FAQ/Help |
Calendar |
Search |
Junior Member
Member Since Jun 2017
Location: Akron, OH
Posts: 12
7 1 hugs
given |
#1
I spent over a year trying different anti-depressants, probably around 12-13 total-including "booster" meds. NONE of them helped and I only experienced varying side-effects from them including weight gain-which makes me feel worse. My dr just kept trying med after med, with no rhyme or reason (except maybe to get me on all of the new anti-depressants to be their guinea pig). I'm just wondering if this is common practice or should they have been doing something else to help??
|
Reply With Quote |
Fuzzybear, qwerty68, Skeezyks, Teddy Bear
|
Disreputable Old Troll
Member Since Oct 2015
Location: The Star of the North
Posts: 32,762
(SuperPoster!)
9 17.4k hugs
given |
#2
Hello vickster: Well... I don't have an authoritative answer to your question. All I can say is that your experience is in line with what I have experienced in the past. I'm no longer on any med's at all of any kind. I do still have a pdoc whom I see a couple of times a year... just to keep my foot in the door, so to speak. Whenever I see him, if I mention anything I'm having difficulty with, he's right there with a suggestion for a med I could take. If I wanted to, I suspect I could be on a whole laundry list of medications. I've chosen not to go down that road. You asked if your providers should be doing something else to help. My personal opinion is... yes they should be. However my experience suggests to me that they probably won't.
You don't mention, in your post, if you see a therapist. That, of course, is the other option. I don't see one of those either. I've tried a few in the past. But none of them turned out to be worth the expense. However I've read posts here on PC written by members who said their therapists saved their lives. So I presume there are great therapists out there. It's simply a matter of finding them. |
Reply With Quote |
reggiegirl
|
vickster2017
|
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
#3
Hi vickster,
Have you considered trying ECT? I've had ECT during times when medication wasn't working, and it pulled me out of my deepest depression. The memory side effects are something to consider, but when you are at rock bottom the side effects don't matter as much as getting your mood stable. |
Reply With Quote |
Bird Feeder, vickster2017
|
Wisest Elder Ever
Member Since Nov 2002
Location: Cave.
Posts: 96,462
(SuperPoster!)
22 81.4k hugs
given |
#4
__________________ |
Reply With Quote |
vickster2017
|
Veteran Member
Member Since Jan 2016
Location: nowhere
Posts: 564
8 418 hugs
given |
#5
It seems to be a common practice. They randomly try things at the beginning but I think after a few they can have a more informed plan. No one can predict super accurately what will help or hurt.
That is a lot of psych meds in a short time. They typically take 6-8 weeks before they might start working. I was on the med treadmill for about 21 years before getting off. Unless a med was causing bad side-effects, the shortest time on any of them was about a year. One thing to look into is pharmacogenetic testing. It is not perfect but can narrow down what meds might be more effective without major side-effects. __________________ MDD with Psychotic Features, Dysthymia, GAD, Cluster C personality traits - Not taking any meds
|
Reply With Quote |
vickster2017
|
Junior Member
Member Since Jun 2017
Location: Akron, OH
Posts: 12
7 1 hugs
given |
#6
Quote:
|
|
Reply With Quote |
Junior Member
Member Since Jun 2017
Location: Akron, OH
Posts: 12
7 1 hugs
given |
#7
Quote:
I spent the year that I was trying different meds seeing a therapist because my insurance required me to. She was horrible but I didn't have it in me to ask for someone new, so I just endured it so I could try the medical route. Finally, I got sick of the whole shebang and quit going there all together and quit all the meds. After a couple months, things still had not improved, so I decided that I would just see my primary(whom basically allows me to tell him what I want to try-thankfully I don't abuse this as I'm sure many do...). Around then I also found a different therapist-which I do like. I am not sure yet how effective the therapy is, but at least he doesn't use the whole session to complain about his life or share about his sugar daddy who wants to buy him a house in Vegas... I do feel as though one or both of these things are helping a bit, along with getting rid of the very toxic bf that triggered this episode to begin with. |
|
Reply With Quote |
Junior Member
Member Since Jun 2017
Location: Akron, OH
Posts: 12
7 1 hugs
given |
#8
Quote:
I have wanted to look into testing, I guess I just haven't because I am not sure who performs it. The pdoc I was seeing certainly never mentioned it. It was a lot of meds in that time period! A couple weren't anti-depressants, but add-ons like Abilify(which at a high dose made me super manic and a low dose caused a 40lb weight gain). Cymbalta was short lived-I broke out in whole body welts on about day 3. A couple of them caused significant enough side effects that I had to stop as well. But the ones I did stay on for longer, I was maxed out on the dosages with zero benefits. I just got so burned out on the whole idea that I finally just stopped all together. |
|
Reply With Quote |
Junior Member
Member Since Jun 2017
Location: Florida
Posts: 17
7 |
#9
I have been on more meds in the past 2 years than I care ti think about. I also did 12 ECT treatments, which did nothing for me at all, except mess with my memory.
I am currently trying Ketamine Infusions. It isn;t covered by insurance and isn't cheap. For just about everyone I have heard from, mostly online, it made a huge difference for them. Me, it has helped a lot, but not the monumental difference for everyone. I go Monday to speak with the doctor at the Ketamine Center to decide what to do now. The usual treatment is 6 infusions. I didn't start seeing a difference until the 4th, so I did number 7 yesterday and am tentatively scheduled for 8 on Tuesday. If you can afford it, it is worth looking into. |
Reply With Quote |
reggiegirl
|
Veteran Member
Member Since Jan 2016
Location: nowhere
Posts: 564
8 418 hugs
given |
#10
Hopefully you get this. Here is one place that does it and seems to focus on psych meds.
Good luck and I hope this site proves to be useful to you. __________________ MDD with Psychotic Features, Dysthymia, GAD, Cluster C personality traits - Not taking any meds
|
Reply With Quote |
Junior Member
Member Since May 2017
Location: san diego
Posts: 19
7 10 hugs
given |
#11
Quote:
|
|
Reply With Quote |
Junior Member
Member Since Jun 2011
Location: Louisiana
Posts: 16
13 3 hugs
given |
#12
Quote:
|
|
Reply With Quote |
Veteran Member
Member Since Sep 2017
Location: Rural New York
Posts: 632
7 301 hugs
given |
#13
I was treated for Treatment Resistant MDD for YEARS with every antidepressant and antipsychotic and therapy available all to no avail. Doctors have no choice but to prescribe medications by the trial and error method because there are no definitive tests for MI and because every medication affects every patient differently.
Finally had a manic episode, whether it was caused by the antidepressants or because I'm just a late bloomer. An excellent psychiatrist took over my care and started me on Bipolar meds which work just great. |
Reply With Quote |
Reply |
|