I used to take it a while ago and My psychiatrist is putting it back on as needed.So what experience if any have you had?
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Knowledge is power. You never know what someone might benefit from.I debated posting this as I am never certain if I am adding anything of worth with my posts, as my perception is that I over share
I used to take it a while ago and My psychiatrist is putting it back on as needed.So what experience if any have you had?
I have taken Klonopin for 30 years. I have not had the problems you have. If I do not take it I have no reaction.This is one of the strongest of the kind, and very addicting, you should not take it more than a week, after that what can happen is you get dependant on it, and it start deteriorating your cognition over time, and digestive issues etc, don't do it, 'medics' give them like candy, and they are very harmful, my hospital in here just outright banned them altogether, i also almost died because i quit cold turkey of them, and the withdrawal symptons can be very ugly. I'm not exaggerating.
I have taken Klonopin for 30 years. I have not had the problems you have. If I do not take it I have no reaction.
You don't mean taking the same dosage for over 30 years do you?I have taken Klonopin for 30 years. I have not had the problems you have. If I do not take it I have no reaction.
I am not an expert, but it seems to me that a drug taken as needed is going to provide different results than a drug taken continuously. I don't know about Klonopin, but I can definitely say that about Ritalin and Methylphenidate.if you didn't try to quit how can be sure it does not do anything?, also you could have accostumed of symptons that you don't believe are because of the drug. If you investigate this, doing research, you would find lots of people have suffered a lot because of this drugs, i am not inventing things.
if you didn't try to quit how can be sure it does not do anything?, also you could have accostumed of symptons that you don't believe are because of the drug. If you investigate this, doing research, you would find lots of people have suffered a lot because of this drugs, i am not inventing things.
Taking the same dosage for over 30 years?
I can't help but wonder if your metabolism built up a tolerance of that medication over time to a point where it doesn't do much at all for you. Sounds like something to run past your physician if you haven't already.
"Doctors work around tolerance by increasing prescription dosages over time or whenever patients are no longer feeling the intended benefits of the drug. If you receive Klonopin through a doctor’s prescription and have had to have your prescription increased, you have likely developed a tolerance. Likewise, if you obtain Klonopin illicitly and have found yourself purchasing more and more of the drug to achieve the desired effects, you also have likely developed a tolerance."
Klonopin Tolerance: How to Decrease it Safely
You do not know how much I take or have taken over the years. Your premise is not correct.
I think my doctor is very careful and knowledgeable. The amount I take now is 1/16 of what I took years ago. It has little effect, maybe a token amount that makes me feel I am taking something to help.
It was a question. Not a statement.
"Little effect". Your words. Probably closer to a placebo with such a low dosage. But then that's the sort of story I suspect most physicians like.
I once took a very powerful drug (Metoprolol) for anti-anxiety for around three or four years a long time ago. Never increased the dosage and never wanted to. It was later found to cause irregular heartbeats, though the kind I have (PACs) are infrequent and benign. Still a little puzzled that it's still allowed on the market.
I simply weaned myself off it...incrementally. Never certain of whether I had developed a tolerance for it. But with that particular drug I couldn't imagine taking it for decades. Not what I'd call a medication with a "subtle delivery". I would practically grimace each time it took hold, so many seconds after swallowing it.
Odd to recall I never saw my doctor after that, nor did he ever contact me. The nature of an HMO I suppose.
You are right, you put a question mark at the end, it was a question and I made a mistake. I am sorry.
I took an ssri for several years then decided to stop taking it bc of side effects. True they can take forever to get them out of the system, and it's a pretty painful process. No one warns people those drugs have serious withdrawals when people stop taking them. I do take a miniscule amount now, to avoid the withdrawals from stopping completely.Coming off Zoloft was one of the worst experiences of my life.