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Legendary
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Member Since Jun 2016
Location: USA
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#21
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One of the keys to using Adderall is to systematically try various doses and timing in order to find your own individualized optimal dosing. Some people, for example, can tolerate 30 mg, twice daily. At 30 mg, I was so dizzy I had to rest on the bed. Not good. At 15 mg. every 4-6 hours, I am awake, less depressed, have some physical and mental energy, etc. My pdoc has told me stimulants were used for depression, many years ago, before the tricyclics and SSRIs were discovered. I have wasted a lot -- many, many-- years trying to tolerate all of the many drugs. Those I could tolerate did nothing for my depression. Adderall is giving me some hope. I will continue to update here. WC __________________ May we each fully claim the courage to live from our hearts, to allow Love, Faith and Hope to enLighten our paths. |
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MickeyCheeky
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MickeyCheeky, Rose76
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Legendary
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Location: USA
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#22
Thanks so much for the update. How great that you find it helpful. Interesting what you say about individualizing the dosing strength and frequency.
Glad you have some hope. |
MickeyCheeky, Wild Coyote
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MickeyCheeky, Wild Coyote
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Junior Member
Member Since May 2015
Location: mississippi
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#23
Try Remeron and Trazadone for sleep issues.
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MickeyCheeky
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MickeyCheeky, Rose76
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Location: Near Seattle WA
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#24
I cannot say for sure- you would have to consult with your doctor. But I would mention it to them. Be prepared for all sorts of issues with it. Ignorance is a beast in the USA.
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MickeyCheeky
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MickeyCheeky
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New Member
Member Since May 2018
Location: Baltimore
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#25
Remeron helps me a lot with anxiety and sleep. I take 15 mg before bed. Adderall and other ADHD drugs didn't do much for me.
Try MAOIs and then TCAs. The dietary objections to MAOIs are way over exaggerated according to a number of experts. |
MickeyCheeky
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MickeyCheeky
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#26
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As for Adderall affecting your brain and your relationships- hasn't depression all ready done that to you? It has pretty much ruined the life I might have had. If you are seeing a therapist perhaps they could help walk you through trying it- or you can take one of the on-line surveys for depression today and while you start the initial dose, to sort of keep track if you are improving or not. Adderall is not heroin- it should not get you hooked right away; it shouldn't make you "high" but it very well may make you feel better, or at least more functional ( my own personal experience) It is good that you are wary of a drug and are checking out the information you can find. I would guess it depends too on your basic health, if you don't suffer from any heart issues, etc. I hope this helps a little. My guess would be if you don't have any history of drug abuse you probably won't have any issue with adderall. But that is just my own unprofessional opinion. I would be interested in seeing how it works for you. |
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MickeyCheeky
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MickeyCheeky
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New Member
Member Since Dec 2017
Location: Thompson, Ct
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#27
I really appreciate your post as I have been on Adderall for a few years and have not until now read anything about it being used for depression. It really helps the feeling of heaviness like I'm weighed down. I almost could have written your post especially regarding attitudes of others if the know you're on it. It doesn't cause me to feel anything other than better for not feeling the heaviness which allowed me to work for many years. The many other symptoms I've had many life changes and Thanks so much!
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MickeyCheeky
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MickeyCheeky
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Legendary
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#28
I've been prescribed Ritalin some months ago and have found it somewhat helpful, which I'll take as worthwhile.
