Coming off mirtazapine
Posted , 11 users are following.
I thought I would start a new thread to give people tips for coming off this drug. I have gained so much advice and support from people on here and I owe my (so far) painless withdrawal to them. People like Calmer and Betsy, and plenty others too. I have been on 30mg mirtazapine for four years. I tried to come off them a couple of years ago and failed miserably, returning to my full dose after 10 days of awful anxiety and insomnia, as well as migraines and nausea. I had cut my dose to 15mg for a week and then dropped to zero.
This time I read every thread on here about mirtazapine withdrawal and started off really slowly, cutting down by just 3.75mg for two weeks. Then by a further 3.75 mg. At the same time I started taking a lot of inositol. I take a huge heaped teaspoon in my tea every morning. I had only slight nausea when I first started dropping my dose but I think that was me getting used to the inositol. Once I was down to 22.5mg of mirt, with no withdrawal symptoms, I figured I could go a bit faster and dropped my dose down to 15mg. I had no withdrawal symptoms after ten days and so have now dropped my dose to 11.25mg. I use a simple pill cutter from ebay to cut my tablets. So I am now on three quarters of a 15mg tablet. Mirtazapine had pooped out on me and so I already have terrible insomnia. I take temazepam some nights and benadryl on others to help me with that.
I will post my progress here. Who knows, I may fail miserably, but whatever the outcome, I hope it will help others. I was terrified of coming off mirtazapine, but now I am excited by it. I think the key is to take it really slowly and work out the pace your body can cope with. The smaller your dose goes, thee smaller the decrease in your dose should be. Good luck everyone, and please post your own experiences here. I know some people have really suffered despite coming off mirt very slowly. Everyone is different and I think everyone's experience can be a real help to others.
3 likes, 291 replies
jay09663 evergreen
Posted
Anyway, back to the point, saw GP who noticed the weight gain! He then promptly advised me that he wanted to stop the mirt and "try me" on sertraline. When I asked about tapering and WD symptoms of mirt he told me to take both the mirt and sertraline for 3 days then stop the mirt, as there are no "real withdrawal symptoms with it!"
Having read all the suffering people go through when stopping one drug and starting another I really don't know what to do for the best. I've spent a good hour researching sertraline and although its unlikely to cause weight gain its got loads of other potential side effects. Ive got myself in a bit of a state and to be honest I am seriously considering tapering the mirt and not starting anything else. It's a minefield! How would I know what is mirt WD or sertraline effects??
I start my CBT next week and have a sick note for another 2 weeks so I don't have to go back to work (a blessed relief as its sooo stresful at the moment)
What to do?
Calmer jay09663
Posted
I wouldn't want to switch at all if I were doing ok with the Mirt, the weight does stabilise somewhere along the line, the first few months may be harder. But as you are starting CBT next week, I strongly agree with what you are saying, Sert may well cause you more problems, especially as it is best to WD so slowly from Mirt' - not sure what training doctors get regards giving out info to come off in 3 days!!! totally wrong.
Although you talk of tapering the Mirt' and not having any other AD, it may be wise to continue with the Mirt', using it for a bridge to tide you through the CBT course, 8 weeks maybe? I did the course, loved it, so very strengthening, lots of books out there to affirm learning also.
Evergreen will be able to advise with weight loss, see above also.
Wishing youu well.
jay09663 Calmer
Posted
I'm rambling, sorry!
The GP wants me off because my BMI is now 43 he started talking about risks and benefits.
He's given me a prescription for sertraline but no more mirt, I'm such a clutz I should have held my corner but was not expecting it so he caught me a bit off guard and now Im not ure what to do! Thinking about it hes unlikely to prescribe further mirt so I can taper slowly!
Thanks for being around, finding this forum and all the amazing supportive people is a blessing
Calmer jay09663
Posted
Insomnia often causes anx' - me too, nasty - maybe ask doctor for longer time to taper from Mirt ? Tell him you've researched from pharmacy / chemist - they don't like quoting internet do they !! X
evergreen jay09663
Posted
evergreen
Posted
I am very emotional today, but not in a bad way. A bit happy tearful. Thinking about music I love, that kind of thing. This will be my second day without mirtazapine.
