Sorry but 2 months is long enough for you to already be recovering and just leads even more evidence to SSRIs being a side-effect ridden placebo.
What evidence do you have to support your opinion? First-hand experience with Celexa for a month isn't gonna cut it.
Have you considered the fact that everyone responds differently to psychiatric medications? Or that Zoloft is indicated (and prescribed off label) for several different mental (and sometimes physical) disorders?
Did you know what I was taking the Zoloft for? And what else I may have been using it with?
Were you aware that my liver or kidneys might be functioning less (or perhaps more) efficiently than yours?
I know from experience that SSRIs do not take 2 months to "work" - it only took 30 days before Celexa switched me into 24/7 mania. Not exactly a positive effect.
It took only about a week of me being on Paxil before I had to be rushed to the ER because I began to experience some incredibly painful cramps. They had to put me on a morphine drip, and I was told to stop the Paxil, which I did and the cramps went away.
What I didn't do afterwards was to go to my work buddy who had told me a couple weeks earlier that he had been on Paxil for the last 2 years or so (without any problems) and basically tell him that he should get off because he's fine by now because I know from experience, and also that it's a side-effect ridden placebo.
Furthermore, It took only 3 days of Prozac before I began to feel like I was going crazy (mania). I had an episode at work which nearly got me fired due to this.
And I've also been on Citalopram (generic Celexa), which I had to stop taking for the same reason as Prozac. Thankfully, at this point, I had decided I needed time to mend - away from work.
Take a look at this chart from PubMed, and notice the differences in adverse effect intensity between common SSRIs[1]:
[1] -
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC181155/table/i1523-5998-003-01-0022-t02/
I think that you're giving the Zoloft a lot more credit than it deserves. Any psychiatrist worth their salt will tell you that if you aren't experiencing relief within a month, it isn't going to work for you. Zoloft generally kicks in faster than most SSRIs with around 3 weeks being the average time that clinical effects would be observed with some experiencing partial to full remission with as little as two weeks.
I'd love to know how you came to this conclusion - especially about Sertraline kicking in "faster than most SSRIs with around 3 weeks being the average time..."
Even the best minds in the field admit that they don't know exactly how the effect of an SSRI correlates to improvement of symptoms of depression, anxiety, panic, etc. So for you to make the above claim - would you mind sharing it with me please?
One the things I've always done with my prescription meds is that I've studied them obsessively, mainly out of fear that I could be doing more damage to my body compared to any potential therapeutic/beneficial effects.
I remember clearly hearing and reading (repeatedly) that Zoloft can take up to 8 weeks to start working. And even then, several more months of sustained pharmacological therapy beyond response to initial treatment may be required for long term benefits.[1]
[1] -
http://www.fda.gov/ohrms/dockets/ac/04/briefing/4006b1_06_zoloft-label.pdf (page 33)
Its great that you're feeling better but SSRIs cause more harm than anything else and recommending that people who have damaged their serotonin systems cause further disruption is reckless advice.
Again, what are you basing your comment on?
And here's my "reckless advice" as my previous comment wasn't meant to be advice:
(reckless advice)
People - SSRIs aren't fun at all. They have ZERO recreational value. There are reports that use (especially long term use) can cause sexual dysfunction, and tardive dysphoria. Pretty much every psychiatric drug has at least one documented long term adverse effect. Neuroleptics carry the risk of tardive dyskinesia and neuroleptic malignant syndrome. Benzodiazepines may interfere with short term memory (among other things). However, if you are suffering from a bad roll, and you do not know what to do anymore, considering trying some Rx medication (if you haven't already). It doesn't need to be an SSRI. Do not be content to remain the way you are. Get up and fight back (easier said than done - trust me I know).
If you do decide to use an SSRI, please be aware of the black box warning about feelings/thoughts of suicde, plus the possible sexual side effects, tardive dysphoria, possible weight gain, sugar/carb cravings, etc.
Whatever med you do decide to use, be sure to read up on it thoroughly, because some psychiatrists may Rx you a specific medication because they are paid to - which is very wrong IMO.
Perhaps you'll recover without any medication. If so, then that's great!
Either way, good luck.
(/end reckless advice)
I don't know whether it's still accepted anymore, but it used to be believed by some that supplementing with an SSRI after a night of rolling would aid in preventing neurotoxicity.
The reason why I theorize that Zoloft aided me is because, by using MDMA in the manner that I did (chronic, consistent, weekly for years), I believe that this may have caused significant upregulation to corresponding 5-HT receptors due to long lasting reductions in 5-HT release. By using the Zoloft/Sertraline for 8 months, the downregulation of 5-HT receptors caused by the SSRI may (or may not) have effectively undone at least part of what my chronic, long-term, abnormal use of MDMA did. But I openly acknowledge that I have absolutely zero proof of this.
You more than likely did your recovering on your own.
Oh hell no, I did not.
I resorted to twaddling my thumbs, avoiding drugs, eating my vegetables, and scratching my ass for nearly a year with zero improvement. Nothing changed for the better until I decided to do some trial and error with Rx meds.
I'm sorry, but your manic experience with (what sounds like) one SSRI does not make you an expert with the rest of them, just like Joe Schmo's experience with tramadol doesn't make him an expert with the entire family of opioid analgesics, and especially just like my experience with over 8 years of being on Xanax makes me no expert with all benzodiazepines.