Is Sustained Release Or Extended Release Better?
blood lithium levels should be checked in 4 to 5 days ,
could i phone u when i see a physician that isnt a psychiatrist & after u speak to the physician ,he could write me a prescription,my psychiatrist is out of city ,he isnt coming until april 4 ,if i see a family physician he is more likely to listen to what i suggest if u speak to him since you are a psychiatrist.
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Hello, and thanks very much for using my direct private service.
I typically start with lithium carbonate immediate release 300mg at 9AM and at 9PM. It does come in an extended release formulation, but that formulation does not give accurate levels at first, so I don't use it until we have established a dosage that gives a good level. You should check a blood level in 5 days, drawn 1 hour before the AM dose. The target blood level is any number between 0.8 and 1.2.
We are not allowed to use phone services on this website, but you can certainly print out my recommendations and show them to your primary care doctor. Many primary care doctors are comfortable prescribing lithium, and hopefully my recommendation printed out and given to them will increase this likelihood.
Please ask any followup questions you may have. Then, please remember to rate and close this answer when you are finished and satisfied.
Thank you for using my private direct service. My name is Dr. Sheppe, and I am an XXXXXXX doctor working in New York City at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, ranked #1 for Psychiatry in the United States (tinyurl.com/psyrank). For a personalized comprehensive evaluation, treatment recommendations, and individual therapy, you can always ask me at HealthCareMagic at this private link: tinyurl.com/DrSheppeAnswers
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Yes, primary care physician is the same thing as family physician, sorry for the confusion.
It is not true that stronger drugs have more side effects and more withdrawal. Very powerful drugs can have few side effects and withdrawal. Buproprion is a powerful drug and has relatively few side effects and little withdrawal. Your plan of tapering to 150mg for 7 days and then stopping is safe. You could then start lithium. Unfortunately we cannot write prescriptions from this site, only give advice. You will have to have your family physician write prescriptions for you. But this is an appropriate plan for you in terms of tapering off Wellbutrin and starting lithium.
Please ask any followup questions you may have. Then, please remember to rate and close this answer when you are finished and satisfied.
Thank you for using my private direct service. My name is Dr. Sheppe, and I am an XXXXXXX doctor working in New York City at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, ranked #1 for Psychiatry in the United States (tinyurl.com/psyrank). For a personalized comprehensive evaluation, treatment recommendations, and individual therapy, you can always ask me at HealthCareMagic at this private link: tinyurl.com/DrSheppeAnswers
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Serotonin syndrome is typically only caused by mixing a tricyclic antidepressant with another antidepressant, or an MAOi antidepressant with another antidepressant. Mixing an SNRI+SSRI as you say typically will not cause it.
This syndrome causes flushing, rapid heartbeat, fever, and can be fatal, but if treated promptly in an emergency room can be managed well with IV fluids and people will recover.
The antidepressants are all roughly equal in efficacy and differ only by their side effect profile; TCAs and MAOIs have more side effects so are used less often.
If the lithium level is low, the dose is increased depending on how low the level is, up to as high as 1200mg a day.
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It would be my pleasure!
SSRI antidepressant: escitalopram or lexapro, citalopram or celexa
SNRI antidepressant: effexor or venlafaxine
TCA antidepressant: imipramine, amitryptline
Atypical antidepressant: bupropion, mirtazapine
Atypical neuroleptic (augmenting agent for depression): Abilify
Mood stabilizer (augmenting agent for depression): lithium
You have one more question remaining in this thread before it needs to be rated and closed.
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respectively with atypical being the latest and typical the drugs from the mid 2oth century
could lexapro & venlafaxine be taken together
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Antidepressants are not separated by generations this way, they are separated by classes. The classes are SSRI, SNRI, TCA, MAOi, and atypicals (the atypicals do not fit into these other specific classes). TCAs and MAOis are older antidepressants. SSRIs, SNRIs, and atypicals are all newer antidepressants.
You may actually be thinking of neuroleptics (antipsychotics), which are separated by age into typical and atypical, with the typicals (like haloperidol) being older and the atypicals (like Abilify) being newer.
I hope this was helpful. Please rate and close this answer thread at this time. Please don't hesitate to open a new question thread at my private link if you have any further or new questions:
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