Guest guest Posted May 28, 2004 Report Share Posted May 28, 2004 This is the typical horse manure you will get from a psychiatrist, how the problem is with the patient and " we just need to find the problem to fix it " . It's psychobabble. The problem occurs when the drug is added. Response from a psychiatrist in NY times ------------------------------------------------------------------------ I wrote to Dr. Sheldon who was quoted in the NY Times saying that " brain zaps aren't painful " . I gave him a quick rundown on s withdrawal. I received an email from him today. " The Paxil seems to have been associated with this event in your son. Th= e question is whether it is related to drug discontinuation (a relatively circumscribed phenomenon) or something else associated with the drug. The phenomenon that you are describing has been reported with people (primarily teenagers) that have taken drugs like Paxil. However, to disting= uish it from discontinuation, this phenomenon can occur with people who are continuing to take the drug. This suggests that the effect is not related t= o discontinuation per se, but something else. So the question is, what? I recently completed writing a chapter for a new = textbook being produced by the American Psychiatric Press on mood disorders, and I discuss the problem there. I have come up with several possibilities. If the reactions are brief, they can readily be attributible= to discontinuation effects (for example, missing doses), however, if they are = more prolonged, it begins to get us into an area that is a bit more complex= . Probably the most common reason for these events is the induction of what i= s called a " mixed state. " This is seen in undiagnosed bipolar disorder (manic= - depressive illness). It has been shown with Paxil and other antidepressant = drugs that, if they are administered to people who have bipolar disorder without using a concomitant mood stabilizer, then situations can be caused = that are like the one seen in your son (anxiety, agitation, aggressive beha= vior, highly variable sleep, and suicidal preoccupation). It probably happens mor= e frequently in teens because many have not had their first manic episode yet= . Finally, there may be a small subset of people who have adverse effects associated with SSRI's; that is, people who do not seem to have bipolar disorder and, yet, who have these effects. I have made an effort to try to = figure out how often this occurs. I have seen several thousand people with mood disorders in my career, and I am able to count six. I bring up these issues for several reasons. Correct attribution is absolut= ely essential if we are going to be able to find out the cause and, theoretical= ly, prevent it. Therefore, distinguishing between a discontinuation effect (i.e= ., no- drug) from the effect of the drug itself is essential. " ******** her reply: What I'm reading from this is if you have the symptoms reported by hundreds= of people on paxil, its not the paxil, but your really Bi-polar and need a= nother drug to fix it! I wonder what drug company payroll this guy is on. ********************************** I think i AM going to email him with my experience with paxil. How many of= us will it take to completely inundate his email??? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2004 Report Share Posted May 28, 2004 This is the typical horse manure you will get from a psychiatrist, how the problem is with the patient and " we just need to find the problem to fix it " . It's psychobabble. The problem occurs when the drug is added. Response from a psychiatrist in NY times ------------------------------------------------------------------------ I wrote to Dr. Sheldon who was quoted in the NY Times saying that " brain zaps aren't painful " . I gave him a quick rundown on s withdrawal. I received an email from him today. " The Paxil seems to have been associated with this event in your son. Th= e question is whether it is related to drug discontinuation (a relatively circumscribed phenomenon) or something else associated with the drug. The phenomenon that you are describing has been reported with people (primarily teenagers) that have taken drugs like Paxil. However, to disting= uish it from discontinuation, this phenomenon can occur with people who are continuing to take the drug. This suggests that the effect is not related t= o discontinuation per se, but something else. So the question is, what? I recently completed writing a chapter for a new = textbook being produced by the American Psychiatric Press on mood disorders, and I discuss the problem there. I have come up with several possibilities. If the reactions are brief, they can readily be attributible= to discontinuation effects (for example, missing doses), however, if they are = more prolonged, it begins to get us into an area that is a bit more complex= . Probably the most common reason for these events is the induction of what i= s called a " mixed state. " This is seen in undiagnosed bipolar disorder (manic= - depressive illness). It has been shown with Paxil and other antidepressant = drugs that, if they are administered to people who have bipolar disorder without using a concomitant mood stabilizer, then situations can be caused = that are like the one seen in your son (anxiety, agitation, aggressive beha= vior, highly variable sleep, and suicidal preoccupation). It probably happens mor= e frequently in teens because many have not had their first manic episode yet= . Finally, there may be a small subset of people who have adverse effects associated with SSRI's; that is, people who do not seem to have