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Posted by Phillipa on March 31, 2006, at 21:17:07
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax? » Sobriquet Style, posted by zazenduck on March 31, 2006, at 11:49:53
Yes it gets into the blood stream much faster my doc always told me to put it under the tongue when I felt a panic attack coming on. Love Phillipa
Posted by Phillipa on March 31, 2006, at 21:23:58
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax? » zazenduck, posted by Phillipa on March 31, 2006, at 21:17:07
And xanax is definitely more effective for panic attacks. Phillipa the Queen of benzos.
Posted by rjlockhart on March 31, 2006, at 21:32:54
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax?, posted by Phillipa on March 31, 2006, at 21:23:58
The Queen of Benzo's
You cracked me up phillipa. Thats an original.
And ed is the KING of Valium.and giving info
a
I took to much Prozac today....Matt
Posted by tizza on April 1, 2006, at 1:54:28
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax?, posted by rjlockhart on March 31, 2006, at 21:32:54
If phillipa is the queen of benzo's then I'm the prince, not quite king yet!! (maybe another queen or princess but who knows ; P) Anyway I just have to say that Valium is fantastic for anxiety and panic attacks but you have to give it a chance. I don't think that it is nearly as euphoric or addictive as xanax. I still take Valium and it works great for me, Xanax on the other hand worked too well, maybe not a bad thing for some but I found it EXTREMELY addictive and had a very nasty time coming off it. That was over 10 years ago now. Valium is used widely in Australia and it's actually very hard to get a RX of xanax here because of it's very addicting properties. It's a very well known fact here that xanax is a major problem for chronic addiction, doctor shopping behaviour and very it's hard to discontinue and is also noted for it's anti depressant effects and very euphoric high that doesn't last very long so you need more, then more, then more. It's a big problem for some people who don't even know that they have addictive personalities. Why would someone be prescribed something that you need to take 3 or 4 times a day (ie. xanax) when you can knock it on the head with one dose of valium, preferably at bed time because it does have slight hypnotic effects even though it's not predomidently prescribed for that but it does help you sleep and it lasts all the next day. I'll give you a list of benzo's I have been prescribed over the years and if you have any questions about them I can tell you how they effected me, pls feel free to babble mail me about it or I could go on for ages. I'd just like to say that xanax was very bad for me personally where something like valium would have been better if I had have given it a better go for a few days to a week. Most people have to wait for 4 weeks for a SSRI to kick in so I don't think a few days is very long to wait. I would take Valium over xanax ANYDAY because it's so much easier to taper off, Blah blah blah.... Here is a list of benzo's I have tried, not all of them worked for me. Paul
temezepam:- restoril, normison,
oxezepam:- serapax, murelax, serax? (not sure about US name)
diazepam:- Valium, it has many names
lorazepam:- Ativan
alprazolam:- Xanax, Kalma
Clonazepam:- Rivitrol, Klonopin, Paxam
Flunitrazepam:- Rohypnol, hypnodorm
Nitrazepam:- Mogadon, Alodorm
Posted by bassman on April 1, 2006, at 8:08:34
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax? » rjlockhart, posted by tizza on April 1, 2006, at 1:54:28
That's interesting...as I said, Valium doesn't do anything for me in terms of panic, but Xanax works exceptionally well. But the interesting thing is that I don't experience any euphoria or any other sensation other than thankfulness that I don't feel as crazy, really. Maybe if you get a buzz out of Xanax it should be avoided. I do think Xanax has antidepressant effects and that is helpful for me. In addition to not helping with panic (God, I used to take mounds of the stuff years ago to try and calm down), if I take Valium and fall asleep, I wake up feeling awful. So, YMMV, yet again. I agree that Valium might be a better drug to start with-when I was taking oodles of it, I just decided one day that it really wasn't helping and just stopped. Maybe 50-60 Valium mg/day for several years to zippo. Hard to say if I withdrew because I felt so awful anyway. :>}Now people know that was foolish to withdraw that quickly. My point is that Valium must be reasonably easy to withdraw from, as has been mentioned, compared to Xanax-which if I drop the dose by 0.25 mg/day, I feel mightily in terms of anxiety. I've been taking Ativan to relieve early-morning nightmares and I'm withdrawing from 1 mg/day (over a period of about two weeks) of that with absolutely no problems; I don't even know I'm withdrawing. I think the Ativan worked slightly at the beginning and now doesn't do anything, so I'm dumping taking it.
