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  1. #1

    Doxepin

    I have tried many antidepressants for anxiety disorders including TcA’s, Maoi’s, Ssri’s, Snri’s. The only combination
    that worked for a few years was moclobemide and pregabalin. I have tried reinstating these at different doses over
    the last four years with no success.
    I could not get upto therapeutic doses especially on clomipramine and imipramine unfortunately.
    pdoc has give me this as a last option, starting at 25mg and working up to 75mg over time.

    Is this a good medication for depression/ anxiety, I see it’s used a lot for insomnia/ hives and has a high affinity for
    histamine. I’m guessing that’s where the anxiety relief may come from similiar to mirtazapine.

    Any experiences with this med anyone and PDU I would appreciate your opinion?

    Thanks
    Mark

  2. #2
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    Re: Doxepin

    Quote Originally Posted by sparky10 View Post
    I have tried many antidepressants for anxiety disorders including TcA’s, Maoi’s, Ssri’s, Snri’s.
    They didn't work, or you couldn't tolerate them, Mark?

    I could not get upto therapeutic doses especially on clomipramine and imipramine unfortunately.
    How did you take them and what happened?

    pdoc has give me this as a last option, starting at 25mg and working up to 75mg over time.

    Is this a good medication for depression/ anxiety, I see it’s used a lot for insomnia/ hives and has a high affinity for
    histamine. I’m guessing that’s where the anxiety relief may come from similiar to mirtazapine.
    Yes, mirtazapine and doxepin are very sedating antihistamines which mostly ease anxiety through sedation. They are not really antidepressants which work by stimulating the growth of new brain cells in the hippocampal regions of the brain. That said, they can be effective enough for some.

    It is probably worth a try, however, doxepin has been phased out in some countries and I note it isn't listed on the NHS Cost Comparison Chart (PDF, section 4:3, p 27) which may, or may not indicate it won't be available for much longer in the UK either so it would pay to check. Your chemist/pharmacist could know more about this than your GP.
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  3. #3
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    Re: Doxepin

    I take 150mg of Doxepin. It's still available in the UK. It has really helped me the last 6 years but now I am perimenopausal, my anxiety is sky high and I'm not sleeping at all. I need a change of antidepressant I think, and I am on my 5th week of hrt.

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    Re: Doxepin

    Quote Originally Posted by karenp View Post
    I need a change of antidepressant I think, and I am on my 5th week of hrt.
    The heightened anxiety might be being driven by the hrt and may settle down, but as doxepin isn't really an antidepressant and may have an uncertain future now might be a good time to switch to another TCA such as amitriptyline, or imipramine.

    Once stabilized on an effective AD please talk to your GP about weaning off the lorazepam if you're taking it regularly as benzodiazepines block the mechanism by which AD work.
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    Re: Doxepin

    Doxepin is unavailable, now it's not being produced any more. The closest alternative is Amitriptyline.
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    Re: Doxepin

    Quote Originally Posted by WiseMonkey View Post
    Doxepin is unavailable, now it's not being produced any more. The closest alternative is Amitriptyline.
    It is still available here, or at least it is still on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme list of meds in 10mg, 25mg and 50mg tablets/capsules. There doesn't seem to be anything about it being dropped, but who knows.
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  7. #7
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    Re: Doxepin

    I am 150mg of Doxepin but I read they no longer prescribe it to new patients. Never have a problem getting my prescription. It's been so easy to tolerate compared to Ssri's. It helps me a lot but I still.take Lorazepam 2mg too and now hrt..

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    Re: Doxepin

    Quote Originally Posted by karenp View Post
    I am 150mg of Doxepin but I read they no longer prescribe it to new patients.
    Doxepin is now regarded as a sedating antihistamine instead of an antidepressant (AD). Which doesn't mean it doesn't work, but it relies on sedation rather than stimulating neurogenesis which is the mechanism of true ADs (and also cognitive/behavioural/mindfulness therapies).

