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Posted by Leo on February 13, 2001, at 12:19:55
In reply to Re: Withdrawal From Effexor, posted by dj-1972 on January 30, 2001, at 15:57:04
Go to www.effexorfx.freeuk.com
It's a bevy of information on Effexor. Take heed though. The information is quite disturbing.
Posted by Cam W. on February 13, 2001, at 14:12:33
In reply to Serotonin Syndrome and Effexor, posted by Leo on February 13, 2001, at 12:19:55
> Go to www.effexorfx.freeuk.com
>
> It's a bevy of information on Effexor. Take heed though. The information is quite disturbing.Leo - The information on this site is very flawed and unscientific. I have seen and read the clinical trials, both pre- and post-marketing; have seen serotonin syndrome with all serotonergic antidepressants when used inappropriately; have seen serotonin withdrawl symptoms, (especially in serotonergic drugs with short half lives; like Effexor), when weaning from the drug was done inappropriately. I have read quite extensively on the effects of antidepressants at multiple receptor sites, including Effexor, and my conclusions differ from yours and those of the above site.
I did not see any information at the above site that scientifically proves any permanent damage from Effexor. I would appreciate if could post scientific proof of how Effexor causes permanent damage to any part of the body, when used correctly. It would be of great interest to me.
Thanks in advance - Cam
Posted by willow on February 13, 2001, at 14:37:24
In reply to Re: Effexor » Leo, posted by Cam W. on February 13, 2001, at 14:12:33
My psychologist had advised me to have my blood pressure checked because of symptoms I've been having. I assumed it was anxiety. (I'm probably gone overboard with this somatoform thing.)
Has anyone's blood pressure regulated after elavating on Effexor? Or maybe I'm feeling better because of it. My blood pressure is now 140/90 and pulse about 103. This isn't so bad is it?
Posted by Leo on February 13, 2001, at 14:42:50
In reply to Re: Effexor » Leo, posted by Cam W. on February 13, 2001, at 14:12:33
> > Go to www.effexorfx.freeuk.com
> >
> > It's a bevy of information on Effexor. Take heed though. The information is quite disturbing.
>
> Leo - The information on this site is very flawed and unscientific. I have seen and read the clinical trials, both pre- and post-marketing; have seen serotonin syndrome with all serotonergic antidepressants when used inappropriately; have seen serotonin withdrawl symptoms, (especially in serotonergic drugs with short half lives; like Effexor), when weaning from the drug was done inappropriately. I have read quite extensively on the effects of antidepressants at multiple receptor sites, including Effexor, and my conclusions differ from yours and those of the above site.
>
> I did not see any information at the above site that scientifically proves any permanent damage from Effexor. I would appreciate if could post scientific proof of how Effexor causes permanent damage to any part of the body, when used correctly. It would be of great interest to me.
>
> Thanks in advance - Cam
>
>Cam,
We will have to agree on disagreeing. Are you an Effexor med patient or do you work of Wyerth-Ayerst. The information on the site I refered to is not and all flawed. It is dead on acurate. If you have never had first hand experience with actually using Effexor then your research is just that-research. If you have actually used the drug and experienced the side effcts then you would totally agree with me that what the website I referenced says-scientific or not, is extremely acurate. If you have never taken Effexor, give it a try and then discontinue its use. You'll have your scientific proof through first hand experience as I have. I'm sure that as the facts become known that Wyerth-Ayerst will be quietly settling millions of dollars in lawsuits. Again, a little bit more of the scientific proof you refer to. There are quite a few scientific studies on serveral of your linked sites that report Effexor as a dangerous anti-depressant that is extremely difficult to discontinue. Perhaps you should read some of those reports as
well.Regards,
Leo
Posted by Janie on February 14, 2001, at 11:39:17
In reply to timing and sleepiness, posted by ty-leigh on January 11, 2001, at 22:05:57
> I seem to be in the sleepy-group of effexor-takers. I take 150mg of xr in the morning, and am extremely sleepy and apathetic all day until about 7:00 pm. I used to be a total morning person before taking this, but now find it so hard to drag my butt out of bed. Has anyone found that taking effexor before bed helps to reduce the daytime sleepiness? I'm wondering if it just takes that long for it to kick-in for me?
