Effexor - Life without i
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Questions posted in the Mental Health forum are being answered by Dr. Roger L. Gould, author of the Mastering Stress and Depression program and affiliated with the UCLA. Department of Psychiatry. Topics covered include anger, attention deficit disorder (ADD), bipolar disorder, dementia, electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), learning disabilities, memory, obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), panic, personality disorders, phobias, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), schizophrenia, stress, transitions, and work problems.
I'm on effexor myself and have been for many years.
I do want to go off them one day, or at least try, but i am aware there is a chance i might need some kind of med. whether effexor or something else to help with chronic depression/anxiety problems.
Some people just lack certain things in their bodies they need medication for to help them function (but it took me quite a while to come to terms with that and still i would try to get off them first at some point).
anyway, i think it's probably a good idea to try how she does without but i do know effexor is known for having quite some withdrawal effects on many people (this doens't mean she is addicted, it just means the med. impacts the system in a way that changes the balance, and that has (side) effects, also when you go off them the balance changes again and there will be withdrawal, but this is temporary)
I would advise to go off it as slowly as possible and if she suffers withdrawal just stay on that lower level for a bit longer before going to the next, even lower level.
good luck
Coming off it was hard, and I came off it in tandem with starting mirtazapine [no weight gain on this one either...!] It took me several months of going very slowly, as it did stir up a lot of murky symptoms from the lower depths. Not everyone has a hard time coming off it though. If start up was fairly unproblematic, then withdrawal shouldn't be too bad. At least that's my experience. Starting on efexor was turbulent for me, although it did help to some degree.
One thing my GP said to me that really really helped me when I was struggling with the withdrawal, and that was that at some point there will no longer be any of the venlafaxine in my system. There is an end to the withdrawal symptoms.