Psycho-Babble Medication Thread 1081833

Shown: posts 1 to 25 of 38. This is the beginning of the thread.

 

AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional

Posted by Sheilac on August 28, 2015, at 13:18:09

I seemed to have failed both Lithium & Depakote as mood stabilizers. I'm unable to take a high enough "therapeutic" dose of Trileptal, but it works as a great add-on.

Sometimes I wonder why exactly I'm taking 120mg of Geodon? It helps with my debilitating depression, as I cannot take any of the usual ADs. But does it really show any proof of mood stabilization?

I ask this because on Geodon I can still become unstable with caffeine and Adderall.

What does a person do when you can't take Dep or Lithium? If I dose up on Trileptal I swell up and my body becomes painful. Tegretol was bad too.

Suggestions?

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Sheilac

Posted by phidippus on August 28, 2015, at 14:57:59

In reply to AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional, posted by Sheilac on August 28, 2015, at 13:18:09


>Sometimes I wonder why exactly I'm taking 120mg of Geodon?

You're taking Geodon because you're bipolar and
it works to treat depressive symptoms as well as mania.

>But does it really show any proof of mood stabilization? I ask this because on Geodon I can still become unstable with caffeine and Adderall.

How do you become unstable on adderall and caffeine?

>What does a person do when you can't take Dep or Lithium? Suggestions.

Lamictal, Carbamazepine are really the only options unless you want to try stuff that doesn't have a lot of data backing their use: Keppra, Zonisamide, Verapamil.

Eric

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » phidippus

Posted by Sheilac on August 28, 2015, at 18:24:02

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Sheilac, posted by phidippus on August 28, 2015, at 14:57:59

We tried upping Geodon to 160mg and it made me irritable (like Seroquel does). So we had to drop down to 120mg, which seems to help.

Maybe the Adderall & caffeine make me manicky because I'm not stable enough? Shouldn't I be able to tolerate Adderall without mania? This tells me I'm not as stable as I should be.

Trileptal is an option, but at higher doses I get very painful joints & swelling.

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Sheilac

Posted by phidippus on August 28, 2015, at 21:00:28

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » phidippus, posted by Sheilac on August 28, 2015, at 18:24:02

What sort of symptoms of mania do you have on caffeine and adderal?

>Maybe the Adderall & caffeine make me manicky because I'm not stable enough?

I don't think this is the case. Just because a certain drug destabilizes you does not mean you are not stable. I'm perfectly stable until I take antidepressants-just because I'm stable doesn't mean I'm not susceptible to alterations in mood from other drugs.

>Shouldn't I be able to tolerate Adderall without mania?

For the most part, yes, but you may be sensitive to the drug.

>This tells me I'm not as stable as I should be.

No, it tells you you can be destabilized by certain drugs.

Eric

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » phidippus

Posted by Sheilac on August 29, 2015, at 8:51:28

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Sheilac, posted by phidippus on August 28, 2015, at 21:00:28

Thank you for helping me think this one out, I appreciate it.

Sometimes I can tolerate Adderall, but I find caffeine actually more destabilizing. I started drinking caffeine (coffee) in high school and can remember hypo and manic episodes corresponding with the coffee.

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional

Posted by Christ_empowered on August 29, 2015, at 11:20:25

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » phidippus, posted by Sheilac on August 29, 2015, at 8:51:28

amphetamines help a lot of people w/ both mood and concentration. My non-professional, completely personal advice would be to keep the adderall (or try vyvanse) and ditch the caffeine.

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Christ_empowered

Posted by Sheilac on August 29, 2015, at 18:55:50

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional, posted by Christ_empowered on August 29, 2015, at 11:20:25

actually, my doctor is pushing me to stop caffeine altogether and only use Adderall.

So, you're right!

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional

Posted by Lamdage22 on September 2, 2015, at 12:42:18

In reply to AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional, posted by Sheilac on August 28, 2015, at 13:18:09

Could it be that without adderall you wouldnt need to take APs/Mood stabilizers?

What are you trying to accomplish with this?

Diagnosis?

Its just my two cents here.

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Lamdage22

Posted by Sheilac on September 2, 2015, at 14:52:58

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional, posted by Lamdage22 on September 2, 2015, at 12:42:18

BPII. The Geodon really takes care of the depression. I still have some residual mood issues, such as severe anxiety which can lead to anger.