Hi
Glad you mentioned this problem. I've been taking Effexor since June of last year, and actually lowered my dose from 75mg to 37.5mg/day because of the somnolence. I STILL can't get my butt out of bed in the mornings. What good would it do to take it at night? If one is still sleepy 24 hours after ingestion, could you ever get up just 8 hours later? Thank God I'm a nurse and work the evening shift!!! Is anyone else experienceing the sleepiness on such a low dose...and also fatigue, I might add?Thanks,
Janie
Posted by Di Dee on February 14, 2001, at 20:10:48
In reply to Anyone had success on Effexor XR? , posted by jp on October 24, 1999, at 14:59:14
> Hi there,
>
> Anyone care to comment on the use of Effexor? Anyone
> "happy" with it? I have tried Prozac (too much anxiety),
> Serzone (too sedating). I am currently on Buspar for anxiety.
>
> Been reading many different reports... Effexor seems
> to have a lot of success...
>
> please share your thoughts on this.
After 5 months on 75mg. of effexor I am functioning sexually again..anyone else experience this?
Posted by Rachel on February 15, 2001, at 5:44:08
In reply to Re: Anyone had success on Effexor XR? , posted by Di Dee on February 14, 2001, at 20:10:48
I've been on 150mg of Effexor for about 3 months now and its probably saved my life. They changed me to cipramil 20mg which reduced me to a suicidal alcoholic mess within days of beginning it. After much pleading they put me back on the Effexor which has given me a quality of life I didn't think I would ever have again and I'm not drinking again! Give it a go I've found its the only thing that works for me. Good luck everyone
Posted by Janie on February 15, 2001, at 18:12:52
In reply to NO Motivation on Effexor XR, posted by Sandee on January 7, 2001, at 20:19:00
> I've been on Effexor XR for about 3 months and I thought this side effect would eventually go away. Currently taking 150 mg. Instead it has gotten worse. I have NO MOTIVATION to do ANYTHING!!! Sometimes even taking a shower seems a huge undertaking. (But of course I manage. lol) I don't want to go out anywhere. I am bothered or irritated by the presence of people more than usual. I just want to veg out and hibernate. I can't even imagine taking a class or anything.
>
> I too, experienced the jerking as I drifted off to sleep the other day. I was also awakened by this zapping feeling in my feet the other nite. Today I had my teeth bump together and I couldn't prevent it.
>
> I am going to go off this med because the bottom line is that it has not helped my depression at all. In fact, at times it seems worse. Guess I'll start by removing some of the little balls and doing all the other prescribed things I've read on this board.Hi guys. I'm rolling through these Threads again because I have been on a reduced dose of Effexor XR, 37.5 mg/day since last October, and I think the lethargy and sleepiness gets worse over time. I am also considering weaning off the drug. I have to FORCE myself to go to the gym, I rarely leave the house on off-days, wash my hair about once a week, and have no interest or motivation for doing anything except sitting in front of the computer, smoking cigs. That's another problem. My smoking has increased, and I have NO motivation to control or stop it. Sometimes I feel like I've been reduced to an infantile state again...just eat, sleep, and veg out. This has got to stop...there must be more to life, and perhaps a little anxiety is what I need to get me moving again.
Posted by MarkinBoston on February 16, 2001, at 0:01:46
In reply to Re: NO Motivation on Effexor XR » Sandee, posted by Janie on February 15, 2001, at 18:12:52
I hear ya! I've been on Effexor twice before and lack of drive is the #1 reason I stopped taking it - well, maybe after anorgasmia. Yes, going off and on and... insures that I'm going to have relapses for the rest of my life, but not having any drive or passion feels like not having a life.
