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Member
Member Since Jan 2015
Location: East Coast
Posts: 70
9 20 hugs
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#1
I am seeing a new therapist because my old therapist said he can no longer treat me, he did not think he was helping anymore. So I have a new therapist now and so far there is no improvement. I went back on medication in December of last year and every medication they gave me since then, I have not responded to. I gave each of them roughly 4 weeks, but did not continue them because they either made me worse, the side effects were too much, and on top of it none of them helped. I was hospitalized back in February, and they changed both my meds at the same time and that did nothing as well. I am really starting to think that no medication will work for me, and my brain is taking all the hits every time they raise or lower the dose, or they change the meds. I am at the point where I do not even feel like trying any new medications. Maybe going off them and trying some alternative treatments. I am seeing my therapist twice a week and still on medication, so I may continue to try different meds, but I don't really know what to do. I am going to try though.
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*Laurie*, RainyDay107, Shazerac, Travelinglady
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Legendary Wise Elder
Member Since Sep 2010
Location: North Carolina
Posts: 48,116
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#2
I hope you can find something that will work.
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Capac
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Grand Member
Member Since Feb 2017
Location: M
Posts: 989
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#3
I wish you the best, I relate to being treatment resistant. For me, Lamictal, Wellbutrin and Ketamine infusions have helped the most. Good luck.
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Veteran Member
Member Since Oct 2017
Location: Mountain View
Posts: 629
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#4
I have treatment-resistant bipolar I and I am being told that Clozapine is pretty essential. I have restarted it today. Based on what you described, you seem a candidate for Clozapine, but you have not named the medications you have tried. Do you remember what they were called?
__________________ Bipolar I w/Psychotic features Zyprexa Zydis 5 mg Gabapentin 1200 mg Melatonin 10 mg Levoxyl 75 mcg (because I took Lithium in the past) past medications: Depakote, Lamictal, Lithium, Seroquel, Trazodone, Risperdal, Cogentin, Remerol, Prozac, Amitriptyline, Ambien, Lorazepam, Klonopin, Saphris, Trileptal, Clozapine and Clozapine+Wellbutrin, Topamax |
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New Member
Member Since Jul 2018
Location: Karachi
Posts: 9
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#5
Thank you aspiringauthor for the pretty nice and informative post.
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AspiringAuthor
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Junior Member
Member Since Jun 2017
Location: Florida
Posts: 17
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#6
If you can afford Ketamine Infusions, that was the first thing in three years that heled at all. It's expensive though. How about TMS? I have heard that can be pretty helpful also. I couldn't get approval for it because I had already done ECT and it didn't help. Personally, I don't recommend ECT although I understand it has helped others. Not me, it just screwed up my memory really bad.
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AspiringAuthor
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Legendary
Member Since Jun 2007
Location: Washington DC metro area
Posts: 15,865
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#7
I think "treatment resistant" should be related to both you and the treatment offered, not just you. If the treatment does not help, it is not necessarily your "fault".
__________________ Now if thou would'st When all have given him o'er From death to life Thou might'st him yet recover -- Michael Drayton 1562 - 1631 |
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Junior Member
Member Since Jun 2017
Location: Florida
Posts: 17
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#8
Treatment resistant is not our fault.
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*Laurie*
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Aug 2008
Location: Illinois, USA
Posts: 3,052
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#9
I have TRD and managed to have intranasal ketamine prescribed. It has helped when nothing else did for many years.
It costs $65/month-not covered by insurance but way cheaper than infusions and totally worth it. |
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AspiringAuthor
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