Need Some Advice
#1
Posted 09 September 2019 - 05:56 AM
Any advice would be very gratefullly received! Thank you
#2
Posted 09 September 2019 - 07:03 AM
Hi PeaceSeeker and welcome.
Can you give a few more details... how long were you on Cymbalta for before weaning? And what was your schedule from November? 20 beads is a good place to get to and it will be very difficult from that point, and feeling some intense symptoms can be expected. Depending on how many beads are in each capsule, I am assuming that 30mg is a lot more than 20 beads - as is most cases and therefore would argue that yes, that is too much of a jump for sure and will be the culprit for the symptoms you describe.
Six days to have been on this dose is long enough to have changed blood levels and a severe drop may cause more problems. Can you tell me how many beads you are working with so we can consider the respective doses? I think the best plan is to drop to a point between where you were and where you are now, but you will then go slower from this point. DO NOT go right back to your 20 beads from this point. If you can let me know the amount of beads, we can work from there...
IUN
#3
Posted 09 September 2019 - 07:41 AM
Thank you for replying. I was on 60mg for approximately 13 years. From November 2018 I came down probably quicker than 10% less than each previous dose per week, up to April 2019 when it definitely was 10% less than each previous dose. I now know that was too rapid for me.
I have just counted the beads in a 30mg capsule, and to my horror there are 270.
Please could you advise what I should do now?
Thank you
#4
Posted 09 September 2019 - 08:43 AM
#5
Posted 09 September 2019 - 09:11 AM
OK - so you were around 2.2mg with the 20 beads which is when things really kick in - if not before.
Whilst 6 days is long enough to change levels, it is not longer enough to have introduced dependency on this dose, so if you were still at a point where you were on 20 beads and having issues, then adding a few beads would be the way to go. But if you feel you haven't been going slow enough... it is a tricky one.
I would have gone perhaps with 30 beads from here given the 6 days move, but again, this is my opinion. Hat has had more experience with this, so if his gut says 25, then I would go there... give it a week to balance out... and then we can go from there. Expect a bit of a rough ride this week knowing it is the dose change, but start this TODAY to limit the effects.
Any more questions, please go ahead - and please keep posting to let us know how you get on - even every day if you want. All this information helps people like Hat and myself (and the others knowledgeable on the forum) to help those who follow you under similar circumstances...
p.s. I know that 30 sounds so close to 20, but believe me when we say these make all the difference. It may be that you end up closer to 5mg to stabalise, but we only want to go as far as is necessary for you to reach this point. 30 is still a 50% increase from where you were with the 20 beads and this should be sufficient to have some impact.
#7
Posted 09 September 2019 - 09:19 AM
- fishinghat and invalidusername like this
#8
Posted 11 September 2019 - 12:25 PM
I'm now unsure what to do going forward, and am considering asking my psychiatrist about cross tapering onto zoloft. Would this in theory help minimise the withdrawal from cymbalta? I'm a little worried that doing this would bring me off cymbalta too quickly regardless. And what if my psychiatrist disagrees anyway? I'm very worried he may remove my script for cymbalta if I was approach him. Or I see my other option is to wean very slowly off cymbalta without cross tapering.
Any advice would be gratefully received. Thank you
#9
Posted 11 September 2019 - 01:32 PM
As well as you are doing I would continue a slow careful wean. Stopping any time you feel even a little but worse.
#10
Posted 11 September 2019 - 02:00 PM
#12
Posted 11 September 2019 - 04:30 PM
I would argue the same - as difficult to stick with it - I would stay with the one med and just take it slow. If you go slow enough, it can be a lot more painless than you may well be thinking. Just about everyone who joins our site say the same thing that they just want off, so you are not alone. Pace yourself and I can see that you saw one of Hat's favourite phrases there - slow and steady wins the race. I remember him saying that to me during my withdrawal!!
Again, the symptoms you mention above are all par for the course - don't worry - they will pass.
#13
Posted 12 September 2019 - 03:28 AM
- invalidusername likes this
#17
Posted 17 September 2019 - 09:22 AM
Just to add the "science bit" as it often helps... we have serotonin receptors in our ears which is why during withdrawal our hearing is affected. This is all linked up to our labyrinth of the inner ear which is where the dizziness comes in. The vision is more than likely a byproduct of this combined.
...and of course what Hat says... it will pass.
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