Psycho-Babble Medication Thread 1013816

Shown: posts 4 to 28 of 36. Go back in thread:

 

Re: Abilify + TCA?

Posted by Christ_empowered on March 24, 2012, at 21:23:27

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA?, posted by Christ_empowered on March 24, 2012, at 15:13:16

I didn't mean to sound critical. I don't think I realized the severity of your situation.

I don't know that the Abilify will clean up your cognition, unless you're less able to think because of agitation, anxiety, psychosis, paranoia, etc. Stuff that tranquilizers can treat. It can be somewhat stimulating. In people with psychotic disorders, there's some research (probably funded by the Abilify people) that shows cognitive benefits. I don't know if its just because it can tranquilize w/o causing too many cognitive deficits itself, like sedating meds and/or older meds (haldol) can, or if its because of some unique, cognition-improving effect.

I'm usually on 30mgs Abilify these days (apparently bipolar I w/ psychotic features. I got demoted from schizophrenia), so my experiences will be different from yours. I'd try to keep the dose low (lower=more stimulating) and see about taking it maybe a couple times weekly. The long half-life can sometimes lead to a tranquilizing effect when used in depression, because those tiny doses are eliminated so slowly that over time you've basically got full on antipsychotic level amounts of in your blood stream.

Do be careful about TD. I don't mean to scare you, but Abilify @ 15 for over a year gave me stiff gait. I corrected it with orthomolecular medicine (e, c, niacinamide, zinc, selenium, b-100 were the core of this program) and now I can take a full 15-30 (standard-to-high dose for bipolar+schizospectrum) w/o tremor, stiffness, TD, etc.

Good luck!

 

Re: Abilify + TCA?

Posted by kagome on March 24, 2012, at 23:24:16

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA?, posted by Christ_empowered on March 24, 2012, at 21:23:27

Not to take over this thread, but Abilify is supposed to be stimulating? Does that mean I should be taking it in the morning? (I'm also on Parnate, an MAOI not TCA)

Even though I haven't figured out timing I do think it works wonders as an adjunct in general. Just my 2cents.

-kagome

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » kagome

Posted by SLS on March 25, 2012, at 4:50:32

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA?, posted by kagome on March 24, 2012, at 23:24:16

> Not to take over this thread, but Abilify is supposed to be stimulating? Does that mean I should be taking it in the morning? (I'm also on Parnate, an MAOI not TCA)
>
> Even though I haven't figured out timing I do think it works wonders as an adjunct in general. Just my 2cents.
>
> -kagome


I take both Parnate and a TCA along with Abilify. I find that the time of day at which I take Abilify does not change my sleep patterns. Right now, I take it in the morning.


- Scott

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » tensor

Posted by SLS on March 25, 2012, at 4:57:18

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » Christ_empowered, posted by tensor on March 24, 2012, at 16:00:12

> > Isn't there a better way? I took Tofranil-PM plus Abilify for psychotic depression. Worked, but sucked at the same time. TCA+neuroleptic combos are heavy-hitters.
>
> I don't know. I need something heavy. It could be good to have something mood-stabilizing onboard, Lamictal didn't work. If I recover it could maybe delay a relapse.

I know two people who respond to Lamictal and Abilify in combination for whom neither one used alone is adequate. It might not hurt for you to revisit Lamictal before you abandon Abilify for lack of effect.

Without getting two technical, it is my belief that both Abilify and Lamictal serve to increase dopamine activity in the limbic system, albeit through different mechanisms. There is probably a synergism there.


- Scott

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » SLS

Posted by tensor on March 25, 2012, at 5:16:16

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » tensor, posted by SLS on March 25, 2012, at 4:57:18

> I know two people who respond to Lamictal and Abilify in combination for whom neither one used alone is adequate. It might not hurt for you to revisit Lamictal before you abandon Abilify for lack of effect.
>
> Without getting two technical, it is my belief that both Abilify and Lamictal serve to increase dopamine activity in the limbic system, albeit through different mechanisms. There is probably a synergism there.
>
>
> - Scott

Interesting. I'm not currently on Abilify and recently started nortrip, so the Lamictal-Abilify combo is something I will have to keep in mind for future. Not emotionally stable right now and have to do something about it.

/t

 

Thanks for the info! (nm) » Christ_empowered

Posted by tensor on March 25, 2012, at 5:22:07

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA?, posted by Christ_empowered on March 24, 2012, at 21:23:27

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » SLS

Posted by tensor on March 26, 2012, at 8:01:04

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » tensor, posted by SLS on March 25, 2012, at 4:57:18

> I know two people who respond to Lamictal and Abilify in combination for whom neither one used alone is adequate. It might not hurt for you to revisit Lamictal before you abandon Abilify for lack of effect.
>
> - Scott

Do they take it for MDD? I have thinking of this combo lately, in combination with nortrip. I believe it's time to get rid of Remeron once and for all.

