CHAPTER 13
HOW TO TAPER ANTIANXIETY, ANTICONVULSANTS, BENZODIAZEPINE,
AND SLEEP MEDICATION
THE FDA HAS
published approved guidelines for tapering off these medications. Those
guidelines are what the authors published a decade ago and this approach is as
effective now as it was in 1999.
Reduce the
medication gradually and if side effects begin that are too severe, go back to
the last dosage you were doing fine with, get stable again and then reduce the
medication again, but this time at a slower reduction amount.
The above can
seem too basic and too easy to understand for it to be misinterpreted. However,
that is not the case.
Gradual – Most of us take the word gradual to me slowly, but there is a
need to give a good example of gradual. Imaging you are in an airplane that is
about to descend for the landing. What would you like that landing to be like?
Would you prefer to not feel the decent and when the plane touches the runway
you do not even feel the tires touch ground. This is a landing where I have
heard the passengers cheer and thank the pilot when they get off the plane. This
is also the gradual landing we want for you when reducing your medication.
Gradual when
tapering off a medication would be; a slow and steady decent that does not jar
and bump the person reducing the drug. Gradual would also be a speed of
reduction that would allow the person to still function in life and reduce to a
minimum the chance of withdrawal side effects.
If you agree
with the above, this removes the idea of skipping days of the medication in
order to reduce the dosage and get off the drug. Skipping days or alternating
from a higher dosage to a lower dosage every other day is not gradual. One only
needs to examine the half-life of the medication to establish that datum. You go
in withdrawal every other day and feel an overdose effect the days you are going
back up on the dosage.
Never Skip
Days of the Drug
All drugs in
this class come in completely different dosages and with some being in a
time-release, the variances are too vast to list in a book of this type. We will
first take what to do with a non-time release medication.
ONLY REDUCE
MEDICATION EVERY 14-DAYS
Non-Time
Release Medication
If you are
taking a non-time release medication, reduce the medication at the smallest
reduction possible. We understand the “smallest reduction possible” is an
arbitrary and we assure you it will be interpreted differently by many
physicians and pharmacists.
With most
medications being different there is no way for us to describe each one and your
physician and pharmacist should be involved in this process regardless.
Some
medications can be compounded in to exact and precise reductions. Compounding is
when the pharmacist takes the medication and grinds it to a powdered form and
then encapsulates to a new dosage. This is the ideal way to reduce all
medications but some cannot be compounded and the cost can also be out of reach
for some individuals.
With your
pharmacist, see if purchasing a pill slicer will work for you.
You can also
purchase a relatively low cost digital scale that will measure mg amounts.
Talk with your
pharmacist about putting the medication in a solution for measuring reductions.
Some medications dissolve well and can be crushed and put in water and then you
pour out of a flask the reduction amount.
An experienced
pharmacist will be of great value to you during this process.
Time Release
or Extended Release Medication
When it comes
to reducing medication that is time release, the process needs to be a little
different with the program. Sometimes time release medications are also offered
in a non-time release form and it is best to cross-over to the non-time release
form of the drug. Your physician and pharmacist are the ones to guide you
through how to take the medication. Cross over to the non-time release form of
the medication if that is at all possible. The cross-over would be the first
reduction.
How to
Adjust Supplements During the Taper
Keeping good
notes with your Daily Journal during the pre-taper is worth its weight in gold
during the tapering of the medication.
A rule of
thumb: The supplement that got rid of a side effect or symptom during the
pre-taper is the supplement to increase during the taper if that symptom returns
while tapering off the drug. An example of this can be made with the JNK
supplement.
If all of your
anxiety vanished during the pre-taper after starting the JNK and anxiety creeps
back when you start reducing the medication, increase the JNK to another packet
at noon. When the anxiety vanishes again, reduce the JNK back to 1 packet in the
morning again.
You can
increase any of the supplements to eliminate the side effects again. After the
side effect diminishes reduce the supplement back down again to the amount you
were taking.
If you
experience withdrawal side effects every time you reduce the medication increase
the supplements the day before you reduce the drug, wait 4 days to ensure there
is no withdrawal and then reduce the supplements back down again.
If you are
reducing a time-release medication you should ALWAYS increase the supplements
the day before you reduce the drug. Your reduction amount will be higher than
desirable and increasing the supplements will be required to eliminate the
withdrawal.
If the
information above is not making a smooth and relative withdrawal free program
for you, it is time to reduce the drug at a slower pace.
We do not
advise switching from one drug to another drug because the new one has a longer
half-life. This does not work and will cause more problems and symptoms than you
currently are experiencing. The general cross-over people try is to Valium from
another drug. DO NOT DO THIS.
Reread and
keep in mind the chapter, Nutritionals Used in The Road Back Program for tips
and how to increase the supplements.
Reducing the
medication is actually the easy part of the program now.
Note:
If you have had difficulty reducing the medication in the past, compounding the
drug for a 2% reduction is advised. Reduce every 14-days, have success and then
try reducing by 5% every 14-days.
If this is
your first attempt tapering the medication, start with a 5% reduction, reduce
again in 14-days and repeat at the 5% reduction two additional times. If
successful, you can try a further increase of reduction, but that is not
advised. If withdrawal side effects begin, go back to the last dosage you were
doing fine with and for the next reduction, reduce at a more gradual rate.
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