I think the whole apathy/complacancy effect is from too much serotonin. It took a while after getting off meds for the gradual improvement in motivation to become noticeable. One thing I'm doing this time is taking a stimulant with Effexor and not feeling so apathetic. I guess I had ADD and never knew it until noticing that stims helped me and reading what people wrote here about how they thought and perceived things so typically ADD. It was a revelation to me that most other people DON'T think that way.
> > I've been on Effexor XR for about 3 months and I thought this side effect would eventually go away. Currently taking 150 mg. Instead it has gotten worse. I have NO MOTIVATION to do ANYTHING!!! Sometimes even taking a shower seems a huge undertaking. (But of course I manage. lol) I don't want to go out anywhere. I am bothered or irritated by the presence of people more than usual. I just want to veg out and hibernate. I can't even imagine taking a class or anything.
> >
> > I too, experienced the jerking as I drifted off to sleep the other day. I was also awakened by this zapping feeling in my feet the other nite. Today I had my teeth bump together and I couldn't prevent it.
> >
> > I am going to go off this med because the bottom line is that it has not helped my depression at all. In fact, at times it seems worse. Guess I'll start by removing some of the little balls and doing all the other prescribed things I've read on this board.
>
> Hi guys. I'm rolling through these Threads again because I have been on a reduced dose of Effexor XR, 37.5 mg/day since last October, and I think the lethargy and sleepiness gets worse over time. I am also considering weaning off the drug. I have to FORCE myself to go to the gym, I rarely leave the house on off-days, wash my hair about once a week, and have no interest or motivation for doing anything except sitting in front of the computer, smoking cigs. That's another problem. My smoking has increased, and I have NO motivation to control or stop it. Sometimes I feel like I've been reduced to an infantile state again...just eat, sleep, and veg out. This has got to stop...there must be more to life, and perhaps a little anxiety is what I need to get me moving again.
Posted by CrystalThacker on February 16, 2001, at 9:16:54
In reply to Anyone had success on Effexor XR? , posted by jp on October 24, 1999, at 14:59:14
hi
> i have done very well on effexor. i have been on it for 2 years now. i have heard all about the bad withdraws from it but i dont plan to get off of it real soon. i was unable to leave my house before i started taking it. now i can drive and go to stores again alone. i think it works great.
>
Posted by Lorraine on February 16, 2001, at 9:29:47
In reply to Re: NO Motivation on Effexor XR, posted by MarkinBoston on February 16, 2001, at 0:01:46
Sounds like you need to add something to the mix. Maybe amphetamine. That's what my pdoc is adding--I'll let you know how it goes in a couple of weeks.
> I hear ya! I've been on Effexor twice before and lack of drive is the #1 reason I stopped taking it - well, maybe after anorgasmia. Yes, going off and on and... insures that I'm going to have relapses for the rest of my life, but not having any drive or passion feels like not having a life.
>
> I think the whole apathy/complacancy effect is from too much serotonin. It took a while after getting off meds for the gradual improvement in motivation to become noticeable. One thing I'm doing this time is taking a stimulant with Effexor and not feeling so apathetic. I guess I had ADD and never knew it until noticing that stims helped me and reading what people wrote here about how they thought and perceived things so typically ADD. It was a revelation to me that most other people DON'T think that way.
>
> > > I've been on Effexor XR for about 3 months and I thought this side effect would eventually go away. Currently taking 150 mg. Instead it has gotten worse. I have NO MOTIVATION to do ANYTHING!!! Sometimes even taking a shower seems a huge undertaking. (But of course I manage. lol) I don't want to go out anywhere. I am bothered or irritated by the presence of people more than usual. I just want to veg out and hibernate. I can't even imagine taking a class or anything.
> > >
> > > I too, experienced the jerking as I drifted off to sleep the other day. I was also awakened by this zapping feeling in my feet the other nite. Today I had my teeth bump together and I couldn't prevent it.
> > >
> > > I am going to go off this med because the bottom line is that it has not helped my depression at all. In fact, at times it seems worse. Guess I'll start by removing some of the little balls and doing all the other prescribed things I've read on this board.