I have found Adderall better for me than coffee (even though I love caffeine).

I'm not sure what would really help with the anxiety which leads to anger and sometimes outbursts. Maybe that's mania? Maybe it's just out of control anxiety?

I didn't have the anxiety and anger on Depakote, but the severe cystitis was a deal breaker. Topamax caused the same thing. Plus, Depakote added weight and acne - yuk.

I'm not sure at this point what could be added to Geodon to mellow my mood.

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional

Posted by Christ_empowered on September 3, 2015, at 14:25:55

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Lamdage22, posted by Sheilac on September 2, 2015, at 14:52:58

in the 50s-70s, there were combo pills that were part antipsychotic and part amphetamine. I read somewhere that the combo is actually remarkably similar, in many respects, to modern antidepressants, except...they often work fast, like within 30 minutes fast.

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Sheilac

Posted by phidippus on September 4, 2015, at 21:53:59

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Lamdage22, posted by Sheilac on September 2, 2015, at 14:52:58

Have you tried Keppra?

Eric

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » phidippus

Posted by Sheilac on September 5, 2015, at 7:18:31

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Sheilac, posted by phidippus on September 4, 2015, at 21:53:59

No I haven't. I will ask my doc about trying it. Hopefully, she'll be open to it.

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Sheilac

Posted by phidippus on September 5, 2015, at 14:44:34

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » phidippus, posted by Sheilac on September 5, 2015, at 7:18:31

Mood and Bipolar Disorders. Levetiracetam (Keppra)affects different parts of the brain, including the hippocampus and the amygdala, which are involved in mood disorders.[9,10,94-96] Studies have shown that increased levels of hippocampal Y-1- and Y-5-like receptors might be responsible for mood-stabilizing properties of levetiracetam.[10] Levetiracetam, both as add-on and as monotherapy, has shown its efficacy in a broad spectrum of bipolar disorders.

Bersani[97] investigated the potential efficacy of levetiracetam in outpatients affected by bipolar spectrum disorders as an add-on therapy to previous pharmacologic treatments. Twenty patients, 13 men and 7 women, were enrolled in this pilot study. These patients received oral levetiracetam 500 mg twice daily for 60 days. Fifteen patients completed the study, and for all of these patients the BPRS and the Bech-Raphaelsen scale of mania scores showed a rapid decrease following levetiracetam add-on therapy; this effect was significant at day 60. The tolerability of levtiracetam was assessed by the dosage record and treatment-emergent symptom scale. Five patients dropped out during the study, one because his symptoms worsened and the others for reasons independent of treatment response. The rest of the patients tolerated levetiracetam therapy without significant adverse effects. This study was the first to show the positive effect of levetiracetam in manic syndrome, including mood and behavioral symptoms.[97]

In an open-label trial, 34 patients with treatment-refractory bipolar I disorder (13 depressed, 7 manic, and 14 cycling) were enrolled.[92] These patients received 500-1000 mg of levetiracetam titrated to a target dosage of 2000 mg/day. The dosage was increased to 3000 mg/day as needed. Levetiracetam was an add-on therapy for eight weeks. The patients were rated weekly or once every other week with the Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS), the Inventory for Depressive SymptomatologyClinical version, and the Clinical Global Impressions scale for use in bipolar illness for severity of mania, depression, and overall illness. A 31% remission rate was reported in patients who were depressed at baseline and who received levetiracetam as an add-on therapy. A 44% remission rate was noted in patients with mania at baseline. Four patients dropped out within the first week of treatment for administrative reasons, drug intolerance, or mood worsening. Another eight patients dropped out before week 3 because of lack of efficacy. Only 1 patient experienced psychosis. This was a high early-withdrawal rate for this open-label study. Moreover, severely depressed patients did not show any good response ( Table 4 ).

