Mental Health Coming off Invega (Paliperidone, Xeplion) injections v 6.0

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I’m 24 & I’m dependent on my grandparents, I live with them, only leave the house when my grandma takes me somewhere. I’ve got no job & there’s no way I could work in the condition I am in. She makes or buys all of my food. She also buys my nicotine & thc. I try to help around the house, but it’s really taxing on me, so it’s usually just simple things like doing a load of laundry or washing the dishes. They’re really supportive, but I wish I could do more.
You're lucky to have such supportive grandparents.
I can testify that life after the injection seems to appear more challenging, where as before the injections, I felt like I was ready to conquer the world.
I believe it gets better...
Do you struggle with your energy levels?
 
Neither for me. I'm at the 11 month mark (off of paliperidone). My psychiatrist kept me on paliperidone for a whole extra month even after my syndrome (side effects) emerged, so I've been experiencing these things for 12 months, while being 11 months off paliperidone.


Yep, I had that same experience at the 4 month mark. And at the 11 month mark, I too, am still as impotent as day 1, sadlol.


First off, those are really impressive numbers. Your bench is out of control good. Since squat and deadlift in a balanced body are supposed to be significantly higher than bench, I think your squat and deadlift ceiling is way higher than that.

You guys have the right ideas and ask the right questions. Measures like continuing to work out and nofap are very wise and should, by conventional wisdom, work. However, I just wanted to share, for anyone who cares, that exercise and nofap has not worked for me at all. I do, admittedly, have a severe form of this paliperidone syndrome. Seems like the metabolism and the fish downstairs are totally dead, lol.


Hormone and blood tests--the right ideas and the right questions. I did want to share that at just 1-2 months off paliperidone, I, also, did a prolactin and testosterone test. My levels were normal (much to my disappointment, hoping for a smoking gun leading to a direct cure). Whether my prolactin and testosterone levels were not affected at all by paliperidone or whether they leveled off right away, either way, in my situation, it seems to suggest that these terrible adverse side effects/symptoms can persist and exist in spite of normal prolactin and testosterone levels. Abnormal hormones have been implicated in the "man-boobs" problem (Gynecomastia) and in some forms of sexual dysfunction, low libido, sexual anhedonia. However, if my case is any indication, it may be that paliperidone achieves all these horrible life-devastating effects by some other mechanism or pathway we don't understand.

Let me know if weed ever works again. I have my doubts. I am just hoping for a cure so weed works again
 
I’m 24 & I’m dependent on my grandparents, I live with them, only leave the house when my grandma takes me somewhere. I’ve got no job & there’s no way I could work in the condition I am in. She makes or buys all of my food. She also buys my nicotine & thc. I try to help around the house, but it’s really taxing on me, so it’s usually just simple things like doing a load of laundry or washing the dishes. They’re really supportive, but I wish I could do more.
I’m 24 and in the same boat you are. I can’t go anywhere with out my parents. I have become codependent on them. It’s actually very embarrassing. How many months off are you?
 
Let me know if weed ever works again. I have my doubts. I am just hoping for a cure so weed works again
Hey, I hear ya. It stopped working for me, too. I'll let you know the very first day it starts to work for me again. This syndrome has, effectively for me, thus far, been a total shut-off of all psychoactive substances. It's been a whole year thus far.

I’m 24 & I’m dependent on my grandparents, I live with them, only leave the house when my grandma takes me somewhere. I’ve got no job & there’s no way I could work in the condition I am in. She makes or buys all of my food. She also buys my nicotine & thc. I try to help around the house, but it’s really taxing on me, so it’s usually just simple things like doing a load of laundry or washing the dishes. They’re really supportive, but I wish I could do more.
I too, am tremendously dependent on my remaining nuclear family members. I too, have trouble helping out with chores where previously it was easy. Invegaishell mentioned trouble showering... and brushing teeth. I too have this problem.

I think it's important to bear in mind a couple things.

First, unless you had a few (same time of day) blood hormone tests in the years/months before you got paliperidone, you may never be sure if your prolactin and testosterone levels actually have returned to your normal baseline. While they are obviously regarded as normal to a physician, the bell-shaped (normal distribution) curve they use to determine 'normal' covers a huge range of values. Your natural level(s) may have been quite different to what you have now, and so that may account for some of your subjective recovery issues.

Second, the testosterone (and prolactin) issue is only ever secondary (ie indirect) to Invega's primary mechanism (or blocking) of action on neurochemical signalling and the various long-term downstream/upstream effects that may have had on the brain's neural connections and CNS. And as you probably know, the neurochemical milieu that controls libido is very complex, not all about sex hormones, and something we know very little about.