> >
> > Hi guys. I'm rolling through these Threads again because I have been on a reduced dose of Effexor XR, 37.5 mg/day since last October, and I think the lethargy and sleepiness gets worse over time. I am also considering weaning off the drug. I have to FORCE myself to go to the gym, I rarely leave the house on off-days, wash my hair about once a week, and have no interest or motivation for doing anything except sitting in front of the computer, smoking cigs. That's another problem. My smoking has increased, and I have NO motivation to control or stop it. Sometimes I feel like I've been reduced to an infantile state again...just eat, sleep, and veg out. This has got to stop...there must be more to life, and perhaps a little anxiety is what I need to get me moving again.
Posted by Lorraine on February 16, 2001, at 12:47:14
In reply to Re: lots of success on effexor, posted by CrystalThacker on February 16, 2001, at 9:16:54
I was on it for 2 years also. Great mood results. Just gained weight and lost interest in sex. I'm trying it again with amphetamine.
> hi
> > i have done very well on effexor. i have been on it for 2 years now. i have heard all about the bad withdraws from it but i dont plan to get off of it real soon. i was unable to leave my house before i started taking it. now i can drive and go to stores again alone. i think it works great.
> >
Posted by Leo on February 16, 2001, at 12:56:18
In reply to Anyone had success on Effexor XR? , posted by jp on October 24, 1999, at 14:59:14
I would first like to thank everyone for your e-mail responses to my threads. I have read thru most of the Effexor notes and the pattern of experiences that I have read are all basically the same. For those of you who are taking the drug and having success.........fantastic!!! I hope you continue getting and feeling better.
Many of us have been prescribed this medication to help overcome the debilitating effects of depression and/or anxiety. We all know how we were feeling when we started taking the effexor. I to, started feeling better.....in the beginning. The positive effects of the drug lasted about six months and then what I found, as I look back on it now, was what seemed to be some sort of relapse of the depressive state. This lasted until I started taking a real hard look into the side effects of the drug. Thru your own experiences with effexor and your discussion I now feel confident that I'm not going insane.
I have been off the effexor completely for 5 days but it was months, and I mean months of withdrawal effects before reaching this point. Here's how I did it. I was taking 37.5mg a day which was nothing compared to what some of you are currently taking. Nine months ago I cut that dose in half, literally. I actually broke the pill in half. I stayed at this dose for 2 months. In the beginning I suffered severe side effects. I the middle of the third month, I broke that dose in half. I was down to a qaurter of a pill a day. On a quarter of a pill a day I wasn't having any of the withdrawl effects. I then started spreading out the dosage to a quarter of a pill every other day. Withdrawal effects again became severe. But I was determined to get off this drug. It stayed like this for almost 6 months. The process of getting off the effexor started almost a year ago. I am still having "flashes" of all the side effects. Some so bad that I am forced to lay on my back for hours just to deal with the withdrawl. When this isn't happening I'm up, out and feeling really good. Here's the bad news, I have been in touch with several ex-effexor med patients. One in particular has been off the drug for almost two years. He still has severe flashbacks of the side/withdrawl effects although now occuring with less frequency than they have in the past. He believes through his investigative research that there may be a possiblity that he, as will all of us, will suffer with these effects for the rest of our lives. Almost everyone I have been in contact with feel that the effexor has permenantly and negitvely effected their lives and vow never to use it again.
There are some people on this sight who challenge this, requiring "scientific proof" of this fact.
To you I say, your proof is coming. Effexor has now been on the market long enough for post-trial studies of the side effects of this drug to begin. These preleminary studies are not at all good or positive. Some can be seen and read by going to Pubmed. A case report on the long term neurological effects of effexor as well as all SSRI's can be found at Psychiatry Online.I ecourage all of you to look into these studies. I think you will find that the drugs we have been taking create entirely new and equaly debilitating effects that may very well cause that unexplained relapse back into depression. My feeling is that long term use of this drug (1 year or more) creates a vicious cycle of effects, mentally and physically, that do nothing more than worsen what is already a bad situation. The longer you are on this stuff the worse the side effects and withdrawal become. If your on effexor and feeling the "blahs" or that miserable depressed state, get to your doctor. It could be, and most likely is, the effexor.