bipolar disorder and, yet, who have these effects. I have made an effort to try to = figure out how often this occurs. I have seen several thousand people with mood disorders in my career, and I am able to count six. I bring up these issues for several reasons. Correct attribution is absolut= ely essential if we are going to be able to find out the cause and, theoretical= ly, prevent it. Therefore, distinguishing between a discontinuation effect (i.e= ., no- drug) from the effect of the drug itself is essential. " ******** her reply: What I'm reading from this is if you have the symptoms reported by hundreds= of people on paxil, its not the paxil, but your really Bi-polar and need a= nother drug to fix it! I wonder what drug company payroll this guy is on. ********************************** I think i AM going to email him with my experience with paxil. How many of= us will it take to completely inundate his email??? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2004 Report Share Posted May 28, 2004 I called him a " Quack " first time I emailed him Thank you for replying, I apologise for the name calling, being very passionate about this issue gets the better of my manners at times My research into ssri's has made me bitter, the damage done to my family and myself is not repairable- I have lost so much. Being told by many dr's that the hell I lived thought had " nothing to do with Paxil " " These drugs have only minor side effects " " you have an underlying problem " " this is the real you " As a devoted family man and father I applied all my strength and consideration determination to being " well " . I suffered from burn out after many years in high pressure coporate jobs. Had it not been for the disgusting/fraudulent way that ssri's are marketed and promoted my dr's would have been aware I was having a severe reaction to this drug. We would not have suffered thought my adverse reaction and withdrawal in complete ignorance of what was happening - people close to me would have had a reason for the way I was - I would not have been put back on the same drug only to suffer an even more horrific reaction I cringe(worse actually) when I hear " clinical trial " data quoted SELECTIVELY and totally out of context. How many dr's/patients are aware of the way these trials are conducted??????? In " general " they are- -Funded by drug companies with huge financial interests in a positive outcome -Results are subjective, based on Q & A DSM and open to interpretation -People who are deeply depressed/suicidal are excluded -Trials are short 6,8,12 weeks with no long term follow up -Trial " dropouts " are not included in full analysis -Negative trial results are not published In this environment the best results show (as the drug company promotion says) 75% of depressed people are cured and any side effect is short lived and minor - those that don't respond well are either bi-polar or have other underlying problems What is not said is - 65% achieved the same improvement on placebo's- no one was cured, 75%/65% made relative improvement on the DSM scale- those that dropout out due to adverse reactions aren't included in results- the most ill/ deeply depressed people were excluded from the trials -coding of negative results was manipulated (rigged) " suicidal " somehow became " depressed " In this corrupt environment to achieve a positive response rate of (at best) 10% in to my view " clinically insignificant " The drug companies efforts to get these drug approved for the young people bears witness to a corrupt-money centred industry. Of the 15 trials only 3 showed positive results, the drug companies were forced to release to regulators (UK) negative trials. Analysis shows clearly and conclusively- ssri's are ineffective and dangerous for young people. They have been banned in the UK and other countries So? why are dr's prescribing them to kids at ever increasing rates??????? It is the biggest " scam " of the drug company era. To endanger the well being and lives of kids for profit is below contempt. The current ploy of drug companies and some regulators (i.e. FDA) of dividing the ssri debate into separate issues is a smoke screen. The question of some young people becoming suicidal (which they do) on ssri's is taken out of the context of the fact in has been proved (by the drug companies) that ssri's are ineffective in treating depressed youngsters- WHY risk the side effects when the bloody things don't even work!!!!!!! pure madness!!!! Prozac is safe for kids tho??? -like hell it is. SSRI side effects are largely the same across all brands, as witnessed by ADR reporting. Only Eli Lily achieved positive trial data, none of the other companies could -so in this current environment we should believe these results. A drug company wouldn't " rig " a trial for profit- would they???? People (you??) don't seem to put a " real " context around this issue- these are real families being destroyed - these are " real " people committing suicide - these are real people having their careers ruined The whole business is a farce- more people are killed by prescription drugs than illegal drugs. The drug companies used to make and sell LSD Heroin etc as cures. We are always told about the terrible effects of E etc. what about the shocking damage done by legal drugs. As for dr's taking gifts/travel etc from drug company reps- it's corrupt and wrong!!! First do no harm > This email was sent to Dr. Sheldon in response to the article in the NY Tim= > es. > Her son had a horrible withdrawal from paxil and she questioned him about > his comments on Zaps NOT being painful. Here is her post