Posted by rose45 on December 27, 2015, at 12:36:21
In reply to Re: Nardil--long term use, posted by meffect on December 27, 2015, at 5:15:04
> > I take it because I have clinical depression which is so bad that I cannot function at all without medication, and maois seem to be the only medication which work for me.
> >
> > When it pooped out, I went to the local psychiatrist and I suggested increasing the dose, which we did, but that didnt help at all. They then suggested various other meds, none of which helped, and just made things worse. I was totally suicidal. Then I suggested we switch to parnate, which my mother had been on. Within a few weeks, the awful depression had lifted. It is not perfect, but I doubt whether any medication is. At least I can live a life, with some compromises. In many ways, for me parnate is easier to use than nardil. It doesnt give me the 'high' which nardil gave - and also changing the dose is easier. With nardil, every time I changed the dose, it would lead to at least 6 weeks of agony, and I found that I had to keep changing the dose to maintain the effect. I didnt try to go off and back on again. I reckoned after 20+ years, the chances were it probably wouldnt work any more. I was in such a bad state that I couldnt think clearly anyway, but in hindsight, I think switching to parnate, for me, was the right thing to do. There are several people on here who have also had success with marplan.
>
> Does the Parnate make you want to nap? When I tried Parnate, I'd take it at 8:00am and have an extreme urge to nap at ~12:00pm.Yes it does. Not every day, but around 4 or 5 pm. I would love to know how other get around this. It is one of the main down sides of the medication.
rose45
poster:rose45
thread:1084261
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/20151225/msgs/1085009.html