/t

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » tensor

Posted by SLS on March 26, 2012, at 8:27:24

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » SLS, posted by tensor on March 26, 2012, at 8:01:04

> Do they take it for MDD?

Yes. No obvious bipolar stuff going on.

> I have thinking of this combo lately, in combination with nortrip.

I like that idea - a lot.

> I believe it's time to get rid of Remeron once and for all.

I know that I keep saying this, but Remeron really should be used at dosages 45 - 90 mg/day to treat MDD. I don't know that you haven't tried this already, but I thought this would be a good opportunity to inform others who might be reading this.

I wish you the best of luck.

Please keep posting. I am very interested to see how you respond to your new treatments.


- Scott

 

Re: Abilify + TCA?

Posted by creepy on March 30, 2012, at 10:20:28

In reply to Abilify + TCA?, posted by tensor on March 24, 2012, at 14:33:49

Could make it worse. abilify has a reputation for causing akathisia in some folks. It can help with depression if you respond to serotonin receptor antagonism versus reuptake inhibition. Two different mechanisms there. It could cause cognitive issues on its own with the dopamine antagonism.
Irritability can mean youre a little mixed on that TCA. You might be able to work around it with a different dose or add on a small amount of a mood stabilizer. Might have to switch to something else.
cognitive impairment can be depression too. Some meds can cover up the depression like a 'psychic painkiller' and the symptoms persist in the background. cognitive decline might be one of those.
If the medication is the cause and it persists after a few weeks it might stick around till you switch to something else.

 

Re: Abilify + TCA?

Posted by banga000 on March 31, 2012, at 7:43:18

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA?, posted by creepy on March 30, 2012, at 10:20:28

Hi,
I used to post here long ago. With help from others, I landed on this combination:

desipramine 100 mg (TCA which acts more on norepinephrine than serotonin)
lamictal 200 mg
Abilify 5 mg
zoloft 50 mg
adderall 30 mg

I must be completely deplete of dopamine and need a lot of stimulating meds. I found the Ability stimulating and the first days it increased anxiety...but then it actually *helped* immensely with anxiety. Abilify is a complex drug, it can alter its effect at different dosages. Right now I'm extremely anxious, but realized I have taken too much Abilify lately (10 mg)and maybe that's too much. It caused slight akasthisia the first years, but it calmed down.
Banga

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » tensor

Posted by phidippus on April 3, 2012, at 19:02:59

In reply to Abilify + TCA?, posted by tensor on March 24, 2012, at 14:33:49

I had a lot of luck with clomipramine and abilify, where as Abilify in other settings wa unbearable.

Eric

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » phidippus

Posted by SLS on April 3, 2012, at 20:43:46

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » tensor, posted by phidippus on April 3, 2012, at 19:02:59

> I had a lot of luck with clomipramine and abilify, where as Abilify in other settings wa unbearable.
>

That must have been very frustrating. Do you have any ideas as to why this happened?


- Scott

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » SLS

Posted by phidippus on April 5, 2012, at 16:13:14

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » phidippus, posted by SLS on April 3, 2012, at 20:43:46

The D2 partial agonism always threw me for a loop. Also, it tended to disturb my mood, rather than help attenuate it.

Eric

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » phidippus

Posted by tensor on April 9, 2012, at 13:35:28

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » tensor, posted by phidippus on April 3, 2012, at 19:02:59

> I had a lot of luck with clomipramine and abilify, where as Abilify in other settings wa unbearable.
>
> Eric

Did you take it for MDD? What doses were you on? Are you still taking it? I take nortrip + Remeron right now with no success yet, I'm still not sure what to do next, maybe add Abilify. I'm interested in the Lamictal/Abilify combo.

/t

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » tensor

Posted by phidippus on April 9, 2012, at 15:47:45

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » phidippus, posted by tensor on April 9, 2012, at 13:35:28

I was using both to treat OCD and depression. I am bipolar.

Rather than addd to nor and remeron, maybe you should look at replacing one with another AD. Abilify isn't going to magically make the two work for you.

Eric

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » phidippus

Posted by tensor on April 9, 2012, at 21:52:03

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » tensor, posted by phidippus on April 9, 2012, at 15:47:45

> I was using both to treat OCD and depression. I am bipolar.
>
> Rather than addd to nor and remeron, maybe you should look at replacing one with another AD. Abilify isn't going to magically make the two work for you.
>
> Eric

You're right. I'm thinking of adding Lamictal and keep nortrip a few weeks and see if it starts working. If nortrip does not work by then, I could replace it with Abilify and perhaps quit Remeron too.