Posted by CrystalThacker on February 16, 2001, at 14:12:58
In reply to Re: lots of success on effexor, posted by Lorraine on February 16, 2001, at 12:47:14
> I was on it for 2 years also. Great mood results. Just gained weight and lost interest in sex. I'm trying it again with amphetamine.
> I have no interest in sex either do you have any advice....?
>
> > hi
> > > i have done very well on effexor. i have been on it for 2 years now. i have heard all about the bad withdraws from it but i dont plan to get off of it real soon. i was unable to leave my house before i started taking it. now i can drive and go to stores again alone. i think it works great.
> > >
Posted by CrystalThacker on February 16, 2001, at 14:21:10
In reply to Discontinuing Effexor, posted by Leo on February 16, 2001, at 12:56:18
> I would first like to thank everyone for your e-mail responses to my threads. I have read thru most of the Effexor notes and the pattern of experiences that I have read are all basically the same. For those of you who are taking the drug and having success.........fantastic!!! I hope you continue getting and feeling better.
>
> Many of us have been prescribed this medication to help overcome the debilitating effects of depression and/or anxiety. We all know how we were feeling when we started taking the effexor. I to, started feeling better.....in the beginning. The positive effects of the drug lasted about six months and then what I found, as I look back on it now, was what seemed to be some sort of relapse of the depressive state. This lasted until I started taking a real hard look into the side effects of the drug. Thru your own experiences with effexor and your discussion I now feel confident that I'm not going insane.
> I have been off the effexor completely for 5 days but it was months, and I mean months of withdrawal effects before reaching this point. Here's how I did it. I was taking 37.5mg a day which was nothing compared to what some of you are currently taking. Nine months ago I cut that dose in half, literally. I actually broke the pill in half. I stayed at this dose for 2 months. In the beginning I suffered severe side effects. I the middle of the third month, I broke that dose in half. I was down to a qaurter of a pill a day. On a quarter of a pill a day I wasn't having any of the withdrawl effects. I then started spreading out the dosage to a quarter of a pill every other day. Withdrawal effects again became severe. But I was determined to get off this drug. It stayed like this for almost 6 months. The process of getting off the effexor started almost a year ago. I am still having "flashes" of all the side effects. Some so bad that I am forced to lay on my back for hours just to deal with the withdrawl. When this isn't happening I'm up, out and feeling really good. Here's the bad news, I have been in touch with several ex-effexor med patients. One in particular has been off the drug for almost two years. He still has severe flashbacks of the side/withdrawl effects although now occuring with less frequency than they have in the past. He believes through his investigative research that there may be a possiblity that he, as will all of us, will suffer with these effects for the rest of our lives. Almost everyone I have been in contact with feel that the effexor has permenantly and negitvely effected their lives and vow never to use it again.
> There are some people on this sight who challenge this, requiring "scientific proof" of this fact.
> To you I say, your proof is coming. Effexor has now been on the market long enough for post-trial studies of the side effects of this drug to begin. These preleminary studies are not at all good or positive. Some can be seen and read by going to Pubmed. A case report on the long term neurological effects of effexor as well as all SSRI's can be found at Psychiatry Online.
>
> I ecourage all of you to look into these studies. I think you will find that the drugs we have been taking create entirely new and equaly debilitating effects that may very well cause that unexplained relapse back into depression. My feeling is that long term use of this drug (1 year or more) creates a vicious cycle of effects, mentally and physically, that do nothing more than worsen what is already a bad situation. The longer you are on this stuff the worse the side effects and withdrawal become. If your on effexor and feeling the "blahs" or that miserable depressed state, get to your doctor. It could be, and most likely is, the effexor.HI I was wandering if you still have depression and anxiety since you quit taking the effexor or are you on something else. Or could the side effects be anxiety and depression from not tahing the pill.
