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- Newsgroups: sci.med
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!darwin.sura.net!convex!egsner!adaptex!sdf!marco
- From: marco@sdf.lonestar.org (Steve Giammarco)
- Subject: Re: Getting off Xanax
- Message-ID: <BzKHos.2sC@sdf.lonestar.org>
- Organization: Best lil' ol' Pubnix in Texas
- References: <1992Dec10.224613.0457875@locus.com> <1992Dec12.203154.25807@newstand.syr.edu> <1992Dec16.212706.0905072@locus.com>
- Date: Sun, 20 Dec 1992 16:55:39 GMT
- Lines: 52
-
- In article <1992Dec16.212706.0905072@locus.com> yazz@locus.com (Bob Yazz) writes:
- >
- >How about duration and severity of that withdrawal? I don't have an answer
- >for you. A lot of people seem to think that short duration of action is
- >what's responsible for withdrawal, so maybe all short duration anxiolytics
- >are the problem. But we also know that Xanax, as opposed to the other
- >benzos, works better in Panic Disorder, so there's got to be something
- >different about it.
-
- Welp... As one who now has 11 years of Panic Disorder in remission for 2
- years, I can tell you this: The side effects of other meds (like Prozac
- and tricyclic antidepressants that help with serotonin reuptake) can
- trigger panic attacks. I took Norpramin (desipramine, the next up from
- imipramine or Tofranil) and it had some pretty wild side effects. It is
- _extremely_ anticholinergic which made me drink a _lot_ of water to feel
- hydrated at all. A trip to Denver to attend motss.con had me stopping every
- 1/2 hr to get something to drink. Of course Denver _is_ the Mile High City.
- It also caused retrograde ejaculation several times. It also made my heart
- beat faster than normal. If you know anything about patients with Panic
- Disorder, you know they're very focused inward to physical maladies,
- potentially to the point of hypochondria, if allowed to do so. Every
- shift in normal body function is a candidate to trigger another attack.
- Desipramine made rising from bed in the morning a dizzying experience on
- occasion, and increased the sensation of light-headedness and tunnel-
- vision. These are the nemesis of Panic Disorder patients who wish to
- escape the feeling of surreality or "brownouts" that scare them so.
-
- I used Xanax PRN (as needed) at the 0.25mg dose not more than once a day.
- While this is not the normal theraputic dosage to _prevent_ attacks, it
- did help me especially at work, and I had no problem getting on or off it
- as someone who _is_ taking a theraputic preventative dose might experience.
- I had no sedative effects that I was aware of. The quick resolution
- of attacks in progress or when the "aura" of an attack was warning me of one
- coming was one of it's best features. I would imagine that folx at higher
- doses might have more difficulty getting off Xanax due to habituation
- and possible non-resolution of the originating psychological problems...
-
- >I suggest you find a colleague whose opinion you trust (this here is
- >just "the net", after all), whose specialty is in addiction recovery,
- >and ask his or her opinion of Xanax in comparison to the other benzos.
- >You may change your prescribing practices as a result.
- >
- >| Its almost never correct to say never.
- >
- >Absolutely. (:-{)>
- >
-
-
- --
- Steve Giammarco/5330 Peterson Lane/Dallas TX 75240
- marco@sdf.lonestar.org
- loveyameanit.
-