Psycho-Babble Medication Thread 940790

Shown: posts 1 to 11 of 11. This is the beginning of the thread.

 

Visual Imagery and SSRI

Posted by vic80 on March 25, 2010, at 12:46:35

Rx: Escitalopram 20mg 10th week (upped last week from 15mg), Lunesta 1mg ocasionally.
Dx: Depression/Anxiety

First noticed this a month ago that I was unable to have richness and vividness in visual/mental imagery while closing my eyes and lying down one day. It was quite a distressing feeling, and I dismissed it as a temporary aberration. But it turns out that even after a month now, I find myself not able to visualize things (lets say recollect an event from the past, build a fantasy in my mind) with the amount of detail and color I am used to.

I have been suspected to have Depersonalization though the therapist is yet to establish it formally. The DP generally manifests in my awareness of my own thoughts and feeling as though I fill in my blank mind with thoughts.
I suspect that Lexapro has caused this current DP, which I guess is not even little as bad as what people have described in testimonials and forums. Infact at times I am fully functional without this heightened-awareness.

My current pressing concern is this lack of 'visual imagery', which has begun to cause severe distress in me.
I wonder if this has to do anything with SSRI, I have not been able to find online any report or mention of such a happening.

Serotonin does cause alteration in Dopamine levels which I suspect could in turn affect imagination.
A lack/lessening of "visual imagery" constitutes cognitive impairment which has been indicated as a side effect of SSRIs.

I must mention my dreams are as detailed and rich as before. I wonder what do I make out of all this... is it just anxiety - my watchfulness over myself while I try to visualize in my mind blanks me out..

 

Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI » vic80

Posted by Phillipa on March 25, 2010, at 13:23:20

In reply to Visual Imagery and SSRI, posted by vic80 on March 25, 2010, at 12:46:35

You dream well but when close eyes can't vividly visualize things like before? Phillipa

 

Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI

Posted by vic80 on March 25, 2010, at 13:26:42

In reply to Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI » vic80, posted by Phillipa on March 25, 2010, at 13:23:20

> You dream well but when close eyes can't vividly visualize things like before? Phillipa

Thats right!

 

Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI

Posted by manic666 on March 25, 2010, at 14:42:46

In reply to Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI, posted by vic80 on March 25, 2010, at 13:26:42

all ssri,s dull you mind , thats there job to get rid of the crap you suffer in depression//an as for dreams??????? i sleep in a seperate bedroom to my wife after kicking out an punching through ssri nightmares.//you just have to make your mind up what you want//meds with side effects or depression? its your call .

 

Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI

Posted by linkadge on March 25, 2010, at 16:33:59

In reply to Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI, posted by manic666 on March 25, 2010, at 14:42:46

Yeah, I think its becaue the SSRI's supress cholinergic drive. The interplay between monoamines and acetycholine gives us the cognative flexability to rememmber and imagine things.


Linkadge

 

Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI » linkadge

Posted by Phillipa on March 25, 2010, at 19:44:52

In reply to Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI, posted by linkadge on March 25, 2010, at 16:33:59

I don't know I have a very active imagination when eyes closed and dreams are plentiful some good some bad. Phillipa

 

super hero fights my ssri nightmares

Posted by manic666 on March 26, 2010, at 4:24:15

In reply to Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI » linkadge, posted by Phillipa on March 25, 2010, at 19:44:52

linkage.// i actually invented a super hero in my mind to fight in my corner in the ssri terror dream thing.///and it works, i bring him into the dreams to supress them.// im not bullshiting it takes pratice, then he ortamaticly appears cool or what

 

Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI » Phillipa

Posted by ed_uk2010 on March 26, 2010, at 18:10:44

In reply to Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI » vic80, posted by Phillipa on March 25, 2010, at 13:23:20

> You dream well but when close eyes can't vividly visualize things like before? Phillipa

I can't vividly visualise things anyway, meds or no meds!

 

Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI » ed_uk2010

Posted by Phillipa on March 26, 2010, at 18:46:38

In reply to Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI » Phillipa, posted by ed_uk2010 on March 26, 2010, at 18:10:44

Ed you can't? You mean you don't dream either? Love PJxxx

 

Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI » Phillipa

Posted by ed_uk2010 on March 27, 2010, at 9:50:33

In reply to Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI » ed_uk2010, posted by Phillipa on March 26, 2010, at 18:46:38

> Ed you can't? You mean you don't dream either? Love PJxxx

I do dream to some extent but my dreams are not at all vivid and I don't normally remember anything about them. If I do, it's only for a minute or so after waking, then I forget. They're just a collection of thoughts really, not much in the way of imagery. My dreams are never story-like, if that makes sense. The only time I ever have vivid dreams is if I miss a few doses of antidepressant (this is a withdrawal symptom).

 

Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI » ed_uk2010

Posted by Phillipa on March 27, 2010, at 20:09:54

In reply to Re: Visual Imagery and SSRI » Phillipa, posted by ed_uk2010 on March 27, 2010, at 9:50:33

Oh I love to dream most of the time unless they are scarey. Love PJxxx


This is the end of the thread.


Show another thread

URL of post in thread:


Psycho-Babble Medication | Extras | FAQ


[dr. bob] Dr. Bob is Robert Hsiung, MD, bob@dr-bob.org

Script revised: February 4, 2008
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/cgi-bin/pb/mget.pl
Copyright 2006-17 Robert Hsiung.
Owned and operated by Dr. Bob LLC and not the University of Chicago.