Where Wolf?
Bluelighter
I'm currently in the early stages of a medically supervised diazepam taper, having failed to quit through a self-administered reduction programme. I started off tapering from doses of 100+mgs of diaz a day, after switching from cocktails of alprazolam, temazepam, nitrazepam and midazolam, but though I managed to get down, several times, to 25-30mgs, I inevitably relapsed/rebounded and got stuck in the 50-70 mgs a day range on diaz.
I'm now down to 55mgs, and am frustrated by the slow pace of tapering - whether as a consequence of dose reduction or for unrelated reasons, the latest (5mg) drop has been accompanied by one of the worst few weeks of daily migraine attacks (up to 3-4 a day) I've ever suffered. Tryptans aren't always effective, for me, and I'm concerned that I'm taking too many NSAIDS (never above therapeutic doses, but daily APAP or ibuprofen, often in combination with low-dose codeine (OTC where I live). I've read both controlled studies and firsthand user reports praising the anti-addictive properties of baclofen and its action as a migraine prophylactic. Does anyone have any experience of using baclofen for either, or both, alcohol/benzo withdrawal and migraine prevention?
I've got a doc's appointment tomorrow to discuss the next step on my taper, and a few weeks ahead of me with no work and few social obligations, so here's what I'm thinking...
a 1mg DAILY dose reduction on diaz, supplemented by 10-30mgs of Baclofen. Any opinions or advice would be very welcome.
I'm now down to 55mgs, and am frustrated by the slow pace of tapering - whether as a consequence of dose reduction or for unrelated reasons, the latest (5mg) drop has been accompanied by one of the worst few weeks of daily migraine attacks (up to 3-4 a day) I've ever suffered. Tryptans aren't always effective, for me, and I'm concerned that I'm taking too many NSAIDS (never above therapeutic doses, but daily APAP or ibuprofen, often in combination with low-dose codeine (OTC where I live). I've read both controlled studies and firsthand user reports praising the anti-addictive properties of baclofen and its action as a migraine prophylactic. Does anyone have any experience of using baclofen for either, or both, alcohol/benzo withdrawal and migraine prevention?
I've got a doc's appointment tomorrow to discuss the next step on my taper, and a few weeks ahead of me with no work and few social obligations, so here's what I'm thinking...
a 1mg DAILY dose reduction on diaz, supplemented by 10-30mgs of Baclofen. Any opinions or advice would be very welcome.