Grunze et al.[93] conducted an open-label study in 10 patients with a history of bipolar I disorder who were in an acute manic state. Levetiracetam was used as an add-on therapy with off-and-on design. All patients were treated with haloperidol 5-10 mg/ day. Levetiracetam was added until day 14, then discontinued, and reintroduced at day 21. The maximum dosage of levetiracetam used was 4000 mg/day. The mean dosage of levetiracetam was 3125 mg/day. The YMRS was used to assess the psychopathologic changes. After a mean decrease of the YMRS scores from 29.6 to 17.2 during the first on phase, manic symptoms worsened during the off period and ameliorated again during the second on phase, with a decrease of the mean YMRS score to 14.7 at the end of the study. At day 14, only 2 patients responded compared with 7 at the end of the study at day 28. Levetiracetam showed some additional antimanic effects in this study. The important adverse effects noted in this study were sedation (3 patients), dizziness (1 patient), and asthenia (1 patient). The abrupt discontinuation of drug caused no withdrawal effects except worsening of manic symptoms ( Table 4 ).[93]

Levetiracetam has a potential role in treating refractory bipolar patients with different comorbidities that are difficult to manage even with multiple medications. Kaufman[98] described a 21-year-old white woman with treatment-resistant, rapid-cycling, bipolar disorder who did not respond to 15 different psychotropics. She responded well to levetiracetam monotherapy, which was started at 1000 mg at bedtime and then increased to 2500 mg at bedtime. She remained without bipolar features during 1 year of maintenance treatment, except for one week during which she was noncompliant.[98]

The results of these studies suggest the need for further controlled trials to see the efficacy and tolerability of levetiracetam in patients with different mood and bipolar disorders. It is premature to recommend the use of levetiracetam in patients with these mood disorders in routine clinical practice.

Eric

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » phidippus

Posted by Sheilac on September 5, 2015, at 15:05:49

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Sheilac, posted by phidippus on September 5, 2015, at 14:44:34

Thank you so much Eric. I'm going to really talk to my doctor about this.

I've responded well to other anticonvulsants, I've just had a few bad side effects which caused me to stop them. Possibly Keppra, could work.

I'll never stop looking for the right add-on.

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » phidippus

Posted by Sheilac on September 5, 2015, at 15:36:35

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Sheilac, posted by phidippus on September 5, 2015, at 14:44:34

Are there any other meds I should look at?

I have a terrible bladder issue call interstitial cystitis (very painful bladder, urinary frequency, etc.) some of the medications I've tried have side effects of cystitis, like Depakote or Topamax.

Trileptal just causes painful, stiff muscles & joints. I can take small doses and it works great for anxiety, but higher doses are painful.

Both Depakote & Topamax worked great for me mentally, but caused terrible cystitis. Lamictal & Wellbutrin made me manic. Lamictal also caused ulcers in my mouth & on my gums. It was terrible. Lithium caused a thyroid nodule to grow (which had to be biopsied).

I'm kinda hard to treat. For some reason Geodon is awesome for me. No side effects. Abilify made me fat, risperdal caused rediculous swelling.

I feel like I've tried everything, but that can't be possible. I will mention Keppra, but I'm interested in anything else that might be an option.

Thanks for your brain power!

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Sheilac

Posted by phidippus on September 5, 2015, at 16:33:54

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » phidippus, posted by Sheilac on September 5, 2015, at 15:36:35

Geodon is working well for you. Can you tell me what symptoms you are still having that you would like to treat?

Eric

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » phidippus

Posted by Sheilac on September 5, 2015, at 17:03:06

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Sheilac, posted by phidippus on September 5, 2015, at 16:33:54

Geodon at 160mg is great for me, but I still have some anger, short fuse issues. It's better now that I've gone from 120mg to 160mg, but still not as "stable" and even tempered as I would like to be.

I don't care if I'm a little goofy at this point, something more would be worth it. Klonopin is like eating M&Ms, 1mg of Klonopin just doesn't cut it.

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Sheilac

Posted by phidippus on September 5, 2015, at 17:48:01

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » phidippus, posted by Sheilac on September 5, 2015, at 17:03:06

The irritability and anger issues may be untreated mania. You're looking for an agent that will calm you down and round those edges. You mention you add Trileptal to calm things a little and that works but you get unwanted side effects. I know of a couple of agents that might work to treat your slight mania like Trileptal:

Keppra - has been shown to be an effective mood stabilizer and has especially strong anti-manic effects. Also has some anxiolytic properties.

Zonegran - Can be useful as a mood stabilizer, but especially useful in treating bipolar depression.

