Shown: posts 1 to 5 of 5. This is the beginning of the thread.
Posted by DStupid on February 23, 2008, at 18:52:52
With the usual caveats (results not typical, etc.)...
History: I'm a 40 y/o male living in the US, 145 lbs, major depression, negative schizophrenic symptoms, social anxiety, learning disability, and attention problems. Employed, single, no friends. On Xanax .5 at bedtime, and Toprol XL (a beta blocker) 25-50 mg daily. Previously, in succession, was on Lexapro 10 mg for a year; Klonopin 1 mg for six months; tried Dexedrine, Ritalin, Norpramin, another TCA whose name I don't remember, Valium, Ativan.
Last Saturday, Sunday, and Monday (a US holiday), I tried Zoloft 25 mg. Results were bad for me.
Saturday: got a $60 ticket for parking the wrong way at the curb: the sign said that parking was permitted at a 90 degree angle with the trunk facing the sidewalk, but I parked with the headlights facing the sidewalk. There were other cars nearby all parked correctly, and there was a sign right where I parked, but I paid no attention.
Sunday: I live with my dad. Knowing that his gait was unsteady and he had taken Dilaudid 2 mg for pain for the first time (strong stuff, people, don't take it unless you absolutely have to), I left him unattended and he fell down the stairs breaking his clavicle.
Monday: In the early afternoon, knowing that my dad was even more unsteady, I left him unattended again (there was no real reason) and he managed to fall on the same spot where he clavicle was broken. He was in pain and took more Dilaudid. Same day, I drove to a psychiatrist and I left the car parked with the front wheels turned all the way to the left. Upon my return, I couldn't start the car because the steering wheel had gotten jammed. I got panicky and called a tow truck which would have cost me $75 for towing my car only 3 miles. Luckily, I had a car manual with me, had the presence of mind to read it and follow it, and dislodged the steering wheel with simple vibrations from left to right and vice versa, while pushing in the ignition key. I didn't need a tow truck.
No more Zoloft for me. Thought I might share my experience with you all.
Posted by Phillipa on February 23, 2008, at 22:06:26
In reply to My Three Day Zoloft Experience, posted by DStupid on February 23, 2008, at 18:52:52
That's a pretty horrible reaction to zoloft and a low dose also. Every have anything like this happen to you before? Phillipa
Posted by DStupid on February 24, 2008, at 10:03:59
In reply to Re: My Three Day Zoloft Experience » DStupid, posted by Phillipa on February 23, 2008, at 22:06:26
> That's a pretty horrible reaction to zoloft and a low dose also. Every have anything like this happen to you before? Phillipa>
No.
Posted by Dopamine123 on February 25, 2008, at 13:17:51
In reply to My Three Day Zoloft Experience, posted by DStupid on February 23, 2008, at 18:52:52
SSRI's like zoloft can decrease dopamine levels in the prefrontal cortex leading to poor attention, apathy etc. If you already have negative type schizophrenic symptoms it could defintely make those worse. I had that same problem with taking SSRI's. You might want to try remeron (mirtazapine). It has been used to reduce negative symptoms. Or you could try an atypical anti-psychotic.
Posted by DStupid on March 1, 2008, at 17:40:10
In reply to Re: My Three Day Zoloft Experience, posted by Dopamine123 on February 25, 2008, at 13:17:51
> SSRI's like zoloft can decrease dopamine levels in the prefrontal cortex leading to poor attention, apathy etc. If you already have negative type schizophrenic symptoms it could defintely make those worse. I had that same problem with taking SSRI's. You might want to try remeron (mirtazapine). It has been used to reduce negative symptoms. Or you could try an atypical anti-psychotic.
>
> My blog:
> http://brainstimulant.blogspot.com>>Yes, I'm on Abilify now and act much better.
This is the end of the thread.
Psycho-Babble Medication | Extras | FAQ
Dr. Bob is Robert Hsiung, MD, [email protected]
Script revised: February 4, 2008
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/cgi-bin/pb/mget.pl
Copyright 2006-17 Robert Hsiung.
Owned and operated by Dr. Bob LLC and not the University of Chicago.