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vomitcuddle | 9 years ago

As someone who had to abruptly come off venlafaxine due to side effects, I can tell you that it was complete hell. I experienced vomiting, the weirdest, most horrible nightmares every night, sleep paralysis with hallucinations and a recurring feeling of "electic shocks" inside my head. This lasted about a month. I think it borders on inhumane not to mention possible withdrawal symptoms before prescribing this awful "anti-"depressant.

My doctor eventually prescribed me trazodone, so I could just sleep the withdrawals off.

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butterfinger|9 years ago

Venlafaxine seems to be one of the worst SNRIs/SSRIs wrt discontinuation syndrome. Except for the nausea, I had the same experiences when quitting cold turkey. The most problematic symptom for me were the "electric shocks" when moving my eyes or head to fast.

For me, getting off venlafaxine was way harder than quitting tilidine, tramadol or the z-drugs.

DanBC|9 years ago

I was on zopiclone for over a year. I stopped cold turkey, it wasn't a problem, although I do still miss it sometimes. I see that it's one of the top ten meds obtained using stolen prescription pads in France; or that Dublin drug rehab clinics see more people addicted to it and I understand that there's obviously potential for addiction there.

I was on Venlafaxine (regular release, not extended release) and missing a dose was as unfun as everyone says it is. Tapering down (from 350 mg) was, for me, easy enough and I stopped after 6 weeks.

My current med has different side effects, but also isn't as effective. I'm not sure tapering down and then back up on a different med is worth the risk.

radd9er|9 years ago

To both parent commenters, my wife has been on venlafaxine for years, and has been tapering off it for the past year. She has had horrible withdrawl symptoms from missing a single dose, like you describe. Each time the doses town (tapering), she has a rough few weeks.

How long were you on it? Do you have any advice? Thanks.

harshreality|9 years ago

I'm curious... you, and all other commenters who mentioned electric shocks... which I'd previously heard of as "brain zaps"...

What difference would it make if the doctor had told you of that side effect before you started the drug? Imagine you have no idea of what brain zaps felt like. Would you have avoided the drug based on such a vague description?

Can you describe the sensation? It's not painful, right? The sensation of an electric shock is sensory nerve input driven by external electricity, but there are no sensory nerves in the brain are there? So it's confusing to me (never been on psych drugs, so never gone through psych drug withdrawal) what these brain electric shocks could possibly feel like.

I assume you can't localize the sensations to somewhere that has nerves, like maybe the eyes, or somewhere—anywhere—else that really does have nerves? So it's like re-balancing the synapses after quitting these drugs causes a phenomenon in the somatosensory cortex that simulates non-localized zap sensations in a place there are no sensory nerves? Is it limited to a sensation, or are other senses (vision, hearing, smell, taste) ever involved? Is it perhaps more like a non-physical zap that's more like an interruption or glitch in consciousness than a ghost physical sensation?

[edit] So one person's experience with one day off meds was a feeling of floating or vague floating-like feeling of imbalance. That's probably related, perhaps an earlier stage of the phenomenon, but doesn't sound quite the same as the electric shocks people mention they get after quitting. Are the electric shock feelings anything like a rapid (instantaneous?) change in balance, like a shift to zero-g and back?

butterfinger|9 years ago

To me, it felt like the moment after some limb went numb and you start to feel it again, just for the whole body. And I had some visual effects like everything being brighter for a moment. It's not painful per se but very disorienting and irritating and it happens several times per hour.

I probably would not have avoided the drugs based on the description, because it doesn't sound as bad as it feels, but I would never quit a SSRI without tapering off again.

Enderz|9 years ago

"Is it perhaps more like a non-physical zap that's more like an interruption or glitch in consciousness than a ghost physical sensation?"

" So one person's experience with one day off meds was a feeling of floating or vague floating-like feeling of imbalance. That's probably related, perhaps an earlier stage of the phenomenon, but doesn't sound quite the same as the electric shocks people mention they get after quitting. Are the electric shock feelings anything like a rapid (instantaneous?) change in balance, like a shift to zero-g and back?"

These are both pretty good descriptions.

