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April 24, 2006 at 23:00:00

Drip Drip Drip - Paxil Info Leaks Out

by Evelyn Pringle     Page 4 of 4 page(s)

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“Research has shown that when patients stop antidepressants cold turkey they can have high rates of withdrawal reactions,” Dr Glenmullen advises, “which vary depending on the particular drug.”

“In studies involving hundreds of patients, 66 percent of patients stopping Paxil,” he says, “have withdrawal reactions.”




For more information for injured parties go to Lawyers and Settlements.com

http://www.lawyersandsettlements.com/articles/paxil.html


Evelyn Pringle
evelyn.pringle@sbcglobal.net

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Evelyn Pringle is a columnist for OpEd News and investigative journalist focused on exposing corruption in government and corporate America.

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RH

No Subject Entered

To relate my own experiences with SSRIs, which I've been taking for almost 6 years: I will say that Dr's have not warned me up front that there could be 'withdrawal symptoms' however it has ALWAYS been stated profusely that one should never quit cold turkey, as adverse effects could occur. Having to pay for the meds (zoloft at the time) myself, I at times ran out before I could get more and therefore experienced these symptoms. I went to the dr to get myself checked out. They then told me that what i was experiencing was 'withdrawal'-and no they don't call it that by name. The symptoms were quite odd and out of the norm for me, but never was it thought or suggested that i was 'relapsing' or that my meds should be increased, they knew from the get-go what the problem was. I got back on the zoloft, no more problems.
After taking the original for a few months, I am now on generic paxil which, in the literature, states that it has a 17-21 hour time period, as oppose to Zoloft's, which is closer to 22-28. Perhaps this is why more people feel the symptoms to a greater degree.
These medications change the chemical balance within your brain and body. Anyone on them should know this and therefore know that stopping them w/o proper supervision and too suddenly will no doubt make your body feel and react oddly. It is of course, the doctor's responsibility to inform the patient, but it is also the patient's responsibility to know what they are putting in their body and how it could affect them.
I am not saying that Glaxo and other companies like them are free from blame, hiding documented facts is knowingly harming the public and should not be tolerated. But to place sole blame the manufacturer is not going to fix anything. Even with information being suppressed, it is still possible to know what to expect from most any drug you're taking. Read the inserts, talk to your pharmicist, look up info online, read 'The Pill Book'. You'll get the gist of what could happen to you with the drugs you're on, learn what symptoms to look for, when to consult your doctor, etc.
It can take up a month or maybe longer for these drugs to fully affect you. The individuals that take these drugs are already unstable (remember I'm speaking of myself as well,so don't take offense), so it is possible that severe shifts in mood and mental capicity have already been occurring, whether anyone, even the individual knows it. If you have severe mood swings or become suicidal or homicidal while on SSRIs for only a very small period of time, it is possible that these behaviors were already possible, before you took these drugs and that the drugs are not solely to blame.
Just something to think about.

by RH (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 1 comments) on Thursday, April 27, 2006 at 10:12:38 AM
 


Paxil kills and changes lives forever!
dlem39Paxil kills and changes lives forever!

just ayour comment

I do not agree, some of us were put on paxil for a single anxiety attack. I became suicidal coming off the drug and its been 5 yrs. My life has never been the same, No I don't just blame GSK, I blame the doctors for not knowing more about this drug, I blame the FDA for not making it harder to patent a drug this dangerous. Paxil has what is called a half life, which means it doesn't stay in your system but 23 hours unlike other ssri's which stay in your system alot longer. I don't advocate any antidepressants because I am scared of them. But I also blame myself for trusting doctors. I have heard and talked to alot of people who went through H--- on this drug. You would not believe the reasons for it was prescribed.
I wasn't suicidal before, I had a good life. But its nothing like it used to be.

Donna

by dlem39 (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 2 comments) on Thursday, September 28, 2006 at 5:17:11 PM
 


Lynn Beckman is a freelance writer and political activist. She resides in Colorado with her husband and teenage son.
Lynn BeckmanLynn Beckman is a freelance writer and political activist. She resides in Colorado with her husband and teenage son.

Paxil

I was given Paxil a number of years ago for depression associated with my mother's death. Within 48 hours, I was a shaking, nervous wreck, so riddled with anxiety, I couldn't perform ordinary tasks. Luckily, my doctor immediately told me to discontinue it and prescribed something else. My friend was not as fortunate. Her cousin was put on Paxil for depression. After two weeks, he repeatedly told his doctor that it was making him so anxious, he felt worse. His doctor told him to keep taking it. Two days later, he took a rifle into the woods and killed himself.

This is a bad drug, yet so many doctors still prescribe it. Must be all the perks they get from Glaxo.

by Lynn Beckman (0 articles, 1 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 27 comments) on Thursday, April 27, 2006 at 11:31:49 PM
 

 

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