Psycho-Babble Medication Thread 993350

Shown: posts 1 to 12 of 12. This is the beginning of the thread.

 

ssri's /potency

Posted by crazyjoe on August 9, 2011, at 22:03:48

how would you rate the ssri's in terms of potency with the most potent first

 

Re: ssri's /potency » crazyjoe

Posted by Phillipa on August 9, 2011, at 23:56:15

In reply to ssri's /potency, posted by crazyjoe on August 9, 2011, at 22:03:48

Tough to answer as we are all different and treating different things as some more for anxiety, some, depression more, and some people need more norephenprine than others. I know the strongest for me was prozac as increased anxiety. Some say effexor? I wonder what a google search would say. And the norephenprine would be an SNRI not an SSRI. Phillipa

 

Re: ssri's /potency

Posted by crazyjoe on August 10, 2011, at 9:12:34

In reply to Re: ssri's /potency » crazyjoe, posted by Phillipa on August 9, 2011, at 23:56:15

do yooooooou think noreprinephrine helps people with bipolar/ocd took cymbalta for 8 months think it turned me around sometimes...am know on 40 celexa only for 3 weeks ....does the sweatin stop over time....did u like cymbalta

 

Re: ssri's /potency » crazyjoe

Posted by Phidippus on August 10, 2011, at 19:03:57

In reply to ssri's /potency, posted by crazyjoe on August 9, 2011, at 22:03:48

There's no way to measure potency, but I'm sure there's some study out their that has studied efficacy-for instance I know Prozac scores a little higher in treating OCD than Luvox.

P

 

Re: ssri's /potency

Posted by jono_in_adelaide on August 10, 2011, at 19:37:02

In reply to ssri's /potency, posted by crazyjoe on August 9, 2011, at 22:03:48

ESCITRALOPRAM AND SERTRALINE FIRST

CITRALOPRAM AND PAROXETINE SECOND

FLUOXETINE LAST

 

Re: ssri's /potency » jono_in_adelaide

Posted by Phillipa on August 10, 2011, at 19:58:19

In reply to Re: ssri's /potency, posted by jono_in_adelaide on August 10, 2011, at 19:37:02

Where did you find this info? Seriously? Phillipa

 

Re: ssri's /potency

Posted by jono_in_adelaide on August 11, 2011, at 1:07:31

In reply to Re: ssri's /potency » jono_in_adelaide, posted by Phillipa on August 10, 2011, at 19:58:19

Google

Of course the infomation applies to groups, not indiciduals (if 1000 people are treated with Zoloft and 1000 are treated with Prozac, more in the Zoloft group will likely respont), it doesnt mean that Zoloft is the strongest drug for you, or the best drug for everyone.

Averages can conceal as much as they reveal!

 

Re: ssri's /potency

Posted by bleauberry on August 12, 2011, at 17:52:29

In reply to ssri's /potency, posted by crazyjoe on August 9, 2011, at 22:03:48

I have seen some potency charts somewhere. I think the order was paxil strongest, then lexapro, zoloft. Not sure about the others. In my own experience with all of them I would agree with paxil being the most potent, but prozac the most effective. imo

The way they measure potency is by how strong the affinity of the drug is to its target receptors. But it doesn't tell us anything about the myriad of ways the meds manipulate all kinds of other physiological systems within us, which may or may not play a major role in the remission or not. So merely looking at potency as a measuring stick I don't think tells the whole story.

 

Re: ssri's /potency » bleauberry

Posted by Conundrum on August 13, 2011, at 8:54:25

In reply to Re: ssri's /potency, posted by bleauberry on August 12, 2011, at 17:52:29

> I have seen some potency charts somewhere. I think the order was paxil strongest, then lexapro, zoloft. Not sure about the others. In my own experience with all of them I would agree with paxil being the most potent, but prozac the most effective. imo
>
> The way they measure potency is by how strong the affinity of the drug is to its target receptors. But it doesn't tell us anything about the myriad of ways the meds manipulate all kinds of other physiological systems within us, which may or may not play a major role in the remission or not. So merely looking at potency as a measuring stick I don't think tells the whole story.

Yes, there are different ways to talk about potency. You could say which is the most potent 5HT reuptake inhibitor? In which Paxil probably wins because it is the tool that labs use to determine how strongly other drugs bind to the serotonin transporter. Then you could ask, which drug is most selective, meaning which drug increases serotonin the most in relationship to the drugs effects on other genes, in which case Lexapro seems to be the most selective. Which is most effective? That's the hard part and most doctors will have a favorite.

 

Re: ssri's /potency » crazyjoe

Posted by viper1431 on August 13, 2011, at 11:23:36

In reply to ssri's /potency, posted by crazyjoe on August 9, 2011, at 22:03:48

potency on seratonin:
Sertraline 0.19 0.85 3.40
Paroxetine 0.29 0.44 0.73
Clomipramine 1.50 2.25 --
Citalopram 1.80 2.71 --
Fluvoxamine 3.80 3.08 --
Fluoxetine 6.8 87.0 93.0
Imipramine 35.00 31.80 41.00
Amitriptyline 39.00 67.20 84.00
Desipramine 200.00 182.00 180.00
http://www.preskorn.com/books/ssri_s3.html

> how would you rate the ssri's in terms of potency with the most potent first

 

Re: ssri's /potency

Posted by crazyjoe on August 13, 2011, at 12:14:56

In reply to Re: ssri's /potency » crazyjoe, posted by viper1431 on August 13, 2011, at 11:23:36

don't understand this at all--in simple terms can you relate that to me strongest to weakest

 

Re: ssri's /potency » Conundrum

Posted by SLS on August 13, 2011, at 12:17:54

In reply to Re: ssri's /potency » bleauberry, posted by Conundrum on August 13, 2011, at 8:54:25

> > I have seen some potency charts somewhere. I think the order was paxil strongest, then lexapro, zoloft. Not sure about the others. In my own experience with all of them I would agree with paxil being the most potent, but prozac the most effective. imo
> >
> > The way they measure potency is by how strong the affinity of the drug is to its target receptors. But it doesn't tell us anything about the myriad of ways the meds manipulate all kinds of other physiological systems within us, which may or may not play a major role in the remission or not. So merely looking at potency as a measuring stick I don't think tells the whole story.
>
> Yes, there are different ways to talk about potency. You could say which is the most potent 5HT reuptake inhibitor? In which Paxil probably wins because it is the tool that labs use to determine how strongly other drugs bind to the serotonin transporter. Then you could ask, which drug is most selective, meaning which drug increases serotonin the most in relationship to the drugs effects on other genes, in which case Lexapro seems to be the most selective. Which is most effective? That's the hard part and most doctors will have a favorite.


Exactly.


- Scott


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.