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Re: Re: What if SSRIs don't work?

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I tapered off slowly with no problem. But you can't just jolt your brain

like that by quitting all at once. It is used to the drug producing the

extra serotonin.

On Thu, Oct 27, 2011 at 2:10 PM, Shan <surpriseshan2@...> wrote:

> **

>

>

> I have a friend that started taking this several years ago - then a couple

> of years ago she tried to go off of it but could not. From what I have heard

> about these drugs ,it is not unual to get addicted to them.

>

> This article by Dr Cheney about SSSRIs is interesting....

>

> SSRI and Stimulants: Frying the Brain by Dr Cheney

> Dr. Cheney recently came across some information regarding the dangers of

> Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIÌs), such as Prozac, Zoloft and

> Paxil, and stimulants like Ritalin and Provigil. During office visits, Dr.

> Cheney shows patients the book " Prozac Backlash: Overcoming the Dangers of

> Prozac, Zoloft, Paxil and Other Antidepressants "

> http://www.dfwcfids.org/medical/ssri.html

>

> Dr Cheney is a doctor in the USA whom specializes in treating Chronic

> Fatigue Syndrome -- he also treats ME or Myalgic Encephalomyelitis too but

> calls both disorders CFS or Chronic Fatigue Syndrome . But whatever, he has

> quite abit of success. He has been pretty good at figuring out what is and

> how these disorders effect the body. It is pretty difficult to treat a

> disorder without knowing what is wrong and impossible to prevent it doing

> more damage.

>

> blessings

> Shan

>

>

>

> >

> > > **

>

> > >

> > >

> > > What if the drugs don't work?

> > >

> > > Research repeatedly shows that antidepressants give little benefit -

> but

> > > serious side effects. Yet millions who take them regard them as

> lifesavers.

> > >

> > > Markie Robson- reports on the controversy that is dividing

> > > psychiatrists

> > >

> > > Tuesday, 25 October 2011

> > >

> > >

> > >

>

http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-families/features/what-if-the\

-drugs-dont-work-2375337.html

> > >

> > > When my American friend Bill, who'd been on SSRI antidepressants for 22

> > > years (Prozac, followed by Paxil, Lexapro, then Celexa), read a

> two-part

> > > article by Dr Marcia Angell in The New York Review of Books recently

> about

> > > the crisis in psychiatry and the inefficacy of antidepressants, he

> stopped

> > > taking his meds (tapering off gradually, monitored by his doctor). " The

> > > article brought on enough doubt to push me over, " he said. Since then,

> his

> > > moods have become more volatile - more anger, more emotion, such as

> crying

> > > at the end of the last Harry Potter film (he's in his 50s). But he's

> got

> > > his

> > > libido back after years of " muffled response " and that seems a

> worthwhile

> > > trade-off.

> > >

> > > Instead of listening to Prozac, have we been listening to placebo all

> > > along?

> > > Research repeatedly appears to show that: antidepressants are little

> more

> > > than placebos, with very little therapeutic benefit but serious

> > > side-effects

> > > (70 per cent of people on Celexa and Paxil report sexual dysfunction,

> and

> > > in

> > > some, it carries on even when they stop taking the pills). The theory

> of

> > > chemical imbalance as a cause of depression is an unproven hypothesis;

> and

> > > doctors are prescribing the drugs mainly because of the " juggernaut of

> > > pharmaceutical promotion " , as the US psychiatrist Dr Carlat

> calls

> > > it.

> > >

> > > It's not surprising there's a US media furore - about 10 per cent of

> > > Americans over the age of six take antidepressants. In the UK,

> > > prescriptions

> > > for the drugs went up 43 per cent in the last four years to 23 million

> a

> > > year.

> > >

> > > Professor Irving Kirsch, associate director of the programme in placebo

> > > studies at Harvard Medical School and author of The Emperor's New

> Drugs:

> > > Exploding the Antidepressant Myth, says the theory of chemical

> imbalance -

> > > that there is not enough serotonin, norepinephrine and/or dopamine in

> the

> > > brain synapses of depressed people - doesn't fit the data (lowering

> > > serotonin levels in healthy patients has no impact on their moods).

> > > Chemical

> > > imbalance is a myth, he says. It follows that the idea that

> > > " antidepressants

> > > can cure depression chemically is simply wrong " . His meta-analysis of

> 38

> > > clinical studies - 40 per cent of which had been withheld from

> publication

> > > because drug companies didn't like the results - involving more than

> 3,000

> > > depressed patients, shows that only 25 per cent of the benefit of

> > > antidepressant treatment was due to the drugs and that 50 per cent was

> a

> > > placebo effect. " In other words, the placebo effect was twice as large

> as

> > > the drug effect, " though the placebo response was lower in the severely

> > > depressed.

> > >

> > > This is not quite as damning as it sounds: placebos are extraordinarily

> > > powerful and can be " as strong as potent medications " . Placebo response

> is

> > > specific: placebo morphine eases pain, placebo antidepressants relieve

> > > depression. It's a question of expectancy and conditioning: if you

> expect

> > > to

> > > feel better, you will, even if you're getting negative side effects,

> > > because

> > > side effects, Kirsch says, convince people that they've been given a

> potent

> > >

> > > drug.

> > >

> > > Psychotherapy boosts the placebo effect and is " significantly more

> > > effective

> > > than medication " for all levels of depression, he says. Antidepressants

> > > should only be used " as a last resort and only for the most severely

> > > depressed " .