Posted by Alli on February 16, 2001, at 15:01:40
In reply to Long term effects of Effexor/permanent , posted by Leo on February 13, 2001, at 11:55:34
I have experienced all the withdrawl side effects but even more so, have experienced additonal effects of Effexor that have recently come to light and may be permanent.
=============
Leo ~ Could you describe the additional effects that you are experiencing that you feel may be permanent? After being on Effexor for two years and recently completing the withdrawl process (pure hell), I'm still not feeling 100%... but I wake up every morning hoping that today will be the day when I feel "normal" again. Alli
Posted by Leo on February 16, 2001, at 18:10:44
In reply to Re: Discontinuing Effexor, posted by CrystalThacker on February 16, 2001, at 14:21:10
In answer to your question. No, I am not taking any more drugs. I will never do this to myself again. And yes, yes, yes I feel very confident that the effexor kept me in a chronic state of depression. Since coming off the med, my mental state has improved remarkably and I'm feeling better with the exception of the withdrawal induced effects caused by the drug.
Posted by Leo on February 16, 2001, at 19:39:55
In reply to Re: Long term effects of Effexor/permanent , posted by Alli on February 16, 2001, at 15:01:40
> I have experienced all the withdrawl side effects but even more so, have experienced additonal effects of Effexor that have recently come to light and may be permanent.
> =============
> Leo ~ Could you describe the additional effects that you are experiencing that you feel may be permanent? After being on Effexor for two years and recently completing the withdrawl process (pure hell), I'm still not feeling 100%... but I wake up every morning hoping that today will be the day when I feel "normal" again. AlliAlli,
Go to www.effexorfz.freeuk.com
This website contains a tremendous amount of the side effects of effexor.
The following is a list of what I have experienced while on and discontinuing the drug.
Loss of short and medium term memory.....to the point where I couldn't remember how to get home.
Loss of drive, ambition, motivation......had a lot of great things I wanted to do, would start but never complete. This was not me at all.
As with Steve Whiting, I started to experience a successive deterioration in my health. My mental state seemed to deteriorate as well. I would sleep for hours some days and then experience insomnia for several days. I never established a sleep pattern while on the drug. This has changed since getting off the drug. I have found that I am ready for bed around 10pm and wake consistently between 6-7am. I tested this theroy and found that when I took the effexor I would be exhausted, ready for sleep around noon time. And then would sleep until midnight only to stay awake sometimes for the next 24 hours. It is truly a great feeling to be wide awake and raring to go in the morning.
I have experienced severe agitation. Violent mood swings. These have subsided drastically. I was never like this before even with the depression. This, to me, was a sure sign something was up. I am much easier to live with according to those around me.
I am still experiencing the confusion that Steve talks about. This is disturbing. I have always been able to organize my thoughts and feelings. I am a free-lance writer and this has made what I do very hard. This, along with the memory loss has forced me to plan everything I do in writing so I can follow the process of writing and creating and not leave anything out or skip a sequence.
I have not experienced any paranoia or stomach cramps, although I would go from constipation to the runs every other day or so. This seems to be settling down to.
I have had swelling in my shoulders, arms and hands. This has stopped since getting off the effexor.I have experienced the involuntary body movements as well as the spontaneous outbursts, not singing, just babbling. Almost like teretts. This had never happened to me before I took the effexor and started to occur over the last year and a half. I haven't had it happen recently. This is frightening but it does seem to be subsiding.
I never had any convulsions or hallucinations.
I have, and still do experience severe dizziness, extremely painful, sharp pains in the back of my head that make me loose my visual focus and the aches and pains that one would attribute to having the flu. Severe fatigue and rapid onset of exhaustion by just climbing a flight of stairs. Again, not at all like me.
I experience the light headedness and dysphoric sensations daily and in bursts, some more severe than others. These do not seem to be subsiding.
There are reports of studies that have been under taken and quite a few state;
"Investigators who were testing effexor observed that clustors of symptoms occured at or shortly after the discontinuation of Effexor treatment."
