I have a question. I take antipsychotic medication and I wonder if I will be able to stop taking it ever. Did any of you ever had any success with interrupting the intake of antipsychotics?
I've been on the anti-psychotic
Zyprexa, also known generically as
Olanzepine, for the last 5 years. It is commonly prescribed for people with schizophrenia or people with bipolar disorder. But is unfortunately being prescribed by doctors to "normal" people for all kinds of silly reasons. It's a very dangerous severely addictive drug. It guarantees repeat business for the doctors and the drug companies.
I have never attempted to withdraw from this drug because I am in my mid-sixties -- I'm just too old. And, I would probably go manic since I'm bipolar. You need to be young and fit. The withdrawal is very hard on the heart and the body in general. My heart is weak. A withdrawal causes severe heart palpitations, sometimes cardiac arrhythmia, gut wrenching anxiety, months of insomnia, severe headaches, and other severe withdrawal symptoms.
Now, the severity of withdrawal depends on what your dose is and how long you've been taking it. The drug is a neurotoxic substance that builds up up in your body over time. The withdrawal effects are a result of your body's response to detoxify from the drug and re-normalize itself.
I have undergone withdrawal from the benzodiazepine
Clonazepam, which is a drug to control anxiety. It nearly killed me. This I do not exaggerate. What saved me was I went manic and all the symptoms vanished. I think it was the body's way of dealing with the withdrawal. The body is very wise.
The anti-psychotic
Zypreza is also known as a
super-benzodiazepine, as some psychiatrists like to call it. It comes with super-withdrawal effects as well.
See this article:
How I got off of psychiatric medication: https://tiltatwindmills.wordpress.com/2008/12/28/how-i-got-off-of-psychiatric-medication/The most important idea to get about withdrawing from psychotropic drugs is to taper off as slowly as possible gradually reducing the dose as you go along.