> > >

> > > Of course, not everyone agrees. Ian , Professor at psychiatry

> at

> > > the

> > > University of Manchester, who is to debate whether " antidepressants are

> > > useful in the treatment of depression " with Kirsch at a conference in

> > > Turkey

> > > next month, thinks we're in danger of throwing the baby out with the

> > > bathwater when we say antidepressants are rubbish. Antidepressants are

> part

> > >

> > > of a doctor's toolbox, though probably most useful for the most

> depressed;

> > > some people don't take to talking therapies; it's not an either/or

> > > situation, he says.

> > >

> > > Professor Allan Young, chair of psychiatry at Imperial College London,

> > > agrees. " Depression is such a huge category of illness - there are

> multiple

> > >

> > > types, and each type responds differently. " Of course, the brain and

> the

> > > body are inextricably linked, he says, and placebo effects are greater

> in

> > > the less-severely ill.

> > >

> > > To make things more complicated, there's the nocebo effect. If you

> expect

> > > to

> > > feel bad when you come off antidepressants, you will, because " we tend

> to

> > > notice random small negative changes and interpret them as evidence

> that we

> > >

> > > are in fact getting worse " , Kirsch says.

> > >

> > > Lucy, who was suicidal, took Cipramil (Celexa in the US) on and off for

> 10

> > > years. She says the drug " gave me back myself, it was like a ray of

> light

> > > shining through fog " , but the side effects - nausea and lost libido

> among

> > > others - forced her off it. Then " it was like a clock ticking, a twitch

> in

> > > the back of my mind. I lived in fear of the depression coming back. The

> > > only

> > > thing that kept me alive was knowing the pills were there. But was it

> > > because I believed I was a depressive so when I had the negative

> feelings I

> > >

> > > panicked? "

> > >

> > > For Judy, lofepramine, a tricyclic, worked well. " First I was given

> Prozac,

> > >

> > > which gave me huge anxiety, like a bad trip, and made me horribly aware

> of

> > > all my nerve-endings. But lofepramine worked from the first day. When I

> > > took

> > > it in the morning I'd get a chemical lift, like a switch being turned

> on:

> > > it

> > > was a fabulous rush of joy. "

> > >

> > > She stopped taking it after six months. Several months later, she felt

> low,

> > >

> > > though not depressed - " I feel depression like a stone in my solar

> plexus,

> > > and it wasn't like that. But still I thought it would be nice to have

> that

> > > short-cut to happiness, so I took a lofepramine and it had no effect

> > > whatsoever - because I wasn't really depressed. So to me the placebo

> theory

> > >

> > > makes no sense. " Neither does it to Hannah, who took Prozac for 10

> years

> > > and

> > > says " it was absolutely fantastic and saved my life " .

> > >

> > > Carlat, a psychiatrist in Boston and author of Unhinged: The

> Trouble

> > >

> > > with Psychiatry - A Doctor's Revelations about a Profession in Crisis

> says

> > > that prescribing is a hit-and-miss affair. " Unfortunately we know a

> good

> > > bit

> > > less about what we are doing than you might think, " he writes. " When I

> find

> > >

> > > myself using phrases like 'chemical imbalance' and 'serotonin

> deficiency',

> > > it is usually because I'm trying to convince a reluctant patient to

> take a

> > > medication. Using these words makes their illness seem more biological,

> > > taking some of the stigma away. "

> > >

> > > Most lay people, he says, don't realise how little shrinks know about

> the

> > > underpinning of mental illness, though he's not as convinced as Kirsch

> > > about

> > > the placebo effect and makes the point that the patients who turn up at

> his

> > >

> > > office are different from those recruited into clinical trials because

> drug

> > >

> > > companies, desperate to get their product to outperform a placebo, are

> > > picky

> > > about who they choose.

> > >

> > > You have to have " pure " depression, unblemished by alcohol use, anxiety

> > > problems, bipolar disorder, suicidal thoughts, mild or long-term

> > > depression - which, says Carlat, would exclude most of his patients.

> Yet,

> > > as

> > > Marcia Angell, author of The Truth About the Drug Companies: How They

> > > Deceive Us and What to Do About It, says: " It's true that clinical

> trials

> > > do

> > > not tell you about the outcome in an individual patient, but they are

> the

> > > best we have. And, of course, if a clinical trial shows an

> antidepressant

> > > is

> > > on average no more effective than a placebo, then for every individual

> > > patient who does better on the drug, there must be one who does worse.

> We

> > > never hear about them! "

> > >

> > > If there's one thing that's clear among the contradictions, it's that

> the

> > > brain remains mysterious. As Carlat says: " Undoubtedly, there are

> > > neurobiological and genetic causes for all mental disorders, but they

> are

> > > still beyond our understanding. " All we really know is that depression

> > > exists and that sometimes the drugs seem to work - even if it's a

> placebo

> > > effect.

> > >

> > > Antidepressants: the guidelines

> > >

> > > * Never stop taking antidepressants without discussing it with your

> doctor,

> > >

> > > because abrupt cessation of SSRIs can cause withdrawal symptoms that

> can be

> > >

> > > both physical and mental.

> > >

> > > * If you do decide to stop, you'll need to reduce the dose gradually

> rather

> > >

> > > than stopping abruptly.

> > >

> > > * If you're happy with your antidepressant and you feel it works for

> you,

> > > then keep on taking it. Regular use is what works: if it ain't broke,

> don't

> > >

> > > fix it, says Professor Irving Kirsch.

> > >

> > > Further reading: Anatomy of an Epidemic: Magic Bullets, Psychiatric

> Drugs,

> > > and the Astonishing Rise of Mental Illness in America by

> Whitaker

> > >

> > >

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