ChemicallyEnhanced
Bluelighter
I feel like it's been used a lot more fairly recently (last decade or so maybe) and it's so obviously (IMO) an attempt to sugar-coast WITHDRAWAL.
I had tried to stop taking Quetiapine (Seroquel) recently and experienced anxiety, essential tremor, TOTAL inability to sleep (I was awake for over 100 hours), nausea, diarrhoea and uncontrollable crying. When I called my doctor (who had told me it did not cause any dependency and had no withdrawal) she said "Oh, that's correct. There's no withdrawal, but it does have a Discontinuation Syndrome". When I asked her to define that she told me "By "Discontinuation Syndrome", we mean that if you stop taking it abruptly, you may experience a variety of unpleasant side effects""...uhhhh, forgive me, but...how TF is that different from withdrawal?
I was also told (during a medication review) that I'd probably be on Sertraline (Zoloft) for the rest of my life now* because people who have been on it in the very long term (I THINK she specified more than 12 years, but could be wrong about that...I've been on it for a little over 14) have a risk of experiencing a discontinuation syndrome that never goes away.
Which is terrifying in itself because some people are taken off these drugs whether they agree with that or not. But, yeah, apparently if you are on an SSRI for an extremely long time, if you DO come off it symptoms like rebound depression, anxiety and "Brain zaps" might continue FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE.
Anyway, yeah, the term is bullshit. They know "withdrawal" scares people so they're trying to hide behind a different term.
*I have never had any intention of NOT being on it for the rest of my life
I had tried to stop taking Quetiapine (Seroquel) recently and experienced anxiety, essential tremor, TOTAL inability to sleep (I was awake for over 100 hours), nausea, diarrhoea and uncontrollable crying. When I called my doctor (who had told me it did not cause any dependency and had no withdrawal) she said "Oh, that's correct. There's no withdrawal, but it does have a Discontinuation Syndrome". When I asked her to define that she told me "By "Discontinuation Syndrome", we mean that if you stop taking it abruptly, you may experience a variety of unpleasant side effects""...uhhhh, forgive me, but...how TF is that different from withdrawal?
I was also told (during a medication review) that I'd probably be on Sertraline (Zoloft) for the rest of my life now* because people who have been on it in the very long term (I THINK she specified more than 12 years, but could be wrong about that...I've been on it for a little over 14) have a risk of experiencing a discontinuation syndrome that never goes away.
Which is terrifying in itself because some people are taken off these drugs whether they agree with that or not. But, yeah, apparently if you are on an SSRI for an extremely long time, if you DO come off it symptoms like rebound depression, anxiety and "Brain zaps" might continue FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE.
Anyway, yeah, the term is bullshit. They know "withdrawal" scares people so they're trying to hide behind a different term.
*I have never had any intention of NOT being on it for the rest of my life