Posted by SLS on December 1, 2015, at 4:58:25
In reply to Re: Luvox is amazing, but... » SLS, posted by former poster on November 30, 2015, at 22:50:33
> > I can't be sure about what's going on with the shaky hands. It may very well be a startup side effect that disappears quickly. I hope so. I guess it is possible that there is still some residual MAO inhibition going on, and that there is a reaction of some sort.
>
> >I saw in another thread that you haven't been on Emsam for a few months. There would be no residual.
>
> Yeah.. It's weird why I get the shakes. Went back on clonazepam and carvedilol. Seems to help some. Shakiness not related to anxiety, but i think the clonz adds some muscle relaxation.
> Read about a guy on askapatient.com had a good response to Luvox but got the exact same tremor and had to give it up. The tremor decreases when I skip a dose. It's definitely the Luvox. Quality bad? Impuritys?
> I'm abroad now and out of the "healthcare industrial complex" thus giving me the option to sample other brands of fluvoxamine at a much reduced price.
>
> I really like how I'm feeling. Almost a magic bullet for me. It dampens cyclic thoughts enough to make it easier to put rage aside, able to move on, less self conscious, plus very mild euphoria giving me enhanced artistic appreciation. I haven't felt this good in a long long, time.
> Hope my post can help guide others to finding relief.
>
> Suggestions on any non-addictive agents for tremor?Clonazepam is a good thought.
Perhaps propranolol will help with tremor more than carvedilol.
Gabapentin has been used in the past to treat essential tremor.
- ScottSome see things as they are and ask why.
I dream of things that never were and ask why not.- George Bernard Shaw
poster:SLS
thread:1084266
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/20151119/msgs/1084314.html