I have also experienced a resurgence in my writing over the past two weeks, as though my creative side is being reawakened. I am currently writing my third novel another supernatural thriller which had been sitting stale for a couple of years! Now it really has come to life again.
My lack of appetite has also returned, which is a PITA because I really have to force myself to eat anything before teatime. But that's just me and definitely not WD. Eating is a chore I need to do to get me through the physical tasks in my day.
But overall I am very, very happy right now. Just hope the doctor doesn't set me back hugely tomorrow. Just a note of warning to self though; often WD can give yoou a mild sense of euphoria, and every high has it's low, so I hope this doesn't mean I'm in for a crash!
How is everyone?
betsy0603 evergreen
Posted
In hindsight looking at 20 years of AD use, I have realized what I have lost over the years: creativity, excitement, truly feeling joy, generally feeling numb. It saddens me because I have been this way for my whole relationship with my husband. I am hoping when I finally get off (and hopefully sooner) that I will emerge a more passionate person. Creativity? Wow, that would be a bonus. A p-doc author writes of it, calling it "psych med spellbinding," where we just don't see what the meds are doing to us, chalking it up to other things, but I clearly see it now!
I am excited for you, Evergreen (as excited as I can get, at least LOL)! If WD does show up, I hope it is so mild as to be tolerable and that you will continue to reep the benefits of being the true You!
betsy0603
Posted
evergreen betsy0603
Posted
I did start to feel a bit down again late morning and so made myself go on the cross trainer to get my natural endorphines up. It worked because I feel much brighter again now.
betsy0603 evergreen
Posted
I'm glad you were able to pull yourself up with the cross trainer!
evergreen
Posted
Bad news is that I hardly slept last night. Although in total I probably got 4 hours of broken sleep and I feel pretty bad today. I think this is just something I will have to push through. I thought the mirt was having no positive effect on sleep, but obviously it was. The thing that's changed is now once I wake up in the small hours, I can't get back off to sleep. Whilst still on the mirt, I could, even though it wasn't helping me with sleep onset, it was obviously sedating me enough to mean that I could quickly fall back to sleep if woken. But it will get better, I'm sure of it, once my body readjusts itself.
I also have no appetite whatsoever. I feel slightly nauseous, but not unbearably so. I just don't want any food, even chocolate. But that's how I was in the mornings before mirt. I called it my morning sickness.
However, I am in very good spirits! I know I can get through this. I am loving being AD free, and feel really alive. So Calmer, Betsy and everyone else tapering off this stuff, it feels good to be off. You are doing the right thing. I feel the fat melting away. It's like a whole layer of it has already come off my body. You'll get there, and it really is worth it.
betsy0603 evergreen
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Calmer evergreen
Posted
You may need to have the protein shakes if you get the queezies, some use it for breakfast as it then helps the appetite for later, otherwise sickness can stay.
Nothings' changed for me, still the same, been out all day and felt great, sit down to PC and on comes the blurrey 'Mirt' eyes and the fatigue ... now to run around the kitchen and cook !
I hope you sleep better tonight.
evergreen Calmer
Posted
evergreen betsy0603
Posted
betsy0603 evergreen
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So, mood swings. I know it is part of withdrawal to have them, but dang, when I'm in the blue phase or anxious phase it is the worst! I am such a weenie; I know I can't handle full-blown withdrawal. Hoping it gets no worse than this!
evergreen betsy0603
Posted
betsy0603 evergreen
Posted
I am so sorry you had such a rough night, but I'm glad the horse is ok. My friend has a horse that colics frequently due to strongyle damage, so I get how distressing that is.
What breed of horses do you have? I forget, do you run a boarding stable? Hard work, caring for multiple horses!
evergreen betsy0603
Posted
The weight is dropping off me at a very fast rate now, although a lot of it is due to the nausea, I think. Lack of sleep doesn't help. But so long as the horses stay well tonight and my son can sort out his own lift home, I am going to have a whole temazepam and an early night tonight. Maybe a glass of wine too.