I see I never responded above to the OP's main point - that people can be horribly judgemental and make judgements based on zero knowledge/experience. I, too, have found that to be true. It can be as bad as you describe, with even repercussions at one's place of employment that I thought were illegal. (It happened to me. I made a mistake on the job. I was asked to resign because my employer "knew I was being treated for depression." A coworker had made a worse mistake, but didn't get asked to resign.) What I've learned is that you just can't safely discuss your psych diagnosis or treatment with people, especially in the workplace. Heck, you are not always safe speaking candidly to a psychiatrist. But let me not digress. When in doubt, just keep your business to yourself. And your safest doubting just about everyone. That's wrong, but that's the reality . . . in my experience. And it's not going to change soon, despite all the efforts at destigmitizing psych problems. I woukd say that stigma will be gone, about as soon as racial prejudice ends. Some things are just almost endemic to how people are socialized. Of course, everyone seems to think that they do have relevant experience. Ex: "Well, I have lots of things I could get depressed about, but I don't let myself." Ever heard that one??? I've gotten that from a family member who has a Masters Degree in counseling. Yeah. Stupidly, I took sucker punches to the gut repeatedly from this close relative before I wised up. I'm pretty wised up now. I suppose there are some people who get it. I tend not to think that anybody who hasn't been there, themselves, gets it. And those who've experienced a serious depressive illness that resolved probably have trouble understanding chronically recurring depression. If you read what "experts" wrote about depression 50 or 60 years ago, you'll see that a lot of their thinking was inane. Read "The Power of Positive Thinking" by Norman Vincent Peale - regarded as a classic, for decades. He claimed to have totally and permanently cured a succession of afflicted individuals by talking with them and explaining to them what he found wrong with their thinking. Many of his generation believed depression was a product of faulty logic. Better reasoning was the fix. Therapists still tend to conduct their practices as though that were what was needed. There is a canonized saint who stated that you can't argue a person into Faith, any more than you can torture a person into it. I would say the same about relief from depressive illness: You can't reason a person out of their affliction. That's my belief. Neither can you medicate a person out of it, though drugs have helped people to varying degrees - myself being one of them. The first step towards Wisdom is for a person to be humble about what they think "they know . . . which often isn't so." (Not saying that comes easy to me either.) It is simply one of life's cruelties that persons most needful of understanding and respect for the effort they are making often get the opposite. |
Birdifriend, MickeyCheeky
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MickeyCheeky
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#29
As far as I know stimulants like amphetemines have been used for TRD for many years. My husband used to take provigil for narcolepsy and while not a stimulant directly, its stimulant like properties did help him. I vaguely remember reading that they are doing med trials to see if provigil can help with depression related to Parkinsons.
__________________ "I carried a watermelon?" President of the no F's given society. |
MickeyCheeky
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MickeyCheeky
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#30
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MickeyCheeky
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MickeyCheeky
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Jun 2018
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#31
I would be cautious about adderall. I have been taking it for 13 years. I am completely addicted. I am utterly useless if I don't take it - I can't stay awake. My body no longer produces its natural stimulants to wake me up and keep me awake. The last time I had to go without adderall for more than a couple days was prior to a sleep study. They wanted me to stop taking it 2 weeks prior, but that was impossible, as I knew I would be nonfunctional and would have to take off work for the duration. We compromised on one week. I broke after 4 days because the withdrawal was so severe that I wanted to kill myself. I took part of my usual dosage, then continued to abstain for the rest of the time period.
Does adderall help with depression? Yes. But that doesn't mean it's a good treatment. For some people, eating a whole chocolate cake helps their depression. But you wouldn't say that's a good thing. The problem I had with adderall was how much better it made me feel. It made life so much more bearable. Getting up in the morning didn't feel like a burden. Completing tasks felt enjoyable and satisfying. If I'm honest, I don't think it was quite a natural feeling. And that's the difference between the results from other depression treatments and adderall. Your mood on adderall does not reflect restored balance. You do not act how you would if you weren't depressed. You act uniquely as you would when taking adderall. And it's very hard to resist taking it every day. These days, I don't feel any of the benefits of taking adderall. I am as depressed as ever. The only difference is I now have this monkey on my back that demands its dose of adderall everyday or my world comes crashing down. I wish I had never started taking adderall. On my experience with Remeron - it really helped. The first couple of days, it was really sedating, but my body adjusted. Very good sleep. Unfortunately, it caused my appetite to balloon out of control, and I gained a lot of weight to the point that it was intolerable. |
MickeyCheeky
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MickeyCheeky, Rose76
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#32
This thread is very helpful. Thank you everyone! Sending many hugs to everyone
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#33
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__________________ "I carried a watermelon?" President of the no F's given society. |
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#34
I have been taking Adderall for treatment resistant depression for about 8 years and it does help my depression. I also take Cymbalta and bupropion. My previous psychiatrist gave it to me when I started working 12 hour shifts so I could keep working. Now my new psychiatrist wants to wean me off of it since I don't have ADHD and my blood pressure is up. I have weaned down the dose but my depression is also not controlled as well. It is a pain to have to take a paper copy RX to the pharmacy each month, but I do believe it really helps my depression.
