Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

General health

Mumsnet doesn't verify the qualifications of users. If you have medical concerns, please consult a healthcare professional.

Experiences with 'quitting' Duloxetine?

2 replies

LiquoriceWheel · 08/08/2019 13:19

I've been on anti-depressants for years but at the start of the year I decided that I no longer wanted to take them (There is a long backstory to this but not that relevant to the post).

With the support of my GP have managed to go from 120mg to 30mg every second day (this has taken me 8 months to do). I've been duloxetine free for the last three days which I'm very pleased about, however, I am feeling very 'withdrawal-ly' still: Brain haze, dizziness, feeling 'tranquilised', confusion, forgetfulness, aggressive feelings out of proportion to the situation, nausea, compulsive overeating/insatiable appetite etc.

These symptoms are completely 'normal' when you are taking duloxetine and miss a dose by accident but I really thought they would be less severe now that I've tapered off so slowly? I'm very disheartened and scared that I will never be free of this drug and feel healthy and normal again. Actually it's very upsetting because I've been trying so hard to change my life for the better and this is a major obstacle that won't budge.

For those who have managed to quit Duloxetine please can you tell me how long this lasts? I need to do assignments and work and normal everyday activities but the withdrawal symptoms are so so awful. I know taking a duloxetine pill will make it go away but I don't want anything to do with it anymore. I keep telling myself 'it can't last forever' but now I feel paranoid that it will.

Can anyone share their experiences with duloxetine with me? TIA

OP posts:
LiquoriceWheel · 16/08/2019 11:59

Update: Just in case someone reads this thread one day, I'm on day 11 now and starting to feel somewhat normal.

Cognition is still a bit off - someone will say something to me and i can't process or understand what they have said straight away. It will completely go over my head, even just a hello (sorry what did you say? for example) but it is so much better than it was a few days ago.

Anyway i just want to leave this here because I always get good advice on mumsnet, so passing it along :)

OP posts:
lyrebird1 · 16/08/2019 19:42

Thanks for sharing your experience. I take Duloxetine (amongst others) for nerve pain and am hoping that a spinal cord stimulator will allow me to reduce/stop taking pain medications completely.

When I was reducing Pregabalin (also hellish!), I was told by my doctor that the withdrawal is due to the brain having to replace the neurotransmitters that the drug was providing. I am glad you are through the worst of the withdrawal symptoms, and I am sure you will continue to get back to normal.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page