Psycho-Babble Medication Thread 354184

Shown: posts 1 to 4 of 4. This is the beginning of the thread.

 

From desipramine to nortriptyline?

Posted by EERRIICC on June 6, 2004, at 0:06:31

If a trial with desipramine fails does it make sense to try nortriptyline? What is the difference between these two drugs?

 

Re: From desipramine to nortriptyline? » EERRIICC

Posted by Sad Panda on June 6, 2004, at 10:30:41

In reply to From desipramine to nortriptyline?, posted by EERRIICC on June 6, 2004, at 0:06:31

> If a trial with desipramine fails does it make sense to try nortriptyline? What is the difference between these two drugs?
>
>

Nortriptyline has nearly as much NRI ability as desipramine, but it also is mildy sedating, anxiolytic & carries more side effects. I would bet that it would have more of an antidepressant effect since it's parent Amitriptyline is still one of the best ever AD's.

Cheers,
Panda.


 

Re: From desipramine to nortriptyline?

Posted by SLS on June 6, 2004, at 11:07:34

In reply to Re: From desipramine to nortriptyline? » EERRIICC, posted by Sad Panda on June 6, 2004, at 10:30:41

> > If a trial with desipramine fails does it make sense to try nortriptyline? What is the difference between these two drugs?

> Nortriptyline has nearly as much NRI ability as desipramine, but it also is mildy sedating, anxiolytic & carries more side effects. I would bet that it would have more of an antidepressant effect since it's parent Amitriptyline is still one of the best ever AD's.

I think you might be right about that. I found nortriptyline to produce a qualitatively better antidepressant response than did desipramine. Unforturnately, I found that establishing a therapeutic dosage of nortriptyline was problematic. There was no stable therapeutic window for me. No one dosage allowed me to feel better for than more than a few days after a dosage change. 75mg was too low and 100mg was too high. I would experience a transient improvement immediately after a change of dosage, either up or down. No amount of finessing helped. Although this type of response pattern is uncommon, I am not unique in this regard. 75mg is the right dosage for most people. Sometimes, people who don't respond to nortriptyline will respond to desipramine and vice-versa. The range for therapeutic blood levels for nortriptyine are well studied and determined to lie within the range of 50-150 ng/mL.


- Scott

 

Re: From desipramine to nortriptyline?

Posted by King Vultan on June 6, 2004, at 12:24:30

In reply to From desipramine to nortriptyline?, posted by EERRIICC on June 6, 2004, at 0:06:31

> If a trial with desipramine fails does it make sense to try nortriptyline? What is the difference between these two drugs?


Panda's and Scott's information is quite good. I actually went the other way, from nortriptyline to desipramine, as nortriptyline is my doctor's preferred tricyclic to start with. I just found nortriptyline way too sedating myself, and desipramine suited me much better, but I believe that most people would probably tolerate nortriptyline better than I do. I agree that it is definitely better for anxiety than desipramine is.

Todd


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.