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Grand Magnate
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#35
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I still got some benefit from adderall until maybe 1-2 years ago. I was also prescribed a much higher dose than many people - 60 MG. I successfully reduced that to 40 MG a year ago, but it was painful. And no, I do not think adderall is comparable to an antidepressant. An antidepressant doesn't immediately make you feel better. It's much harder to stop using a substance when you know you can get immediate effects from it. There's a reason adderall and certain other drugs are considered addictive. In any case, I would actually say I am dependent on my antidepressants and other meds, and my body is physically addicted. But this thread is about adderall. People should be aware of the possible drawbacks, that's all. I still wish I'd never started on it. Edit: The FOR YOU was rather hostile and unnecessary. I shouldn't have to post a disclaimer when sharing my experiences informing readers that my experiences are my own. That should be obvious. |
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#36
Hey listen, I am very sorry that I upset you or made you angry and I did not mean to invalidate your experience all so please accept my apologies. Maybe I was triggered and did not know it, its very possible. And I should do a better job of remembering that the whole world doesnt revolve around me and my experiences. I truly apologize.
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Legendary
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#37
I think all posters above have been well-intentioned, and I'm heartened to see posters trying to offer more understanding to each other, after a slight dust-up.
I see validity in both of the two contrasting perspectives above. My own situation is that I started on Ritalin a few months ago, and I seem to be doing better on it. I just take 20 mg daily, just tab 1 in the morning with breakfast. It's helping me wake up and resist going back to bed. But I know there are good reasons why some drugs are scheduled in the highly controlled category. It is very easy to get carried away with them. And they may not simply make you feel "normal." People's experience varies, but even a prescribed, therapeutic dose can become a monkey-on-your-back. I haven't fallen in love with Ritalin, so I'm lucky. I get an intended benefit, and my world wouldn't fall apart, if the pdoc stopped letting me have it. But I do have that kind of attachment to a different controlled drug: hydrocodone. I take 10 mg two or three times a day. Half of the pills are mine, and half I get from my boyfriend who is prescribed more than he needs and uses (even after I twice told the VA that he didn't need so many!) I have stayed at that level of use for a few years. I feel I'm habituated to the point where I would call my use somewhat of an addiction, but I'm not looking to escalate to recapture the euphoric effect I used to enjoy when the drug was new to me. There really is not a sharp line between dependence and addiction. I know some abuse experts tend to see addiction as more than just physiologic dependence. But those categories can overlap and their distinctions can blur. If hydrocodone was removed from my life tomorrow, I would be in a panic. Mainly that's because I have a low tolerance for pain. I was depressed long before I had chronic pains and aches, but - for me - feeling "sore" is immobilizing. Without pain pills, I probably would never get off the recliner. My cue to take a pain pill is when I feel too sore to comfortably do stuff - like cook, or wash the dishes. When all it usually takes is hydrocodone 10 mg every 12 hours to almost totally alleviate that, then I must not be dealing with that big of a pain problem. But getting it relieved changes my life. I can totally see how people fall in love with opiates. I'm in love with these pills, but my use stays pretty modest because I'm a realist about the consequences of going nuts with this stuff. (Then one could point out that I am using as much of it as I can conveniently get a hold of.) So I am kind of addicted. When they talk on TV about curbing doctors prescribing it, I am horrified. But I'm glad I have the stuff. I believe life would suck, if I didn't have it. I don't believe mood altering drugs, like antidepressants and bipolar meds, simply make you "normal." (I take amitriptyline. In the past, I tried several "mood stabilizers.) I think all this stuff involves somewhat of a "deal with the devil." |
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#38
I have had TRD, TR OCD and other clinical chronic issues for decades. Adderall is the only adjunct that actually dents my omnipresent anhedonia. I don't give a flying **** if I'm "addicted" or heading for a nasty fall. I would be dead several times over already without it so therefore I take it. I literally couldn't care less what words of warning anyone has.
As to the OP's point, yes, 90% of my PDocs have tried to get me off it so that they can retry all the same ineffective meds I've already failed on. They all have their own favourites or angle as to what will fix me. Zero have succeeded. Nor ECT, dTMS or Ketamine. So, after 23 years of crushing suffering it's still only Adderall that makes any kind of impact on my TRD. Nardil + Adderall was divine (I wanted to do things) but my PDoc got cold feet and stopped prescribing the combo. To this day it fills me with bitter anger that there's a solution out there to my eternal suffering that I simply am not allowed to have. My 2d that if your only other option is Suicide, take the ****ing Adderall for ****'s sake. |
Rose76
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