We do know, however, that dopamine and norephinephrine appear to play a significant role in elevating libido, and serotonin in modulating it. We also know, for instance, that targeting the D3 receptor with drugs like Pramipexole, or D2 (and 5-HT2B, GLT-1 etc), as drugs like Bromocriptine do, can cause substantial elevations in libido, even in the absence of testosterone recovery (though long term, activation of D2/D3 can dampen or suppress prolactin signalling, leading to elevations in HPTA activity and thus testes output. Though it can also be harmful to GH and IGF-1 signalling, which have positive neuromodulatory effects, so swings and roundabouts!!!) Even drugs like bupropion can be helpful depending on the person, and that has quite a range of targets in the CNS that it modulates.

So what I'm trying to say, in a long roundabout way, is that the mechanism you're experiencing probably isn't really that mystifying. It's just that it still hasn't recovered, and may need some (temporary or long-term) pharmacological interventions by your doctors/specialists to kick it back into action and allow a more subjectively natural recovery <3
Thank you for your post. Your point about the distribution curve of normal values for hormones is very insightful--this never occurred to me. Unfortunately, I never did a testosterone nor prolactin test in my life before I did it after the onset of paliperidone syndrome, so I don't have that piece of information which really would have been insightful.

I thought about possible testosterone therapy even in spite of so-called normal levels, but have not explored it thus far. I imagine I will explore it soon, since the known options and outlook for treating low libido and sexual anhedonia are very limited and bleak. There's, roughly speaking, no accepted treatment for it. All of the psychiatric medications for it are off-label and informal. There also appears to be nobody really developing a treatment for it, either.
Compounding this problem is that low libido and sexual anhedonia induced by psychiatric medication is equally, if not even more bleak--
first, from antidepressants, particularly SSRIs, called PSSD (post SSRI sexual dysfunction, see https://rxisk.org/post-ssri-sexual-dysfunction-pssd/), it's said, bluntly, that there is no cure or treatment,
and secondly, from antipsychotics--well, it's not even widely and properly acknowledged enough as even existing! (antipsychotic induced sexual dysfunction) I imagine it has the same bleak outlook as the SSRI induced variety.

I concur with you regarding the importance of dopamine and (at the very least, if not much more things) libido. Now, I did try pramipexole but was unable to take a high enough dose given some very irritating side effects. I was able to take a much higher dose of wellbutrin for a longer period of time (also with serious side effects). Neither of them worked but I'm still open to trying other dopamine agonists, hoping that I can tolerate a higher dose. My intolerable side effects to dopamine medications thus far could also be an indication that it may not be the problem, or, perhaps, that the specific dopamine actions of these types of drugs are just not what's needed. There are also dopamine-releasing agents as well as so called dopamine reuptake inhibitors sometimes used in the treatment of depression and anhedonia. These appear to be different from dopamine agonists.

I'm still of the belief that the dopamine hypothesis (as its antagonism is probably the most conspicuous element of paliperidone's stated pharmacology) is one of the best ones to explain the notorious features of paliperidone syndrome/NIDS, like severe depression/total anhedonia, sexual dysfunction (inc. low libido and sexual anhedonia) and loss of sensitivity to coffee/tea/caffeine. And I believe, like you said, it's just a matter of paliperidone's dopamine antagonism being so severe and long lasting that the receptors haven't recovered and standard dopamine medications haven't broken through yet (may need DRIs and DRAs instead of dopamine agonists, for instance). There could be another neurotransmitter related to dopamine pathways which could play a role in reviving/healing the dopamine systems, like GABA, norepinephrine and glutamate. I am partial to the hope that a combination of time and pharmalogical interventions could overcome it.

It just doesn't seem all that likely to me that most other neurotransmitters would be directly involved in these conspicuous severe adverse effects (unless, like I said, they are related to dopamine pathways).

For instance, paliperidone binds to the adrenergic and histamine receptors, too--it has occurred to me that that could be a treatment to explore, even though they seem to affect other physiological subsystems unrelated to depression-anhedonia and sexual dysfunction, etc.. The idea is this: reverse the effects of that adrenergic and histamine binding by introducing some drug that has the opposite action that paliperidone has on said adrenergic and histamine receptors. However, I'm not very clear on how the adrenergic and histamine receptors work in the first place, and I couldn't find any information on exactly what paliperidone does to them. I have considered mirtazipine as a possible candidate, since it has actions on the adrenergic and histamine receptors, but I still don't understand exactly what actions, and like I said, for it to be plausible as a treatment, it would have to be precisely opposite of what paliperidone does on them, and I can't ascertain what either of them do. I need to ask a psychiatrist with better neurochemistry chops, the likes of which I am trying to get into contact with. My current conventional insurance psychiatrists have proven to be lacking in neurochemistry chops and/or the motivation to exercise them and help the patient do the hard thinking. I might add, that my current psychiatrist, with sexual dysfunction expertise, upon my specific asking, told me that he was unsure of the neurochemistry behind, generally, low libido and sexual anhedonia, whether its dopamine or whatever other explanation.