In answer to a previous question in this thread, there are oodles of references out there that people that use benzos so they can function generally decrease their dosage as time goes on. If anyone finds that interesting and doesn't want to Google/etc. it, I'd be glad to find some references. My experience is that people HATE their psychoactive meds (my pet theory is that the sicker the person is, the harder it is to get them to take medication-I don’t know why), no matter what they are and periodically declare themselves fully well and get off their meds. Then they feel miserable for months while until they realize they felt O.K. because their meds were working. Heck, I've done that.:>}
Posted by ed_uk on April 1, 2006, at 13:00:45
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax?, posted by bassman on March 31, 2006, at 18:10:47
Hi
>I have panic disorder and have found Valium useless for extreme anxiety-Xanax is just the opposite; very effective. If panic is the problem, Xanax is a drug to consider. Look at Remedyfind.com for people's opinion on drugs for panic-Valium isn't even mentioned in the the top 10, and by my experience, for good reason.
Xanax is highly potent. Valium is not. You'd probably need 40-80mg Valium to substitute for 4mg Xanax.
Most people who post on remedy find are Americans. Most Americans have either never been prescribed Valium or have only taken it MANY years ago. Inevitably, it will not be in the top 10.
Regards
Ed
Posted by ed_uk on April 1, 2006, at 13:07:12
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax?, posted by bassman on April 1, 2006, at 8:08:34
Hi Bassman
I guess Valium wasn't the right drug for you at any dose!
My guess is that you find Xanax particularly effective due to its antidepressant-like effect which other benzos seem to lack. Valium and Klonopin seem more 'depressing' than Xanax, but can be good meds for some people.
Regards
Ed
Posted by bassman on April 1, 2006, at 13:32:51
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax? » bassman, posted by ed_uk on April 1, 2006, at 13:07:12
Hi Ed,
I think you're right-it just may be that Valium and Klonopin are too sedating/depressing for me and that just makes the panic more difficult to handle. When I experience panic, I simulataneously feel depressed. I do think Valium and Klonopin are drugs that are worth trying in general; and probably before Xanax. I'd feel more at ease (less concerned about habituation) with either Valium or Klonopin, but they just haven't worked for me. No sense taking a drug that isn't helping. Thanks for the note!
bassman
Posted by ed_uk on April 1, 2006, at 14:10:15
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax?, posted by bassman on April 1, 2006, at 13:32:51
Hi bassman,
What is your opinion of Xanax XR?
Ed
Posted by rjlockhart on April 1, 2006, at 15:48:47
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax? » bassman, posted by ed_uk on April 1, 2006, at 14:10:15
I think ed is right.
He is the King of knowing of Benzo's... ROFL
I take Xanax regualar, it does have some antidepressat properties, like i feel relief with out feeling down. Similar to Ativan, but more potent. Xanax wears off quuick, thats the bad thing about it because all sudden you feel like a arousol feeling. I was on 6mg of Clonazepam (Klonopin) i mean i was so, well wasnt drugged but felt liket like it. Yes, ed rerember me being on Klonopin.
Previous before Klonopin:
Ativan (6mg 2mg X 3) - didnt work at all for painc attacks. And i have severe. That im going to just lose it.Mmm, i dont know if Ativan is good effects diffrent people diffrent, but i wasnt depressed on Ativan i was just having panic attacks ROFL, its longer half life (lasts 6 hours) is good. And it doenst make you depressed much like Klonopin.
But we are all diffrent on meds.
Ed do you still take Valium?
Posted by ed_uk on April 1, 2006, at 16:03:43
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax? -- bassman, posted by rjlockhart on April 1, 2006, at 15:48:47
Hi Rj
I don't often need Valium anymore. I used to take 15mg PRN.
