold a glass of water. Make sure your levels are done often.
Paris

> Cubbybear,
> You are correct. Unipolar is major depression without mania. I have heard and read about MAOI's but am uncertain how they work. Just in case the lithium, recently added to my cocktail of meds, does not provide adequate depression relief, can you please tell me more about Parnate and how it works? I do know MAOI'S adverse effects on other drugs.
>
> Flipsactown
>
> > > Do you know if the MAOI Parnate is effective on unipolar depression?
> >
> > Forgive my ignorance, but I'm not sure what unipolar means. Does it mean that the depression does not have a manic part? If so, then I guess my depression is unipolar, since I definitely am not bi-polar or atypical. If I were to stop the Parnate, within a few months I'd plunge back down into major depression, with bad anxiety as one of the symptoms, but no manic behavior or feelings. Hope this helps.
>
>

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???

Posted by thunder on February 13, 2004, at 15:29:52

In reply to Who has been on meds for 10+ years???, posted by jay on February 10, 2004, at 16:43:02

I was on 70 mg of Parnate for 14+ years with no problems (took Reglan for Ortho. Hypotension and Clonazepam for sleep)before Cardiologist told me it was causing my tachycardia. Turned out my Cardiologist was wrong!

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » thunder

Posted by Bob on February 13, 2004, at 19:05:27

In reply to Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???, posted by thunder on February 13, 2004, at 15:29:52

> I was on 70 mg of Parnate for 14+ years with no problems (took Reglan for Ortho. Hypotension and Clonazepam for sleep)before Cardiologist told me it was causing my tachycardia. Turned out my Cardiologist was wrong!

Are you male or female? Did the Parnate shut you down sexually?

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???

Posted by thunder on February 13, 2004, at 20:01:13

In reply to Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » thunder, posted by Bob on February 13, 2004, at 19:05:27

> > I was on 70 mg of Parnate for 14+ years with no problems (took Reglan for Ortho. Hypotension and Clonazepam for sleep)before Cardiologist told me it was causing my tachycardia. Turned out my Cardiologist was wrong!
>
> Are you male or female? Did the Parnate shut you down sexually?
>
I'm male and the parnate didn't shut me down, but the timing had to be right. Generally in the morning before my morning dose (40mg)(30mg early afternoon).

 

Is this the article? » Bill LL

Posted by profiles on February 16, 2004, at 2:21:51

In reply to Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???, posted by Bill LL on February 11, 2004, at 9:30:25

Going beyond prozac:

http://msnbc.msn.com/id/3606205/


> I have. For me, AD's have been very helpful. Especially for my anxiety. Before drugs I was suicidal. Now I am reasonably happy and can enjoy life.
>
> According to a recent Newsweek magazine article, scientists now beleive that AD's probably do not work by increasing serotonin (and other transmiters). The new thinking is that AD's work by increasing the size of a portion of the brain called the hippocampus. Depressed people tend to have a smaller than average hippocampus (I think CAT scans were used).
>
> In other words, the AD's do in fact affect receptors for serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine, but that's not how they reduce depression.
>
> The article said that scientists will try to develope new drugs with this new depression model in mind.
>
>

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???

Posted by sobeit on March 12, 2004, at 21:01:06

In reply to Who has been on meds for 10+ years???, posted by jay on February 10, 2004, at 16:43:02

> Just wondering...as I heard some research that the 10 year mark is supposed to be the time that most people on meds find their 'optimal' treatment?? I feel like I am sometimes "close", but at many (and I *emphasize* that!) others I feel horrible and like I have gotten nowhere.
>
> Jay


It's been 17 years since I began taking an MAOI (Nardil), initially for social phobia, but now primarily for recurrent atypical depression. It is the only med that has proved successful for me. Biggest battle has been surviving the numerous periods of experimentation with newer, "safer" meds that psychiatrists always want to try due to their fear of a mishap with the MAOI. The most recent attempt a year ago to transfer to a newer medication lead to an incredible episode of depression, resulting in a trial of ECT (that cost me $13,000 out of my own pocket) - it provided no relief at all. Two months later I was allowed to continue the MAOI, resulting in a return to a positive mood in less than two weeks. It would be incredibly interesting to know more about why individuals respond to specific meds -- what neurological characteristics, using fMRI or PET, are evident between someone responding to paxil vs. someone responding to parnate, and so on.

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » sobeit

Posted by Flipsactown on March 12, 2004, at 22:35:06

In reply to Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???, posted by sobeit on March 12, 2004, at 21:01:06

I have been on ADs (Zoloft, Paxil, Celexa, Effexor, Wellbutrin...for over 12 years. I am currently on Prozac, Remeron,Lamictal and Lithium. I have a pdoc appointment next week and I will ask to be put on Nardil. I have read several good comments about it. Why is it that pdoc shy away from MAOI? I know about watching what you eat and something about it interacting with other medication. At this point in my life (fifties) and still experiencing unipolar depression, I will take my chances and just be vigilant in what I ingest.

FST

> > Just wondering...as I heard some research that the 10 year mark is supposed to be the time that most people on meds find their 'optimal' treatment?? I feel like I am sometimes "close", but at many (and I *emphasize* that!) others I feel horrible and like I have gotten nowhere.
> >
> > Jay
>
>
> It's been 17 years since I began taking an MAOI (Nardil), initially for social phobia, but now primarily for recurrent atypical depression. It is the only med that has proved successful for me. Biggest battle has been surviving the numerous periods of experimentation with newer, "safer" meds that psychiatrists always want to try due to their fear of a mishap with the MAOI. The most recent attempt a year ago to transfer to a newer medication lead to an incredible episode of depression, resulting in a trial of ECT (that cost me $13,000 out of my own pocket) - it provided no relief at all. Two months later I was allowed to continue the MAOI, resulting in a return to a positive mood in less than two weeks. It would be incredibly interesting to know more about why individuals respond to specific meds -- what neurological characteristics, using fMRI or PET, are evident between someone responding to paxil vs. someone responding to parnate, and so on.

 

Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years??? » sobeit

Posted by Bob on March 13, 2004, at 0:26:14

In reply to Re: Who has been on meds for 10+ years???, posted by sobeit on March 12, 2004, at 21:01:06

Hey Sobeit, are you a male? Are you able to have any sort of sex on Nardil?

Thanks,

Bob


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