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i'm 20 and in big depression and sometimes totally lose my faith in getting over it:( my doctor prescribed me seroxat but i was too scared to take it and stopped after 2 days. is there anyone who really beat depression thanks to antidepressants???? :(

2007-12-09 08:00:26 · 17 answers · asked by girl,depressed 1 in Health Mental Health

17 answers

Thinking about and reading about anti-depressants is enough to put you off taking them all together. you read and hear so many people's opinions that its hard to know who to believe and what to trust. Everybod is different but my personal opinion is, I once was too scared to take anti-depressants that i had been prescribed I took two and stopped. As the days went on I felt worse and worse even though I was convinved I'd snap out of it. After 4 weeks of hell the doctor said to me why am I scared of taking anti-depressants when Im not scared to take valium or sleeping tabs ? I decided to give anti-d a go and much to my surprise they worked !! After 2 weeks I felt a change and a month i got their full effect. I think you should go back and talk to your doctor explain that you are scared of taking them and ask him to explain things thoroughly. The ones I took were called Cipralex and they are an SSRI like Seroxat. Get well soon

2007-12-09 08:19:09 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

The first thing you need to explore is if your depression is situational ( Relationship problems, school problems, money, etc) and you know you will feel better once this situation is resolved. If that is the case then you do not need medication. However, If everything in your life is basically fine but you still find that you have trouble eating ( or are eating too much), have trouble sleeping, don't call your friends anymore, don't want to participate in your normal activities and this has been going on steadily for a few months then you may in fact be depressed and yes anti-depressants can help you a lot.

You would need to begin by speaking to your doctor and getting a referral to a psychiatrist. Regular MD's can prescribe antidepressants but you are really so much better off working with a psychiatrist who will monitor you. For most people it is a case of trial and error before you find the best medicine or combo of medicines that work for you. I tried 4 different combos before I found the life saver for me which was wellbutrin and zoloft. I now take a very lose dose of wellbutrin and take no SSRI's. And feel great! I took the two for 8 years and then slowly went off of them. And my depression is gone. While taking them your best bet is to work with your doctor, make sure you take every dosage of your meds, see a therapist and exercise. . I can honestly say that I was in a very severe depression and thought I would never pull out of it and thanks to antidepressants I am alive today.

Good luck!

2007-12-09 08:18:12 · answer #2 · answered by Joy 6 · 0 2

that isn't any longer coincidental that all and sundry the individuals who went on taking photos sprees interior the final ten years have been on SSRIS. I believe you're one hundred% yet relatively the universal public of people want speedy restoration methods [quickly nutrients mentality] they might somewhat take a pill than undergo any of the suffering required for emotional growth,capability and awareness. there's no organic and organic try for melancholy,so people basically assume they have some style of imbalance even nevertheless not one of the "chemical imbalance" theories of melancholy have been ever been everyday. The underlying concern inflicting the melancholy and drop in serotonin is rarely addressed in user-friendly terms the symptom.The pill takes away the soreness however the harm remains there and could be there whilst they arrive off the pills. If the female above me did any examine she might understand the great undesirable effects those drugs have had on society fantastically interior the US have been they're marketed plenty greater heavily.The drug businesses create issues with a view to sell recommendations - they're advertising and marketing melancholy no longer in user-friendly terms the medicine. In an analysis of efficacy archives submitted to the FDA between 1987 and 1999 for 6 of the main time-honored selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressants, seventy 5 to eighty% of the reaction to medicine exchange into duplicated in placebo communities.[Placebo is a pretend sugar pill] What does that inform you??? SSRIs are no longer a therapy, or possibly an extremely effectual therapy for melancholy. Serotonin is basically one among a number of neurotransmitters that influence temper, and if a individual has a serotonin deficiency, forcing what little they must no longer be re-uptaken into the synapses does no longer restoration the situation. the incontrovertible fact that all and sundry reason detrimental area-effects proves that this man made chemical balancing act isn't what the physique needs. discover selections or there are going to be greater incidents like Va Tech.

2016-10-10 22:24:48 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

First of all, don't stop taking a medication abruptly without consulting with your doctor first. Doing so can be dangerous to your health.

Antidepressants can definitely work. There is no best antidepressant because everyone is different, and what works for one person may not work for another. In fact, antidepressants are notorious for having markedly varied efficacy on different people.

Finding the right antidepressant is usually a process of trial and error. Some people will get lucky and the first medication they try will work wonderfully, and others will go through numerous prescriptions before finding something that works. Some people may never find a drug that works for them.