Ed
Posted by bassman on April 1, 2006, at 18:00:23
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax? » bassman, posted by ed_uk on April 1, 2006, at 14:10:15
Ed,
Xanax XR is strange...I thought I'd substitute it for Klonopin-sort of like having a longer half-life (other than it drops off like a rock at some point). Funny you should ask, because I tried the XR about a month ago. My experience was that after about 12 hours at 0.5 mg XR, I would seem to have more panic. That wasn't the idea. :>} My guess is that if I had taken 1 mg XR twice a day, I would have been alright-but that scared me-it felt like I was on a one-way train to instant dependence. I'm O.K. with taking 1 mg Xanax a day, if that was the only benzo I was taking-but as I said, I’m tapering off the Ativan, which I find useless, and the Klonopin, which seems to depress me at 1 mg and above. But I convinced myself XR was the way to go for me, and I have a whole bottle of pills that cost me $43 after insurance, but I'm not going to take them. Xanax ER works best for me, but damn, the XR idea seems great in theory.
bassman
Posted by Meri-Tuuli on April 2, 2006, at 3:37:20
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax? -- bassman » rjlockhart, posted by ed_uk on April 1, 2006, at 16:03:43
Hi Ed!
I got a huge panic attack last weekend and I made my partner drive me to A+E (ER). I was just seen by a nurse, who didn't do anything and told me to go home. Anyway, I have never taken any benzos in my life, and I was wondering what a GP would think to prescribing something for me PRN?? I was under the impression that GPs would get their hands slapped if they ever prescribed a benzo so I have never asked/mentioned panic attacks. I read in the BNF that they are to be rather strict with them. Particulary if you've never touched one before.
Kind regards
Meri
> Hi Rj
>
> I don't often need Valium anymore. I used to take 15mg PRN.
>
> Ed
Posted by special_k on April 2, 2006, at 7:15:49
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax? » ed_uk, posted by Meri-Tuuli on April 2, 2006, at 3:37:20
hmm.
and now the people come out to play...
so... valium can take a couple days in your system.
does that explain why i puked my guts out at a cocktail party the other night?????
dammit.
Posted by Sobriquet Style on April 2, 2006, at 7:47:17
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax?, posted by bassman on April 1, 2006, at 8:08:34
>In answer to a previous question in this thread, there are oodles of references out there that people that use benzos so they can function generally decrease their dosage as time goes on. If anyone finds that interesting and doesn't want to Google/etc. it, I'd be glad to find some references.
I've been trying to obtain some medical studies about people being maintained on Benzo's longterm (especially Diazepam) and not building tolerance to the anxiety effects. Basically something that will challenge what is said by Ashton at benzo.org.uk.
If you can provide any new information about this, it would be extreamly helpful for me, I've read over 200 studies about benzo's being used longterm and can't find any studies that I need (studies newer than the 1980's!)
~
Posted by bassman on April 2, 2006, at 11:13:09
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax? » bassman, posted by Sobriquet Style on April 2, 2006, at 7:47:17
I hope these will be of help:
Schweizer et al. (58) have conducted an 8-month, placebo-controlled study of continuation therapy for panic disorder with alprazolam and imipramine that found sustained efficacy for both compounds with no dose escalation, suggesting an absence of tolerance to the therapeutic effect
Preliminary evidence for the efficacy of continuation therapy of GAD comes from two studies (43, 47). In both studies the benzodiazepine therapy achieved sustained remission of anxious symptomatology with no tolerance and no dose escalation over a 6-month period.
http://www.acnp.org/G4/GN401000129/CH127.html
A total of 136 patients received clonazepam nightly for a mean 3.5 (+/- 2.4) years, with no significant difference in initial versus final mean dose: 0.77 mg (+/- 0.46) versus 1.10 mg (+/- 0.96). Similar results were obtained with chronic alprazolam treatment and with other benzodiazepine treatments. CONCLUSION: Long-term, nightly benzodiazepine treatment of injurious parasomnias and other disorders of disrupted nocturnal sleep resulted in sustained efficacy in most cases, with low risk of dosage tolerance, adverse effects, or abuse.
Fifty-nine panic disorder patients originally randomized to treatment in a controlled trial comparing alprazolam, clonazepam, and placebo were reevaluated in a follow-up study. At a mean follow-up of 1.5 years, 78% of patients remained on medication and the mean dosage of alprazolam and clonazepam did not increase.A 15 year study:
Maintenance medication was common. No benzodiazepine abuse was reported. CONCLUSION: PD has a favourable outcome in a substantial proportion of patients. However, the illness is chronic and needs treatment. The short-term treatment given in the drug trial had no influence on the long-term outcome.I think this is interesting because it basically says the physicians are quite prejudiced concerning benzo use, even when it comes to outcome. Who knows the benefits better, the physician or the patient? That’ s easy.
