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  #1  
Old May 29, 2012, 08:54 PM
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Suki22 Suki22 is offline
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if you walked into a pyschiatrist's office and could choose an anti-depressant that you know works, what would you choose and why?

which one(s) worked the best for you in the past or present?
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  #2  
Old May 29, 2012, 09:23 PM
Anonymous32910
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I've been on wellbutrin xl the longest. It has never given me problems.

I started on viibryd last December. It is expensive and insurance tried to deny coverage for it, but they eventually approved it. It has worked beautifully for me. I take it with the wellbutrin xl. Pdoc has found I do best on a combination of antidepressants.

Effexor xr really worked well for me until it just stopped working (a common problem for me). Many people have a hard time withdrawing from it though. I was able to get off of it fairly easy with a few side effects, but nothing too hard to work through.
Thanks for this!
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  #3  
Old May 29, 2012, 09:57 PM
RaceAgainstMyself RaceAgainstMyself is offline
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I guess it depends what condition you're treating. The one I've been on for most of my life now worked best, but now it seems to be slowly killing me. My issue from childhood was always panic disorder/specific phobia, I wasn't ever supposed to be on AD's for so long. For panic attacks though, Effexor XR always worked. Problem is I didn't get those proper diagnoses til a year ago; docs have always claimed I had depression, or (originally) GAD. My therapist and I both suspect I have neither (though obviously, untreated anxiety can cause depression, but that's clearly situational.)

For depression though, I would never have chosen effexor XR for myself, as with depression meds tend to be prescribed longer-term (again, I ended up getting that prescribed after trying a few others, and it seemed SSRI's weren't doing it for me, and/or gave me bad side effects.... also, docs often gave me very high dosages, then when I got bad reactions, they'd be like 'this med obviously isn't working...') From what I've heard, going solely by half-life, Prozac is probably best b/c it has the longest half-life of any SS/NRI, so it's the least difficult to discontinue. That has been my biggest frustration with my meds the past...decade at least, the fact I seem to have gotten twice as bad as I was before any meds at all, every time I've gone off something (zoloft once, effexor twice.)

There are also possibly different "subtypes" of depression, primarily the serotonin based idea, and the HPA one. It's thought that something about the whole adrenal system gets thrown off in many people with depression, and low cortisol and adrenal levels in the brain can lead to depression, along with affecting the other common chemicals (serotonin, etc.) in turn. So with the adrenal-type one I'd think an SNRI might be preferable (but there's not much choice ther besides effexor), or one of the other more "stimulating" ones, like wellbutrin. OR perhaps not even an antidepressant per se - Vyvanse seems to have some anti-depressant effects, especially in conjunction with the other ones. I've heaerd there can be drug interactions b/w antidepressants and vyvanse, b/c the latter also likely has some sort of serotonin effect....but my doctor and my pamphlets for vyvanse never mention that, I found it on the internet. So again it would probably come down to, most generally, whether the patient wanst a more stimulatory vs a calming effect....typically if you have a more anxious-type depression they'll tell you to stay away from stimulants, including wellbutrin. (though personally I've ended up on both of those, as well as caffeine-dependent, to overcompensate for effexor's total numbing effect and lethargy issues. ironic much? lol.) So yeah you have to be careful about swinging the pendulum too far in the other direction too!
Thanks for this!
Suki22
  #4  
Old May 30, 2012, 04:16 PM
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Atlantis Atlantis is offline
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An SNDRI, but if I could have any one back it would be bupropion. Clomipramine seems to be the TCA that works for me (so yes, a TCA as well if the SNDRI doesn't work), but I wouldn't hesitate to try a MAOI if none of the above doesn't work.
Thanks for this!
Suki22
  #5  
Old May 31, 2012, 05:23 AM
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cocoabeans cocoabeans is offline
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Um, I've tried a SSRIs with bad results, prozac, zoloft, celexa. Wellbutrin destroyed my appetite so, I recently quit that (went from 300 mg to 0 and no discontinuation issues by the way). Won't even bother with Effexor or its patented cousins.

Next depression, I'm just going to wait it out. Maybe let it kill me or get so desperate I go back on yet another drug but, not because they work. The side effects are so distracting, like a bad habit. But you can always quit the drugs so, there's false hope.
Hugs from:
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  #6  
Old May 31, 2012, 10:58 PM
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sunrise sunrise is offline
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I would choose Wellbutrin.
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Thanks for this!
Suki22
  #7  
Old Jun 05, 2012, 06:57 AM
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Atlantis Atlantis is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cocoabeans View Post
Um, I've tried a SSRIs with bad results, prozac, zoloft, celexa. Wellbutrin destroyed my appetite so, I recently quit that (went from 300 mg to 0 and no discontinuation issues by the way). Won't even bother with Effexor or its patented cousins.

Next depression, I'm just going to wait it out. Maybe let it kill me or get so desperate I go back on yet another drug but, not because they work. The side effects are so distracting, like a bad habit. But you can always quit the drugs so, there's false hope.
I'm sorry to hear this, but I'm interested to hear more and willing to help if there's any I can give. SSRIs are all fairly similar given their effects on serotonin, but bupropion has a far greater affinity for dopamine (which does explain the increased appetite if you're susceptible to it). Why won't you bother with venlafexine and other SNRIs? If that fails, there is always hope in the tricyclics. Depression isn't something you should have to "wait out", as there are drugs out there that will work for you and with minimal side-effects. If you're desperate I know how hard it can be to find the right one though.
  #8  
Old Jun 06, 2012, 09:43 AM
Mogeii Mogeii is offline
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For my conditions Zoloft worked for 4 years. I call that grounds for choosing it if I had knowledge it would work again. Poop out however ruined the run.
Thanks for this!
Suki22
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