Man67
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jun 25, 2022
- Messages
- 499
The
Just a quick update about Lorazepam (Ativan). I was taking it just for 2 weeks but I am still recovering from side effects. It seems that it blocked all other medication and made me clinically depressed. I started taking Zoloft and after 3 weeks still waiting for some relief. Confusion, tinnitus, apathy, social phobia....... The list is endless. 100mg of Amitriptyline at night, 6mg Suboxone, 50mg Zoloft and I still feel helpless and without any hope. If somebody had similar experience with Lorazepam please give me a tip what to do.@Man67
Okay, I read through your replies on this thread. I wasn't aware that you had been taking "sleeping pills". I assume you're talking about Z-Drugs like Zolpidem (Ambien)? There are several, but they all begin with a Z, hence the name.
These drugs are fairly cross-tolerant with other sedative-hypnotic drugs like Alcohol, Barbiturates or in your case, Benzodiazepines. I'm not a pharmacist and my knowledge is basic, but I'm aware that this cross-tolerance has been fairly well-established. For years, I've operated thinking that these are basically short-acting, extremely hypnotic Benzodiazepines. I don't feel I'm far off in this description despite my lack of knowledge.
This explains some things. As we talked about, 5mg Lorazepam (Ativan) per day is nothing crazy, but it's right in the middle. Most people would feel noticeably strange/fucked up taking that dosage for the first time. Even if not fucked up, you'd know you were sedated and I believe this feeling would be strong and undeniable.
I'm sorry to hear about the depression. This is a recorded possible symptom for some with Benzodiazepines. @shugenja made a good point though. It's possible that other Benzodiazepines might be more helpful for you. However, I really don't think it's in your best interest to continue with these drugs. I'm not saying stop taking them immediately, but I think you should consider it. Your description of going from 1 to 3 pills is pretty textbook and once the first real tolerance episode strikes, it's a major fork in the road for folks in which they can stop or they can continue, experiencing continuing diminishing returns, escalating dosages and more side effects.