/t

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » tensor

Posted by SLS on April 10, 2012, at 6:17:56

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » phidippus, posted by tensor on April 9, 2012, at 21:52:03

> > I was using both to treat OCD and depression. I am bipolar.
> >
> > Rather than addd to nor and remeron, maybe you should look at replacing one with another AD. Abilify isn't going to magically make the two work for you.
> >
> > Eric
>
> You're right. I'm thinking of adding Lamictal and keep nortrip a few weeks and see if it starts working. If nortrip does not work by then, I could replace it with Abilify and perhaps quit Remeron too.

Abilify + Lamictal is particularly effective in BD according to some recent studies performed by the NIH. It works well to prevent future episodes. I have seen it work to treat ongoing depression as well. It might be worth a shot.

What has been your experience with Wellbutrin? Anything positive at all?


- Scott

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » SLS

Posted by tensor on April 10, 2012, at 6:31:09

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » tensor, posted by SLS on April 10, 2012, at 6:17:56

> Abilify + Lamictal is particularly effective in BD according to some recent studies performed by the NIH. It works well to prevent future episodes. I have seen it work to treat ongoing depression as well. It might be worth a shot.
>
> What has been your experience with Wellbutrin? Anything positive at all?
>
>
> - Scott

Do you have any links?
When I tried Wellbutrin a few years ago it worked very well for about six weeks then it made me tired. When I tried it recently it had no antidepressant effect, made me more anxious and a little tired.


When I tried Lamictal a few years back 200mg was the target dose and we stopped there because of lack of efficacy. It made me a little tired and some headache. I talked to a person who did not respond to 200mg but had a good response at 300mg. Maybe all I needed was higher dose? Only one way to find out, I guess.

/t

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » tensor

Posted by SLS on April 10, 2012, at 7:08:24

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » SLS, posted by tensor on April 10, 2012, at 6:31:09

> > Abilify + Lamictal is particularly effective in BD according to some recent studies performed by the NIH. It works well to prevent future episodes. I have seen it work to treat ongoing depression as well. It might be worth a shot.
> >
> > What has been your experience with Wellbutrin? Anything positive at all?
> >
> >
> > - Scott

> Do you have any links?


I read it in a NIH bulletin that is not yet available online.

Terrence Ketter performed a similar study but reported no significant clinical effect. Sometimes it is difficult to decide whose study is worth basing decisions upon. Remember, though, that this was a study of prophylaxis against mania in bipolar I disorder, and not for the acute treatment of ongoing depression.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22329471

> When I tried Wellbutrin a few years ago it worked very well for about six weeks then it made me tired.

That's what I was hoping to hear, although I would have hoped that you would get more than six weeks out of it. In any even, your reaction to Wellbutrin might be a prognosticator of response to the combination of Lamictal and Abilify. I have seen this occur.

> When I tried Lamictal a few years back 200mg was the target dose and we stopped there because of lack of efficacy.

I have never seen Lamictal work as monotherapy for depression, despite early blip improvements occurring during titration.

> It made me a little tired and some headache. I talked to a person who did not respond to 200mg but had a good response at 300mg.

It happens. If you don't experience significant cognitive impairments at higher dosages, it might be worth pursuing.

> Maybe all I needed was higher dose? Only one way to find out, I guess.

Things happen between Lamictal and Abilify that are synergistic and may involve the potentiation of dopamine activity. My doctor has had success combining Lamictal with Wellbutrin. It sounds as if you have not exhausted your options. This is a good thing.

To what extent is mania a component of your disorder?

You'll get there. It might involve a little bit of luck to come upon the right treatment sooner rather than later, but you will find it. A partial or brief success is not a failure to respond. It is a reasonable strategy to identify such treatments and combine them, especially if the agents have different mechanisms of action. That is how I chose the drugs to remain on as I experimented with the addition of new. Combining Lamictal + nortriptyline was the first base treatment I used to maintain an improvement, albeit a very small one. It was enought to allow me to live independently and discourage me from entertaining thoughts of suicide.

Currently:

Parnate 80 mg
nortriptyline 150 mg
Lamictal 200 mg
Abilify 10 mg
lithium 300 mg
prazosin 6 mg

Good luck.