Furthermore, although paliperidone is said to bind only to dopamine, serotonin, adrenergic and histamine receptors, it is possible that these themselves could have led to a neurochemistry cascade affecting other neurotransmitters. I hope to leave no stones unturned/turn over more stones in this regard and report back on the results.

However, you mentioned norepinephrine, and that peaks my interest. I have considered the importance of norepinephrine while slightly dismissing it. Particularly, I personally did not come across evidence for its strong role in sexual function, but I might have misread/not read enough and am going to do more reading. I am actually taking an SNRI right now, duloxetine (just started a week ago and working my way up from a small dose to the target of 60mg a day). I told my psychiatrist, "well, haven't I already taken a decently strong norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor in the form of wellbutrin?" And he told me that the norepinephrine reuptake inhibition action of duloxetine and, SNRIs generally, is stronger than that of wellbutrin. So we'll see!
 
I might also add that, although I have not yet had any adverse reactions to SSRIs nor SNRIs, I have not had any benefit from them, and even though the fish downstairs (as Winston Churchill used to say, supposedly*) (as well as all my romantic/intimacy faculties) are already totally dead since paliperidone, I am indeed running the scary risk of developing SSRI/SNRI induced sexual dysfunction, of who knows what severity, on top of my antipsychotic (paliperidone) induced severe sexual dysfunction!
The current options in psychiatry indeed are a minefield...

*according to my Dad, sometime during the Second World War, Churchill was known to wander his administrative grounds naked, and on one occasion, a female orderly ran into him. In response to her shock, he reassured her "the fish is dead" or something to that nature.
 
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When did everyone’s inner dialogue return?
Whoa, yeah. Suddenly I'm reminded...
My whole experience on Invega and Risperdal was that I had no inner monologue. Everything I wanted and needed I had to actually "say".
I would say it was probably a few months off the drug that I got that inner monologue back.

Other meds screwed it up, though.
 
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I might also add that, although I have not yet had any adverse reactions to SSRIs nor SNRIs, I have not had any benefit from them, and even though the fish downstairs (as Winston Churchill used to say, supposedly*) (as well as all my romantic/intimacy faculties) are already totally dead since paliperidone, I am indeed running the scary risk of developing SSRI/SNRI induced sexual dysfunction, of who knows what severity, on top of my antipsychotic (paliperidone) induced severe sexual dysfunction!
The current options in psychiatry indeed are a minefield...

*according to my Dad, sometime during the Second World War, Churchill was known to wander his administrative grounds naked, and on one occasion, a female orderly ran into him. In response to her shock, he reassured her "the fish is dead" or something to that nature.
Yeah... I would say that sexual function is one of the last things recovered, following withdrawal.
 
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You're lucky to have such supportive grandparents.
I can testify that life after the injection seems to appear more challenging, where as before the injections, I felt like I was ready to conquer the world.
I believe it gets better...
Do you struggle with your energy levels?
My energy levels & motivation are terrible, I always feel like I have absolutely no energy, it’s very hard for me to do simple things like showering & chores. I feel like I just want to sit still 24/7, but I still force myself out of bed a couple of times a day.
I’m 24 and in the same boat you are. I can’t go anywhere with out my parents. I have become codependent on them. It’s actually very embarrassing. How many months off are you?
I’m 5 months & 1 day off. I’m hoping I’ll start to see some recovery soon, but who knows. These withdrawals are hell (and the effects of the Invega of course)
 
I’m 5 months & 1 day off of Invega so far, and it’s been rough. I still have all the Anhedonia, & akathisia is a little less severe, but still pretty bad. Cognitively I think I’m a little better, but still have a long way to go, I can now actually keep up with and understand TV shows and movies, but i still don’t get any pleasure out of watching, just something to pass the time and distract myself with. I still have trouble communicating and thinking of things to say.

I’m sure some of you will be glad to hear this, at 5 months off, I get high from smoking regular weed (not taking 2000 mg in edibles like before) and alcohol works as well. Shitty part is I still feel terrible while drunk/high, and getting high has been making my anxiety go crazy.

One last thing that I haven’t seen anyone mention, I HURT so fucking bad, all the time, all over, no matter if I take Ibuprofen or Tylenol, it’s in my muscles and my joints. It’s gotten really bad over these past couple of weeks and now I feel like a chronic pain patient in addition to the Invega. Has anyone else had this?
 
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I’m not quite sure, but it used to completely block weed out for me, and over the past month or two it’s come back and I can get high again.
I am happy for you! Maybe I will be able to get high on weed again next year
 
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