The participants were 93 patients over 60 years of age using a benzodiazepine for insomnia and 25 physicians comprising sleep specialists, family physicians, and family medicine residents. The main outcome measure was perception of benefit and risk scores calculated from the mean of responses (on a Likert scale of 1 to 5) to various items on the survey. RESULTS: The mean perception of benefit score was significantly higher in patients than physicians (3.85 vs. 2.84, p < 0.001, 95% CI 0.69, 1.32). The mean perception of risk score was significantly lower in patients than physicians (2.21 vs. 3.63, p < 0.001, 95% CI 1.07, 1.77). CONCLUSIONS: There is a significant discordance between older patients and their physicians regarding the perceptions of benefits and risks of using benzodiazepines for insomnia on a long term basis. The challenge is to openly discuss these perceptions in the context of the available evidence to make collaborative and informed decisions.
The Task Force Report, although over 10 years old, is still a standard reference for benzodiazepine use. Its points—that there is undue reluctance to use minor tranquillizers, and that many people are undertreated—still hold, and are borne out by the Roy-Byrne study. Other relevant literature includes a review of 2719 adult out-patient charts2 (medical and psychiatric) for evidence of benzodiazepine abuse that found no patients meeting the criteria. Another study, of long-term alprazolam users, found no dose escalation with long-term use.3 Tyrer’s 19884 paper on minor tranquillizers notes an absence of evidence that benzodiazepine dependence leads to dangerous long-term sequellae, and blames "excessive media attention" for distortion of scientific attitudes.
http://fampra.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/20/3/347
Benzodiazepines are relatively safe drugs that are probably under- rather than overprescribed. Periodic reassessment of chronic users is appropriate, although generalized anxiety disorder and panic disorder are chronic conditions for which long-term treatment may be necessary. In the more recent era of safer antidepressants, these agents may be able to supplant minor tranquillizers for the control of chronic anxiety in many patients. Long-term benzodiazepine use is appropriate for some patients.
http://fampra.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/20/3/347
Tolerance is the need to increase the dose of a drug to maintain the desired effects. Tolerance to the anxiety-relieving effects of benzodiazepines is uncommon and most individuals do not increase their benzodiazepine dose
Posted by zeugma on April 2, 2006, at 12:28:54
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax? » SLS, posted by ed_uk on March 31, 2006, at 16:46:24
It's often noted than the benzodiazepines differ more in their pharmacokinetics than in their pharmacodynamics.>>
Hi Ed.
The often-noted greater prevalence of depression as a result of clonazepam relative to other benzos, would appear to disprove this.
BTW I have not experienced depressive symtoms from clonazepam, and the problems I have had with sleep architecture disruption would be common to all benzodiazepines (as far as I know). Benzos suppress NREM stages 3-4 preferentially, presumably as part of their mechanism of anticonvulsant action, and they incidentally reduce REM because one normally enters REM after cycling through NREM stages 1-4. Blockade of NREM 3-4 in someone who does not exhibit this pattern, however, will experience increased REM by means of a process analogous to displacement in physics (if you put a bar of soap in a tub full of water, the tub will overspill, even though no water has been added).
It is a common misconception that benzos block REM, as an intrinsic property of theirs, as evidenced by an authoritative survey I have in my file, which contains many other inaccuracies, but which I will linger on now.
-z
Ed
Posted by ed_uk on April 2, 2006, at 13:37:40
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax?, posted by bassman on April 1, 2006, at 18:00:23
Hi B
It seems common for people to take the XR every 12 hours. XR meds often don't seem to last as long as they're supposed to.
Ed
Posted by ed_uk on April 2, 2006, at 13:39:21
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax? » ed_uk, posted by Meri-Tuuli on April 2, 2006, at 3:37:20
Hi
GPs always refused to prescribe me PRN diazepam, even in small quantities. Pathetic really. You might be able to get some from your new pdoc.
Ed x
Posted by ed_uk on April 2, 2006, at 13:49:18
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax? » ed_uk, posted by zeugma on April 2, 2006, at 12:28:54
Hi Z
>The often-noted greater prevalence of depression as a result of clonazepam relative to other benzos, would appear to disprove this
I don't know. It seems to be more depressing than Xanax, but is it more depressing than the other benzos? Xanax seems to be somewhat unique.
