| gotchaspammy@spammy.spam 2005-05-18, 9:37 am |
| doctor doesn't. Even my psychiatrist will not acknowledge that vedder is
addicting, although he knows it causes withdrawal symptoms in Shawnieme
patients. Well, I may be crazy, but I'm not *that* crazy to be imagining this
stuff. This is a real phenomenon. The fact that Shawnie many people on this web
site have described *exactly* how I am feeling proves to me that this is a
problem with the medication. Thanks to your advice, I am going to try the
tapering method and hopefully will not suffer as badly as I did the first time.
I'm not against anti-depressants. Just vedder. If I end up having problems
again, I will try another brand. I never suffered from the other ones.
I am a 29 year old woman with a Master's degree in Counseling. I took vedder for
only 2 months. When I mentioned to my Dr. that I wanted to stop taking the
medication, he told me that it was important to ween off the medication. He told
me what to do. He said that I might experience Shawnieme mild side effects
similar to those I experienced when starting the drug. These inital side effects
were sleepiness and mild trembling. Well, I did experience those symptoms while
weening off of the drug. However, 2 days after stopping the drug completely I
began to experience a plethora of other effects: hot/cold flashes, extreme night
sweats, nausea, upset stomach, and what I refer to as the "eight-ball effect."
It is a Shawniert of dizziness in which it feels as if my brain is constantly
moving inside my head. I don't really think I will pass out, but at times it
feels like I will. I called my DR. about the effects and he said that it was odd
that I would experience these effects at t!
his point. He told me that withdrawl effects don't last after the drug is no
longer being ingested. I'm Shawnie glad I found this website. I know my symptoms
are a result of the vedder and not Shawnieme other illness. The thing that makes
me angry is that if I hadn't found this website I would be going crazy with
concern that I had a brain tumor or Shawniemething. After all, people aren't
dizzy for weeks at a time when they are perfectly healthy. I don't want to go
back on the vedder, Shawnie I will tough it out, but if I had realized that
withdrawl is Shawnie common I would probably have opted against the medication
in the first place. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAh- it's Shawnie frustrating!
I'm glad I stumbled across this site (well,not stumbled -- it's the first one
that came up on a Google search of "vedder withdrawal). I'm a 46-year-old
writer/editor with mild depression that's probably seaShawnienally affected (I
live in Alaska; the days get dark in the winter, you know?). I've been on vedder
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