from > Paxilprogress.org. > *************** > Posted: Thu May 27, 2004 8:32 pm   Post subject: Response from a > psychiatrist in NY times > -------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- > I wrote to Dr. Sheldon who was quoted in the NY Times saying that " brain > zaps aren't painful " . I gave him a quick rundown on s withdrawal. I > received an email from him today. > > " The Paxil seems to have been associated with this event in your son. Th= > e > question is whether it is related to drug discontinuation (a relatively > circumscribed phenomenon) or something else associated with the drug. > > The phenomenon that you are describing has been reported with people > (primarily teenagers) that have taken drugs like Paxil. However, to disting= > uish > it from discontinuation, this phenomenon can occur with people who are > continuing to take the drug. This suggests that the effect is not related t= > o > discontinuation per se, but something else. > > So the question is, what? I recently completed writing a chapter for a new = > > textbook being produced by the American Psychiatric Press on mood > disorders, and I discuss the problem there. I have come up with several > possibilities. If the reactions are brief, they can readily be attributible= > to > discontinuation effects (for example, missing doses), however, if they are = > > more prolonged, it begins to get us into an area that is a bit more complex= > . > Probably the most common reason for these events is the induction of what i= > s > called a " mixed state. " This is seen in undiagnosed bipolar disorder (manic= > - > depressive illness). It has been shown with Paxil and other antidepressant = > > drugs that, if they are administered to people who have bipolar disorder > without using a concomitant mood stabilizer, then situations can be caused = > > that are like the one seen in your son (anxiety, agitation, aggressive beha= > vior, > highly variable sleep, and suicidal preoccupation). It probably happens mor= > e > frequently in teens because many have not had their first manic episode yet= > . > > Finally, there may be a small subset of people who have adverse effects > associated with SSRI's; that is, people who do not seem to have bipolar > disorder and, yet, who have these effects. I have made an effort to try to = > figure > out how often this occurs. I have seen several thousand people with mood > disorders in my career, and I am able to count six. > > I bring up these issues for several reasons. Correct attribution is absolut= > ely > essential if we are going to be able to find out the cause and, theoretical= > ly, > prevent it. Therefore, distinguishing between a discontinuation effect (i.e= > ., no- > drug) from the effect of the drug itself is essential. " > ******** > her reply: > > What I'm reading from this is if you have the symptoms reported by hundreds= > > of people on paxil, its not the paxil, but your really Bi-polar and need a= > nother > drug to fix it! > I wonder what drug company payroll this guy is on. > ********************************** > > I think i AM going to email him with my experience with paxil. How many of= > us > will it take to completely inundate his email??? > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2004 Report Share Posted May 28, 2004 Dr. Sheldon says " It has been shown with Paxil and other antidepressant drugs that, if they are administered to people who have bipolar disorder without using a concomitant mood stabilizer, then situations can be caused that are like the one seen in your son (anxiety, agitation, aggressive behavior, highly variable sleep, and suicidal preoccupation). It probably happens more frequently in teens because many have not had their first manic episode yet. " This is absolutely incorrect. Treatment with a concomitant mood stabilizer (Lithium, Depakote, Lamictal, Tegretol, and maybe Zyprexa) is NO protection against anxiety, agitation, aggressive behavior, highly variable sleep, and suicidal preoccupation. That is pretty much an accepted fact in the current bipolar treatment philosophy IF your talk to so-called experts in " bipolar " disorder. This is ESPECIALLY true for children and adolscents. I know. My son took 400 mg of Lamictal with his Celexa and still wanted to kill people. I know of MANY children who are living in residental treatment centers or in and out of psychiatric hospitals because there are doctors like this one who think mood stabilizers make SSRIs safe for kids. And " Finally, there may be a small subset of people who have adverse effects associated with SSRI's; that is, people who do not seem to have bipolar disorder and, yet, who have these effects. I have made an effort to try to figure out how often this occurs. I have seen several thousand people with mood disorders in my career, and I am able to count six. " I think this may be the new push from the medical industry: Everyone who has an adverse reaction to SSRIs really has undiagnosed bipolar. That keeps the bipolar crowd happy -- they get more people diagnosed " bipolar " to swell their ranks -- and gets the medical industry off the hook -- misdiagnosis is the problem, not the drug. This reaction is undoubtedly more common that 6 out of thousands because over the past decade and a half some researchers wanted to add a new form of Bipolar (either III or IV, depending on which researcher you read) which is called SSRI Induced Bipolar. I can only suggest that our dear Dr. Sheldon is one of the many doctors out there who couldn't recognize an adverse reaction to an SSRI if it jumped up and bit him. " I bring up these issues for