Pretty constant background floaty/disconnected feeling punctuated by sudden, momentary shift of balance feelings that feel like a large number of synapses have fired all at once, usually triggered by relatively minor head or eye movements. Each one leaves you with a very subtle sensation that you've just lost a split second of consciousness and are just suddenly snapping back awake.

They aren't painful at all (so the electric shock analogy breaks down), but after a while can become pretty distracting and annoying (to the point of not being able to concentrate on work, study, or even entertainment).

Pete_D|9 years ago

I'd heard of brain zaps before quitting Zoloft cold turkey[0], but the actual experience wasn't what I expected from the term "brain zaps". Kind of like a dizzy spell that lasts 0.1 seconds, with a sort of buzzing sensation, like someone had turned on a step-down transformer in my skull. I've never experienced anything else like it to compare it to.

[0] in hindsight, not tapering gradually is a really bad idea

merlish|9 years ago

Imbalance is a good way to start thinking of it.

But, are you familiar with the sensation of being so tired you drop off to sleep & wake up seemingly instantly, but time has passed? The 'yeah, I'm awake, I'm awake' thing.

Based on going off venlafaxine myself, that's how I'd put it. It isn't painful, and you don't actually lose time. The sensation is extremely jarring, and unpleasant, though. You'll take a step or look to the side and that sort of zap just happens.

... I'm slightly better at getting out of the house to get my prescription refilled these days.

mcjiggerlog|9 years ago

An electric shock is really the best way to describe what it felt like to me.

Imagine a sudden electric shock to the middle of your brain. It doesn't exactly hurt, but it is incredibly uncomfortable and jarring. It is like a momentary jolt of energy and caused me to feel pretty disoriented for the following few seconds. It is definitely (feels like, at least) a physical sensation as opposed to just sensory.

nspriego|9 years ago

For me the electric shocks are a sensation of jolting back to reality, something like how I imagine coming out of the matrix would feel like - only on a much smaller scale. Curious to see if anyone else has the same type of sensation.

mcjiggerlog|9 years ago

I went through a similar experience (although not as extreme) when coming off of citalopram, even with a doctor's guidance.

Lots of nausea and disorientation, but worst of all were the "electric shocks" which really were very disturbing.

Not a single mention of these when having the medicine prescribed!

nspriego|9 years ago

If I miss taking citalopram 2 days in a row I start getting these "electric shocks" and dizzyness. Glad to know I'm not the only one.

outworlder|9 years ago

Oh well. Just today I was prescribed half my usual dosage of venlafaxine so that I can taper off and quit (will go back to a small dose of citalopram)

I'm not looking forward for the withdrawal symptoms – I know them too well. You will only forget to take it once.

Not looking forward to it.

baus|9 years ago

I had to withdraw from Effexor myself. The electric shock symptom is real. It is brutal. Combined with withdrawal from benzodiazepines, those were some of the worst days of my life

tibbon|9 years ago

A partner of mine had super strong shocks as well from it. Scary. It went on for a while almost any time she's turn quickly

lacampbell|9 years ago

I tried to taper off venlafaxine for about a month. It just extended the agony. I eventually just stopped taking it, had 2 really shit days, and that was that.

IANAD, YMMV

hvs|9 years ago

Most doctors will prescribe a short duration of a longer-lasting SSRI (like Prozac) which will help with withdrawal. Any competent doctor will tell you not to discontinue abruptly or withdrawal symptoms are likely. Unfortunately, too many GPs that don't understand the drugs prescribe them rather than psychiatrists.

agumonkey|9 years ago

I'm not off meds but since two weeks I had quite strange nightmares. A weird blend of terror and non daily event based (having nightmares after being mugged wouldn't scare me more than that). Waking up in sweat, heart racing and still not sure what reality I was in.

ds18|9 years ago

Do you mind me asking what your dosage was and if you went cold turkey or tapered off at all?

DanBC|9 years ago

I'm not the person you replied to, but I was on 350 mg (which is a reasonably high dose). I was on venlafaxine regular release, not the extended release. If I missed a dose I got full on discontinuation effects. When I tapered off it wasn't great, but it wasn't awful.

Some people do report problems even with a very gentle long taper down.