Verapamil - High doses of this calcium channel blocker have shown to have mood stabilizing properties.

Nimodipine - may have particular benefits for those diagnostic subclasses of bipolar disorder most resistant to therapy, e.g., ultra-rapid-cycling bipolars and brief recurrent depressions.

These agents may help to take the edge off. You mentioned in the past Zyprexa was very helpful for you. It wouldn't hurt to combine the Geodon with the Zyprexa in a low dose.

Eric

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » phidippus

Posted by Sheilac on September 5, 2015, at 19:04:51

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Sheilac, posted by phidippus on September 5, 2015, at 17:48:01

Those sound like great options for me to discuss with my doc.

I did love zyprexa, only used a small dose for about 10 days. I just wonder about using 2 AAPs at one time?

I wonder also how low I can go without weight gain on it.

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional

Posted by Christ_empowered on September 6, 2015, at 8:13:43

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » phidippus, posted by Sheilac on September 5, 2015, at 19:04:51

Sometimes, 2 AP/AAP drugs are used together. I think its fairly common in schizophrenia and schizoaffective, less so w/ bipolar I.

Anyway, over the long haul, probably not the best idea, but for short term use, I can see it being helpful. Me, I take 30mgs/Abilify and then when/if I feel agitated, I take a low dose of risperidone on top, at night. I only do that for a little while and then I stop.

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Sheilac

Posted by phidippus on September 6, 2015, at 20:37:45

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » phidippus, posted by Sheilac on September 5, 2015, at 19:04:51

There really isn't a problem with using two AAPs at once. I've known many patients who have been on two antipsychotics at once-my favorite example is this one gentleman who had bipolar disorder and temporal lobe epilepsy. Besides the load of anticonvulsants he was on, he was also on haloperidol AND clozaril, two of the most powerful antipsychotics available.

I imagine the Geodon is working well to treat your symptoms from the bottom up-it can be remarkably effective as an antidepressant. But it might activate you a little. Adding a little Zyprexa might calm things down-Zyprexa has no antidepressant qualities and will kind of bring down things a bit. You can start in 5mg increments and see how you respond.

Since you have problems with conventional mood stabilizers, treating your illness with two aaps may be the best way to go.

Eric


 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » phidippus

Posted by Sheilac on September 7, 2015, at 6:45:17

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Sheilac, posted by phidippus on September 6, 2015, at 20:37:45

Would going any higher than my current 160mg of Geodon help take the edge off? I'm BP.

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional

Posted by Lamdage22 on September 7, 2015, at 7:30:29

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » phidippus, posted by Sheilac on September 7, 2015, at 6:45:17

You sure are on a lot of stuff and you wanna try even more stuff.

I dont know if it would be a good thing if your doctor cooperates with this.

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional

Posted by Lamdage22 on September 7, 2015, at 7:36:10

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional, posted by Lamdage22 on September 7, 2015, at 7:30:29

Can you share what is angering you?

 

Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional » Lamdage22

Posted by Sheilac on September 7, 2015, at 9:38:47

In reply to Re: AAPs as mood stabilizers/failed traditional, posted by Lamdage22 on September 7, 2015, at 7:36:10

Usually my husband stresses me out because he is quick to temper (he takes risperdal) and my mother has terminal cancer and I'm one of her caregivers. It's very stressful and sometimes my stress makes me lose my temper or blow or become overly irrational. Also, to add to my stresses, my husband has decided we are moving again (2nd time this year), I've had 2 surgeries and I live in almost constant pain when my Interstitial Cystitis flares up.

I've been through years of counseling, yoga, deep breathing, meditation, but Geodon has really helped. Klonopin used to help, but not so much anymore. I noticed when I was taking Depakote (which flared my IC) Klonopin worked better. Unfortunately, I've failed anticonvulsants. Cross them off my possible med list.

It is imperative that I basically keep it together. Im not trying to drug myself into being constantly numb, I'm just trying to keep my BP in check and react like any other person would. I can't start screaming at a bad driver in the grocery store parking lot, or become so enraged I want to physically attack someone. That's just wrong.

Don't get me wrong, I have my times when I react correctly to the stresses, like crying, but my BP makes stress particularly hard to handle sometimes.


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