several reasons. Correct attribution is absolutely essential if we are going to be able to find out the cause and, theoretically, prevent it. Therefore, distinguishing between a discontinuation effect (i.e., no-drug) from the effect of the drug itself is essential. " Correct diagnosis of a treatable medical condition is absolutely essential if doctors are going to prescribe drugs. They need to be able to definitively diagnose any neurological condition BEFORE they start handing out medications. And they need to know what those medications actually do to the body BEFORE people start taking them, ESPECIALLY CHILDREN WITH GROWING BRAINS. Prescribing medication to treat a list of subjectively identified symptoms without any scientific method of sorting out one cause from another makes about as much sense as treating everyone with a distended abdomen as though he/she is pregnant. But that's the way psychiatry works. As is stands, long term chronic use of amphetamines/stimulants (Adderall, Concerta, Ritalin) leads to depression. Short or long term use of SSRIs can lead to mania and hypomania. Any wonder why we have so many kids suddenly being diagnosed " early onset bipolar disorder " (whatever that is)? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2004 Report Share Posted May 28, 2004 I didn't write all I wanted to write in the previous post. There are people -- generally older people with " regular adult " bipolar who take SSRIs with Lithium. In fact, that is a pretty normal treatment in Europe. But I know adults who are taking two mood stabilizers who can't take SSRIs or any antidepressant. And most of the wildly unstable bp children are taking a bunch of drugs which invariably includes at least one of each of the following categories: mood stabilizer, stimulant (or Strattera), antipsychotic, SSRI. Most started with either the SSRI or the stimulant. > Dr. Sheldon says " It has been shown with Paxil and other > antidepressant drugs that, if they are administered to people who have > bipolar disorder without using a concomitant mood stabilizer, then > situations can be caused that are like the one seen in your son > (anxiety, agitation, aggressive behavior, highly variable sleep, and > suicidal preoccupation). It probably happens more frequently in teens > because many have not had their first manic episode yet. " > > This is absolutely incorrect. Treatment with a concomitant mood > stabilizer (Lithium, Depakote, Lamictal, Tegretol, and maybe Zyprexa) > is NO protection against anxiety, agitation, aggressive behavior, > highly variable sleep, and suicidal preoccupation. That is pretty > much an accepted fact in the current bipolar treatment philosophy IF > your talk to so-called experts in " bipolar " disorder. This is > ESPECIALLY true for children and adolscents. I know. My son took 400 > mg of Lamictal with his Celexa and still wanted to kill people. I > know of MANY children who are living in residental treatment centers > or in and out of psychiatric hospitals because there are doctors like > this one who think mood stabilizers make SSRIs safe for kids. > > And " Finally, there may be a small subset of people who have adverse > effects associated with SSRI's; that is, people who do not seem to > have bipolar disorder and, yet, who have these effects. I have made an > effort to try to figure out how often this occurs. I have seen several > thousand people with mood disorders in my career, and I am able to > count six. " > > I think this may be the new push from the medical industry: Everyone > who has an adverse reaction to SSRIs really has undiagnosed bipolar. > That keeps the bipolar crowd happy -- they get more people diagnosed > " bipolar " to swell their ranks -- and gets the medical industry off > the hook -- misdiagnosis is the problem, not the drug. This reaction > is undoubtedly more common that 6 out of thousands because over the > past decade and a half some researchers wanted to add a new form of > Bipolar (either III or IV, depending on which researcher you read) > which is called SSRI Induced Bipolar. I can only suggest that our > dear Dr. Sheldon is one of the many doctors out there who couldn't > recognize an adverse reaction to an SSRI if it jumped up and bit him. > > " I bring up these issues for several reasons. Correct attribution is > absolutely essential if we are going to be able to find out the cause > and, theoretically, prevent it. Therefore, distinguishing between a > discontinuation effect (i.e., no-drug) from the effect of the drug > itself is essential. " > > Correct diagnosis of a treatable medical condition is absolutely > essential if doctors are going to prescribe drugs. They need to be > able to definitively diagnose any neurological condition BEFORE they > start handing out medications. And they need to know what those > medications actually do to the body BEFORE people start taking them, > ESPECIALLY CHILDREN WITH GROWING BRAINS. Prescribing medication to > treat a list of subjectively identified symptoms without any > scientific method of sorting out one cause from another makes about as > much sense as treating everyone with a distended abdomen as though > he/she is pregnant. But that's the way psychiatry works. > > As is stands, long term chronic use of amphetamines/stimulants > (Adderall, Concerta, Ritalin) leads to depression. Short or long term > use of SSRIs can lead to mania and hypomania. Any wonder why we have > so many kids suddenly being diagnosed " early onset bipolar disorder " > (whatever that is)? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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