Member Comments are provided by individuals and reflect their personal opinions only. Under NO circumstances should you act on any advice or opinion posted in this forum.  ALWAYS check with your personal physician before taking any action regarding your health! MedHelp International and our partners, sponsors and affiliates have no obligation to monitor any comments posted on this site, or the content and/or accuracy of such exchanges. MedHelp International does not endorse the views of any user.
Mental Health  (Expert Forum)
 | 
Effexor - Life without i
Answered by
Roger Gould, M.D. - Mental Health, Wellness
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.

Effexor - Life without i

by Theresa719, Apr 03, 2008 01:24PM
I have been reading these posts that date back in 2005 - it is now 2008.  My daughter is on Effexor and has been for about 1 year and will state that is has helped her immensely.  But, she knows she is having some minor side effects and she desires to get off as doesn't like being so dependent on a pill, but is so terrified of the potential withdrawal.  She also doesn't want to go back to the way she was feeling before the Effexor, but she has gained almost 50 pounds since starting the meds.  One doctor was going to stop her cold turkey and switch her to Zolof, but she didn't do it for fear of a reaction.  Thus, it is not helping her emotionally to live with the fear of her meds.  She says she feels like an addict.  Has there been any new discoveries relative to withdrawals, procedures for reduction, etc for Effexor.

Thanks

by Roger Gould, M.D., Apr 03, 2008 04:20PM
To: theresa
The best way to get off his medication is to do it over three weeks.  The first week he reduce the dose to as low as possible.  The second week you take that does every other day.  The third week you take it every third day and then you quit.  You should not have any withdrawal effects after that.
Member Comments (4)

by tafai, May 04, 2008 03:05PM
To: Theresa719
HI,
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

by TRwife, May 07, 2008 09:44AM
To: Theresa719
I've been trying to get off Effexor for months now.  I tapered down over three weeks, but when I stopped completely, the withdrawal symptoms were terrible.  I didn't know what was happening to me until I found this website.  On the basis of something I read online, I had my doctor prescribe tablets instead of capsules.  I've been cutting these down slowly, not going to a lower dose until I don't feel the dizziness for over a day.  I'm down to 1/8 of a tablet, once a day. I hope to be able to stop sometime soon.  I also gained weight - 45 lbs.  And I had just lost all the weight from my first pregnancy when I started taking Effexor.  I've been nursing my twins (second pregnancy) for almost a year now, and even that has not helped me lose anything more than what I started the pregnancy with.  I've switched to Wellbutrin, which is not as helpful as the Effexor for me, but I am "depressed" by my weight.  :-)

by Eleison, May 07, 2008 11:35AM
I was on efexor a year. It wasn't a medication suited to my body chemistry at all, and it worsened anorexic symptoms - far from gaining weight, I lost half a stone... Different meds effect different people in different ways.

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.
Expert Activity
Rising Healthcare Costs Dont Equal ...
Jul 24 by Lee Kirksey, MD
Fluoroquinolones increase risk of t...
Jul 08 by Enoch Choi, MD