I encourage you to take good care of yourself as a whole and work closely with your psychiatrist. Don't give up! Just because one medication doesn't work doesn't mean the next won't either. Also, don't give up on a medication too soon. Most antidepressants take days or weeks to kick in.

Ask your doctor what other things you can be doing to help, like exercising regularly or seeing a therapist. It is possible to "fix" depression without drugs, and a combination of medication and lifestyle changes does wonders for many people.

Good luck! I hope you feel better.

2007-12-09 08:09:31 · answer #4 · answered by Lauren 5 · 4 2

It's a case of finding what works for you, I've had a lot that didn't work but found taking very high doses of dothiepin helpful - this is kind of tranquillising, it's supposed to help with anxiety. The only thing is they are so hard to come back off - it's not like getting addicted when you need a fix, it's just that learning to cope on your own again is really hard. It's a rush to start with but that wears off and then it just feels like a big exhausting battle. If you need to take them, don't let that put you off, the most important thing is the short term, and the long term sorts itself out.

2007-12-09 21:48:51 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

http://www.peterbreggin.com/

They are **** - they only work for all these people because they believe in them. A sugar pill would have worked for them just as well. None have worked for me The side effects are terrible. I was giving risperidal and the agitation was like nothing I can explain. Pure hell. I could not sit down for two seconds, i had to be walking back and forth constantly. I had to be prescribed valium to calm me down and even this did not do much but took the edge off it. The psychiatric nurses were looking at me as though I must be making it up.
I was then prescribed effexor and this made me zombified. I've tried to come off them and they give me the weirdest nightmares and nervousness and brain zaps.
Look at the petition for peoples experiences on it.
http://www.petitiononline.com/effexor/

Psychiatrists say it is a chemical balance but this is only a theory which many on here tout as though its iron clad truth. These tablets vcause chemical imbalances and problems that were not there before.

I hope you find your way out of feeling depressed without resorting to these poisons.

2007-12-09 08:49:49 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

I do not believe in them. I believe doctors give them out like smarties just to get people in and out of their door. I was prescribed seroxat too and although i didn't want to take them i felt as if i had to as my family wanted me to get better and believed that this was the answer so i felt like i couldn't say no but within a couple of days the side effects were so bad i thought it was the end of me. I couldn't even walk upstairs to the bathroom, i had to crawl. When they seen the state of me they argreed that there must be another way or at least the antidepressants were not the answer. I began taking St John's Wort which like antidepressants takes a few weeks to start working, it is also natural and doesn't have any side effects (although it can interfere with the way other medications are absorbed including the contraceptive pill) You can also take this for as long as you want/need and you don't have to wean yourself off it like antidepressants and go through the withdrawl symtoms associated with that. My belief is if something can make you that ill going into your body how can it be good for you and you have the same coming off it. I'm not sure i believe the previous persons comments about if they missed a couple of days they feel depressed again because it takes weeks for them to work, it also takes the same for them to come out of your system. I also recommend just doing things that make you happy to try and cheer yourself up and also excercise.

2007-12-09 08:17:57 · answer #7 · answered by honey 3 · 1 4

They do work for about 70% of patients. No one knows why they don't work for the rest. Lexapro was the best for me. There is not a best one for everyone, but the top ones are: Prozac, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Effexor, and Celexa. Even the worst depression sometimes can be beaten without medication. Prozac didn't work for me and at that time I didn't switch to anything else, but I got better anyway. Only you can decide what is best for you. Start with as little as you can and work up to what you need. That is the safest way.

2007-12-09 08:29:13 · answer #8 · answered by Susas 6 · 0 1

why were you too scared to take it?
antidepressants will take a good few days to have any effect, and usually it is 2-3 weeks before you fully see their effects. but dont let this discourage you - they can be really helpful if you stick at them.
there is no such thing as the "best" antidepressant - some work better for some than others.
the best thing you can do is chat to your GP. also maybe think about counselling - again your GP can advise - because that can really help,having someone you can talk to and who understands.
good luck.

2007-12-09 08:47:09 · answer #9 · answered by clairelouise 4 · 1 1

You are asking a very complicated question and one that a doctor would know much more about than a patient. On here you're more likely to find patients than doctors.Different anti-depressants work in different ways, and effect different people differently. The best person to see is a psychiatrist. They know these medicines well. They have several patients on each medicine, and they have seen studies of mass groups of patients and how they have done on what kind of drugs. There may be info on this subject on www.webmd.com, but you're best bet is to see a psychiatrist. Hope that you get well soon.

2007-12-09 08:10:14 · answer #10 · answered by hottotrot1_usa 7 · 0 2

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