Patients experienced withdrawal sypmtoms ranging from flu-like symptoms (aches and pains) to insomnia, nausea, nervousness, dizziness, dysphoric mood, loss of energy.....In some patients, withdrawal symptoms were so severe and prolonged that medical treatment was required. Some patients could not be withdrawn from the drug, therefore they continued on the effexor and one patient was hospitalized. These cases suggest a severe addiction possibility.
This study can be found at www.socialaudit.org
1997/Moore/VenlafaxineThere are numerous studies about effexor on this site. You owe it ot yourself to read these studies. I think you will find them very unsettling.
My overall health, physically and mentally, declined while on effexor. This decline accelerated the longer I was on it. I have not been off of it long enough to know for sure what permanent damage has been done, however, through my discussions with others on the drug I am certain that some of what has been brought about by taking this drug will be with me the rest of my life. Just how it will effect the quality of my life is yet to be seen. And yes, if I can I will sue Wyeth-Ayerst for millions.I believe that depression and anxiety disorder is a dark abyss of suffering. I also believe that these things are brought on by an embalance within the body. This embalance triggers the depression/anxiety. Then I think that how bad this gets depends on individual personalities.
I think that in many situations effexor worsens these conditions of suffering with long term continued use. I have yet to see anything in the med information given by the pharmacy that warns people of the true effects of this drug. The manufacturer has known about these effects for many years and only in March of last year disclosed some sellected information. To my knowledge that have yet to disclose everything about effexor. This, in my opinion, borders on criminal behavior and will be addressed with legal action.
Posted by CRTF on February 18, 2001, at 2:30:50
In reply to Re: Effexor XR vs. Paxil and weight gain , posted by newgirl on April 18, 2000, at 10:46:14
Posted by Joy on February 18, 2001, at 8:06:12
In reply to Does Prozac cause weight gain?, posted by CRTF on February 18, 2001, at 2:30:50
Prozac does not cause weight gain in the majority of people who take it even at high doses[including me] but Paxil does.
Joy >> Can it cause weight gain in adolescent teen girls? How long does it take for the weight gain to start? What about a smaller dosage? Please help!
Posted by CRTF on February 18, 2001, at 11:30:06
In reply to Re: Does Prozac cause weight gain?, posted by Joy on February 18, 2001, at 8:06:12
Posted by maxx on February 18, 2001, at 16:19:44
In reply to Re: lots of success on effexor, posted by CrystalThacker on February 16, 2001, at 14:12:58
Has anyone solved/reduced the problem of gaining weight from EFFEXOR?
Thanks for any input! Max
Posted by CrystalThacker on February 18, 2001, at 18:40:02
In reply to Re: lots of success - gaining weight, posted by maxx on February 18, 2001, at 16:19:44
> Has anyone solved/reduced the problem of gaining weight from EFFEXOR?
>
> Thanks for any input! MaxNo I havent gained any weight while on effexor been on it for 2 years. I gained weught taking paxil though cant get that off.
Posted by Shell on February 19, 2001, at 2:04:54
In reply to Does Prozac cause weight gain?, posted by CRTF on February 18, 2001, at 2:30:50
>
> Can it cause weight gain in adolescent teen girls? How long does it take for the weight gain to start? What about a smaller dosage? Please help!I lost about 15-20 pounds on Prozac, which is a lot for me (size 10-12 to size 6). I wasn't an adolescent girl, however; I was a 28-year-old woman. I think it worked by reducing cravings, especially for carbohydrates and by helping me be more motivated to exercise. I still had to diet, but it was just easier to stick to it.
Shell
Posted by NMichele on February 19, 2001, at 7:34:36
In reply to Re: withdrawal, posted by NMichele on January 25, 2001, at 9:48:44
> > Has anybody lost any of the weight they gained from Effexor XR. I gained about 35lbs over the last 2 1/2 years and am now beginning the journey of losing all of this extra weight. If you have, how long did it take and what did you have to do?? Any encouragement would be wonderful!! Thanks - NMichele
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