- Scott

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » SLS

Posted by tensor on April 10, 2012, at 7:46:14

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » tensor, posted by SLS on April 10, 2012, at 7:08:24

> > It made me a little tired and some headache. I talked to a person who did not respond to 200mg but had a good response at 300mg.
>
> It happens. If you don't experience significant cognitive impairments at higher dosages, it might be worth pursuing.
>
> > Maybe all I needed was higher dose? Only one way to find out, I guess.
>
> Things happen between Lamictal and Abilify that are synergistic and may involve the potentiation of dopamine activity. My doctor has had success combining Lamictal with Wellbutrin. It sounds as if you have not exhausted your options. This is a good thing.

What is the mechanism behind that, do you know?

> To what extent is mania a component of your disorder?

No mania, ever.

> You'll get there. It might involve a little bit of luck to come upon the right treatment sooner rather than later, but you will find it. A partial or brief success is not a failure to respond. It is a reasonable strategy to identify such treatments and combine them, especially if the agents have different mechanisms of action. That is how I chose the drugs to remain on as I experimented with the addition of new. Combining Lamictal + nortriptyline was the first base treatment I used to maintain an improvement, albeit a very small one. It was enought to allow me to live independently and discourage me from entertaining thoughts of suicide.

I'm taking 45mg of Remeron and 150mg of nortrip now. I was thinking that replacing Remeron with Lamictal would be a good move. Then I can give nortrip a little more time to prove itself since the slow titration of Lamictal.
I'm not sure when or how to introduce Abilify to my regime, I know my pdoc is not keen on starting two meds at the same time. I will see him in two days.

> Good luck.
>
>
> - Scott
>

Thanks, Scott!


 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » tensor

Posted by SLS on April 10, 2012, at 8:29:15

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » SLS, posted by tensor on April 10, 2012, at 7:46:14

> > > It made me a little tired and some headache. I talked to a person who did not respond to 200mg but had a good response at 300mg.
> >
> > It happens. If you don't experience significant cognitive impairments at higher dosages, it might be worth pursuing.
> >
> > > Maybe all I needed was higher dose? Only one way to find out, I guess.
> >
> > Things happen between Lamictal and Abilify that are synergistic and may involve the potentiation of dopamine activity. My doctor has had success combining Lamictal with Wellbutrin. It sounds as if you have not exhausted your options. This is a good thing.
>
> What is the mechanism behind that, do you know?


Lamictal: My guess after researching the matter is that Lamictal increases DA in the nucleus accumbens via disinhibition as glutamate release is inhibited in the thalamus.

Abilify: Limbic DA activation via D2/D3 receptor partial agonism and 5-HT1a receptor partial agonism.


> I'm taking 45mg of Remeron and 150mg of nortrip now. I was thinking that replacing Remeron with Lamictal would be a good move. Then I can give nortrip a little more time to prove itself since the slow titration of Lamictal.

That's a great move in my opinion.

> I'm not sure when or how to introduce Abilify to my regime, I know my pdoc is not keen on starting two meds at the same time. I will see him in two days.

If you are unipolar, starting Abilify at a very low dosage probably makes the most sense. You can start at 1.25 - 2.5 mg and work up to 5 mg if needed. If you are bipolar, you might need to go up to 10 mg.


- Scott

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » SLS

Posted by phidippus on April 10, 2012, at 16:08:46

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » tensor, posted by SLS on April 10, 2012, at 8:29:15

Don't start more than two meds at a time. Remeron is probably more therapeutic than Nortryptaline. I would lower o up on the Lamictal.the N and g

Eric

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » tensor

Posted by phidippus on April 10, 2012, at 16:18:01

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » phidippus, posted by tensor on April 9, 2012, at 21:52:03

What's your current regimine?

Eric

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » phidippus

Posted by tensor on April 11, 2012, at 3:39:29

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » tensor, posted by phidippus on April 10, 2012, at 16:18:01

> What's your current regimine?
>
> Eric

Remeron 45mg, nortrip 150mg, clonazepam 2mg.

/t

 

Re: Abilify + TCA? » phidippus

Posted by SLS on April 11, 2012, at 6:21:01

In reply to Re: Abilify + TCA? » SLS, posted by phidippus on April 10, 2012, at 16:08:46

> Remeron is probably more therapeutic than Nortryptaline.

I don't know how you came to this conclusion, but I don't think Remeron is generally as effective as nortriptyline. I am basing this on observation and not statistics.

I know that it was initially thought that mianserin was more effective than imipramine, but I think that idea has not been verified in many years of clinical usage. I think the same has been observed with Remeron.

http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/article.aspx?Volume=163&page=1161&journalID=13

"Results: For mirtazapine, remission rates were 12.3% and 8.0% per the Hamilton and QIDS-SR16 scores, respectively. For nortriptyline, remission rates were 19.8% and 12.4%, respectively."


- Scott


Go forward in 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.