Sorry to say this, but your doc was a bit of a buffoon for telling you to just stop your Xanax after being on it daily for 6 months! You simply can't do that with Xanax. That you began to experience w/d symptoms, took a Xanax and 20 minutes later (almost the EXACT amount of time it takes to get in your system) you felt relief, should have sent up the big red flags that you were being taken off the drug in the worst possible way. I am not a doctor nor a pharmacist, but after 6 months of a daily dose of Xanax, you can't just quit and begin taking it on a PRN (as needed) basis. You could take it PRN, I would guess, AFTER you had been completely and correctly weaned from it, but even then, as Summer123 so wisely said, try a different benzo like diazepam or klonopin, one that is nowhere near as "addicting" as Xanax and much easier to wean off when the time comes. As for the question of your blood pressure. Our BP fluctuates all day long and WILL spike if we get stressed. Was your blood pressure the reason your doc put you on the Xanax to begin with? Hmmmmm. I can't tell you to change your dosage........only your doctor can do that, and I would certainly set up an appointment with him to discuss not only your dose and the schedule, but a complete change of meds, done the RIGHT way. If he tells you to just stop the Xanax again, even if he IS changing you to something else, I would seek a second opinion. To change from Xanax to something else is best done in a "cross-over" regime. He should know what that is.
If I haven't addressed all your concerns here, please let me know and we'll try again. As a long time Xanax junkie, I really know what you're going through and what you're faced with.
Peace
Greenlydia
And yes, it was supposed to be "Should I increase my dosage to 1 mg as my body's used to that.. and then really slowly taper it down, so as to not experience much benzo withdrawal"..
Thanks for your reply. Like I mentioned in my previous post.. I had gotten everything pretty much ruled out, and everything came back normal. So the rise in BP's most likely due to my anxiety. I'm on Xanax again.. I had started experiencing those head tingling/ticklish feeling, and so I caved and couldn't handle it.. so I've been taking a 0.5 mg of it every night for the past 4-5 days now. 20-30 minutes after I take it I find a relief, and it really helps.. and lasts till the next day until it starts wearing off, and that's when I start putting my mind to it again and find that same feeling returning + a rise in my BP, which I can feel in my head (perhaps due to tension). I'm wondering what I should do.. should I increase my dosage to 1 mg (as that's the dosage I was taking before stopping the med. and getting the withdrawal symptoms) as my body's used to that? Or do you think it's just tension and my state of mind being already so sensitive that I feel heavy-headed, slight rise in BP and the ticklish sensation in my head .. at the end of the day? My doctor suggests I need a change in lifestyle, and I haven't really done much for that. I need to engage myself in sports esp. I do not listen. I'd really like to start meditating as that's been proven quite effective, but I cant get around to doing it. It's not easy for me to sit in one place and just keep focus on my breathing for 10 minutes, let alone 5 minutes! I'm going to try though.
There's just all these questions in my mind. Some .. the ones I mentioned above. I'd appreciate it if someone could answer me, and perhaps assure me. So I know I'm not alone on this.
What's your case, have you or are you experiencing a rise in BP every now and then?
Yes, anxiety can increase your bp. The symtoms you are talking about after stopping the xanex sound like withdrawal symptoms to me. If you take xanex daily, you should gradually taper off of it. The head tingling is a common withdrawal symptom. Since you are only 18, I would suggest you get off the xanex and never take it again. IT is very addicting. I've been on it for years and I cannot remember when I went from taking it every few days or when needed to being on it daily. If you do need a benzo, try one of the other longer acting benzos like valium or klonopin, but then only when absolutely necessary. Good luck.