Regards
Ed
Posted by zeugma on April 2, 2006, at 14:29:01
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax? » zeugma, posted by ed_uk on April 2, 2006, at 13:49:18
hello Ed,
this is something I didn't expect to find:
Eur Neuropsychopharmacol. 2003 Mar;13(2):129-34.
Clonazepam in the long-term treatment of patients with unipolar depression, bipolar and schizoaffective disorder.Winkler D, Willeit M, Wolf R, Stamenkovic M, Tauscher J, Pjrek E, Konstantinidis A, Schindler S, Barnas C, Kasper S.
Department of General Psychiatry, University Hospital for Psychiatry, Wahringer Gurtel 18-20, A-1090, Vienna, Austria. dietmar.winkler@akh-wien.ac.at
The value of a long-term treatment with clonazepam in the prophylaxis of affective disorder is discussed controversially in the scientific literature. Altogether there are only a few reports on the use of this compound as a mood stabilizer, most of them describing patients suffering from bipolar affective disorder. The aim of this investigation was to evaluate clonazepam as a phase prophylactic medication in affective disorder. We conducted a retrospective chart review in 34 out-patients of our lithium clinic (15 suffering from unipolar depression, 15 from bipolar disorder, four from schizoaffective disorder), who had been treated with clonazepam as a long-term medication. Clonazepam was either given as monotherapy, or as in the case of lithium non-responders, as adjunctive therapy. Patients with unipolar depression had significantly (P=0.026) less depressive episodes after initiation of treatment with clonazepam. Patients with bipolar disorder did not benefit from this therapy. Neither manic/hypomanic phases nor depressive episodes were reduced in this group of patients. Interestingly, clonazepam also reduced affective phases in our four schizoaffective patients on a trend level. Our results indicate that patients with unipolar depression may benefit from a maintenance treatment with clonazepam. Due to methodological limitations our results need to be replicated in controlled double-blind randomized clinical trials.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
nfortunately, there really is very little literature on clonazepam and depression, other than anecdotal reports here, in which I have seen far more frequent attributions of depression to clonazepam than to any of the other benzos. It is difficult to find literature on the possible antidepressant or depressant effects of other benzodiazepines other than alprazolam and adinazolam.
-z
Posted by ed_uk on April 2, 2006, at 15:14:50
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax? » ed_uk, posted by zeugma on April 2, 2006, at 14:29:01
Hi Z
Clonazepam has been looked at to 'augment' antidepressants. I think the research was Japanese.
>reports here, in which I have seen far more frequent attributions of depression to clonazepam than to any of the other benzos
That's true. Most babblers compare it to Xanax though. In many cases they haven't taken any other benzodiazepines.
>Patients with unipolar depression had significantly (P=0.026) less depressive episodes after initiation of treatment with clonazepam. Patients with bipolar disorder did not benefit from this therapy. Neither manic/hypomanic phases nor depressive episodes were reduced in this group of patients. Interestingly, clonazepam also reduced affective phases in our four schizoaffective patients on a trend level. Our results indicate that patients with unipolar depression may benefit from a maintenance treatment with clonazepam.
That's interesting. I would not consider clonazepam to be a 'mood stabiliser'. There seems to be a trend to refer to all antiepileptics as mood stabilisers, even in the absense of evidence.....Topamax being the most obvious example today..........gabapentin a few years ago.........probably Keppra next.
Kind regards
Ed
Posted by SLS on April 2, 2006, at 15:39:52
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax? » zeugma, posted by ed_uk on April 2, 2006, at 15:14:50
Clonazepam + lithium was more effective than lithium alone in treating my manic reaction to Parnate + desipramine.
- Scott
Posted by zeugma on April 2, 2006, at 16:52:01
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax?, posted by SLS on April 2, 2006, at 15:39:52
> Clonazepam + lithium was more effective than lithium alone in treating my manic reaction to Parnate + desipramine.
>
>
> - Scotthi Scott,
did you only take clonazepam acutely? and if not, what effect did it have?
-z
Posted by Sobriquet Style on April 2, 2006, at 18:09:51
In reply to Re: Is Valium more potent than Xanax?, posted by bassman on April 2, 2006, at 11:13:09
>I hope these will be of help:
I am extreamly grateful, thank you :-)
~
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