    It's been so easy to tolerate compared to Ssri's.
    The tricyclic class ADs (TCAs) tend to have less initial side-effects than SSRIs/SNRIs, but that is often at the expense of more ongoing issues such as constipation and dry mouth. They are also less prone to poop-out.

    I can't tolerate SSRIs either, but TCAs have kept my PD under control for 37 years.

    It helps me a lot but I still.take Lorazepam 2mg too and now hrt..
    Do you take the lorazepam daily, or only as needed?
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  9. #9

    Re: Doxepin

    Quote Originally Posted by panic_down_under View Post
    They didn't work, or you couldn't tolerate them, Mark?

    I struggled to tolerate a lot of them but stayed on them for example, Prozac, effexor, parnate, phenelzine for a good length
    of time. They never helped me though so feel stuck and therapy hasn’t done anything either. Prozac I was on for 18 months and the
    others for 4 months. It was only diazepam that enabled me to stay on them.



    How did you take them and what happened?

    i took them at a low dose but the anxiety was too much especially clomipramine and I just felt in a daze most of the time.
    it never got any better the longer I stayed on it.



    Yes, mirtazapine and doxepin are very sedating antihistamines which mostly ease anxiety through sedation. They are not really antidepressants which work by stimulating the growth of new brain cells in the hippocampal regions of the brain. That said, they can be effective enough for some.

    It is probably worth a try, however, doxepin has been phased out in some countries and I note it isn't listed on the NHS Cost Comparison Chart (PDF, section 4:3, p 27) which may, or may not indicate it won't be available for much longer in the UK either so it would pay to check. Your chemist/pharmacist could know more about this than your GP.
    I got my prescription over here in the U.K., they have not said anything about it being discontinued.

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    Re: Doxepin

    Quote Originally Posted by sparky10 View Post
    I struggled to tolerate a lot of them but stayed on them for example, Prozac, effexor, parnate, phenelzine for a good length of time. They never helped me though so feel stuck and therapy hasn’t done anything either. Prozac I was on for 18 months and the others for 4 months. It was only diazepam that enabled me to stay on them.
    Unfortunately, while diazepam may have eased the anxiety in the short term it was likely making things worse overall. ADs don't work directly in the way diazepam does. Anxiety and depression are the emotional expressions of an underlying brain disorder, atrophy of parts of the two hippocampal regions of the brain caused by high brain stress hormone levels killing brain cells and inhibiting the growth of new ones. ADs stimulate the growth of new cells (neurogenesis). It is the new cells and the interconnections they forge which provide the therapeutic response. Unfortunately, diazepam and other benzodiazepines (BZDs) impair neurogenesis (Villasana LE, 2019; Boldrini M, 2014; Nochi R, 2013; Sun Y, 2013; Song J, 2012; Wu X, 2009; Stefovska VG, 2008).

    BTW - therapy also works by neurogenesis.

    i took them at a low dose but the anxiety was too much especially clomipramine and I just felt in a daze most of the time. it never got any better the longer I stayed on it.
    The low doses may have been the problem. To initiate and sustain neurogenesis the dose of most serotonergic ADs needs to be high enough to saturate at least 80% of the serotonin transporters (5-HTT).

    Unfortunately, ADs will often make anxiety worse in the beginning. There is no way of preventing this, however, it can usually be minimized by starting at a low dose, no more than a quarter of the recommended minimum therapeutic dose and ramped up slowly by a similar amount every few weeks. Small doses of sedating antihistamines such as hydroxyzine or mirtazapine can help ease the initial anxiety spike too, as may BZDs in the short-term.

    Given your experience with SSRIs and clomipramine maybe an AD that targets noradrenaline, aka norepinephrine, reuptake such as nortriptyline might be worth a shot.
    __________________
    The opinions expressed above are based on my observations and, where applicable, interpretation of cited data and are general in nature. Consult your physician before acting on anything stated.

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