Posted by LizG on August 20, 2000, at 5:59:44
In reply to all Meds seem to be worthless after a few weeks , posted by amyw on August 15, 2000, at 20:48:31
Hi Amyw
I have had depression myself for a couple of years and have tried numerous medications. I currently take dothiepin (TCA) because it is the only one that has any sort of effect. Personally I don't rate the newer drugs, they just make you feel like you've been thrown in a bag and shaken up. I have tried prozac (made me jittery), seroxat (which did nothing but make me sick) remeron (mirtazapine) which worked slightly then stopped working.
I think your son should do what HE wants and not what the psychiatrist says. I myself am absolutely sure that social interaction and activity is better than staying at home and doing nothing, letting your mind whirr round in circles.
I am also starting to form the opinion that drugs are just the simplest way for a doctor to dismiss you.
"Here, take these. Next please"I don't at all like what I read on these pages about side effects/long term effects and I certainly wouldn't take Effexor after what I have read about it.
Has your son tried any of the TCA's? I must admit they're not great but they do work well for anxiety and they have no unpleasant side effects (despite the garbage that's reported about them).
Regards
I have been writing about my son who is 18 and has been diagnosed about four different ways. These include binge eating disorder, depression, anxiety, and a possible bipolr. In any case, he has decided and I understand why that the only success he has ever had with medications is in the first week or two when they are activating. After that, he gets more side efects of fatigue, body sensations etc. It is really as if the side effect of activation at the beginning is truly the only thing that ever helps. Then he falls into a slump. He is starting to feel exactly the wame way on wellbutrin after only 3 weeks and I see the difference. He is now lethargic, tired and physically exhausted. He didn't give wellbutrin that long, but he gave prozac almost a year, with varying dosages, risperdal for two months, paxil for five months and cellexa. Is there anyone who has had a similar problem? Right now he wants to give his body a rest and go off everything for a while.
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> ALso, he is recovering from an eating disorder nad is still only 140 and 5"9 and perhaps that plays a role also. THe wellbutrin made him lose another five pounds and that certainly isn't good.
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> HAS anyone else ever found that they feel worse on meds than when not on them? What a frsutrating process, but I support whatever he does. HE wants to have the energy to make it as a freshman in college, but he says he will bring all his meds with him in case of a real crash.
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> HE also is having blood work again to see if anyting else could be wrong, but usually nothign shows up.
> Any advice as a parent? THe psychiatrist says not o let him go to college and to take his car way if he doesn't take meds,. but I feel that it hasto be his choice. HE has never been suicidal or anything and I think that the stimulating environment at college may help him. HE has become really isolated here.
poster:LizG
thread:43011
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/20000811/msgs/43371.html