Guest guest Posted December 5, 2004 Report Share Posted December 5, 2004 So if someone is on Prozac, do you recommend staying ob it til Armour builds up? I am currently on 1 grain Armour that I started 1 month ago after 1 month on Synthroid.(due for labs this week). I plan to increase whatever DR says. I have also been taking 20mg Prozac for several months. I keep trying to take myself off of it as I just don't want to take it. I went without it the last two weeks, but can feel the rage/depression/unable to cope feelings building up. I finally took one of them yesterday because I don't like that person. Anyway, would you wait til you reached a particular dose range to quit the Prozac? BTW, I also lost my brother unexpectedly this year. We were very close. He even lived here next door to my family. His birthday is next week and of course this is our first Christmas without him. I'm sure that contributes to my problem. > In a message dated 12/5/2004 1:03:39 PM Eastern Standard Time, > debra_eastman@m... writes: > > > Cindi, if you're reading this any advice you can give me would be > > appreciated: I know you went through hell and have done a lot of research on the > > psychological aspects of this disease. > > > > What I would tell you is that the healing from the mental symptoms is a > sometimes slow one...sometimes rocky one....but a steady one. I am in my 10th > month of treatment, and it is rare now for me to feel any anxiety, panic, > depression. That was not true in my 5th month. Each month has seen gains in the > amount of time that month that I have been free from psychiatric symptoms. > > By rocky one...I mean this. In the beginning, I felt like a metronome (one > of those things piano users use to keep the rhythm..it goes back and forth, > back and forth, back and forth). And that's how I would sometimes feel. Like > this: I'm okay. I'm not okay. I'm okay again. All in the space of 5 > minutes...my mood and thoughts could fluctuate that fast. > > The good thing was that I knew that it was my brain healing from the effects > of not having enough thyroid hormone. In one book I read about the mind > effects of hypo, it talks about how the brain has been " jumbled " from lack of > thyroid hormone. And it takes a while for it to settle back down and run smoothly. > > > Just like with the other parts of the body, the brain has to adjust to having > what it needs. And I think that the brain even gets " remapped " a bit in the > negative/depressive/etc. thinking from brain hypo...and that it takes a while > for things to get back to normal. And that having the needed resources > (enough thyroid hormone for the brain), one has to then do a bit of postitive > thinking on one's own to undo the some of the brain damage. And it is brain > damage...just like damage to the body from hypo. > Cindi > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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