Do you use prescription drugs for your ASD?
MakaylaTheAspie
Veteran
Joined: 21 Jun 2011
Age: 27
Gender: Non-binary
Posts: 14,565
Location: O'er the land of the so-called free and the home of the self-proclaimed brave. (Oregon)
Yes.
Prozac, 40mg.
Concerta, 18mg.
Risperidone, .5mg
The Prozac is for depression and anxiety, the Concerta is for my attention issues, and the Risperidone for irritability and self-injury.
_________________
"If we fail to anticipate the unforeseen or expect the unexpected in a universe of infinite possibilities, we may find ourselves at the mercy of anyone or anything that cannot be programmed, categorized or easily referenced."
-XFG (no longer a moderator)
Mmuffinn
Pileated woodpecker
Joined: 4 Oct 2011
Age: 39
Gender: Female
Posts: 181
Location: Ontario, Canada
Prozac 60mg
Seroquel 100mg
Concerta 36mg
Clonazepam 0.5mg
Metoprolol 50mg
_________________
Diagnosed with aspergers January 17, 2012. Diagnosed with depression in 1998. I just started a blog: http://depressiveaspiegirl.blogspot.com
This! I've never used any type of meds for my ASDs, nor for any co-morbid, unless you count probiotics.
_________________
BOLTZ 17/3 2012 - 12/11 2020
Beautiful, sweet, gentle, playful, loyal
simply the best and one of a kind
love you and miss you, dear boy
Stop the wolf kills! https://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeact ... 3091429765
I've been on it for years too and I'm on half the dose you are and it makes me feel tired and unmotivated a lot of the time
The only benefit is I don't get suicidally depressed on it and I dont' seem to ruminate on negative things so much
A lot of this is because it makes my mind go blank a lot though I think! My memory is terrible!
I have taken Seroquel in the past too and that made me very tired as well - more tired than the Efexor
I seem to be very sensitive to medication
I can come off Effexor - it's an unpleasant withdrawal process but I can tolerate it and it's easier if on a lower dose
I just end up depressed again if I'm off it too long though
I would describe myself as clinically depressed at periods, I would at the moment. However, I don't think it's the Effexor doing that for me, I think it's that it doesn't do it's job properly or at all in my case. I too am pretty sensitive to medications, I do get side effects from all the ones I take, it's more that the side effects are livable in relation to the relief the drugs give me. Seroquel is incredibly sedating but I take it to get me to sleep so it does the desired job. I canot take it during the day at all and I have to take the ones that aren't the XL modified release versions. That led to some incredibly embarrasing incidents the day after when I was in IP, I spent pretty much the whole week falling asleep, I won't be trying that again. The pregabalin makes me very internal but I don't mind that, infact it's ofen preferable.
Do you think it's the meds or how you might actually be, do you think you could be too depressed and the medication simply isn't helping? God, I hope that doesn't offend you, that really isn't my intention, I am just not able to think of a less clumsy way to put it today, stupid brain day. x
_________________
'For your own good' is a persuasive argument that will eventually make a man agree to his own destruction- Janet Frame
goldfish21
Veteran
Joined: 17 Feb 2013
Age: 41
Gender: Male
Posts: 22,612
Location: Vancouver, BC, Canada
I've been on it for years too and I'm on half the dose you are and it makes me feel tired and unmotivated a lot of the time
The only benefit is I don't get suicidally depressed on it and I dont' seem to ruminate on negative things so much
A lot of this is because it makes my mind go blank a lot though I think! My memory is terrible!
I have taken Seroquel in the past too and that made me very tired as well - more tired than the Efexor
I seem to be very sensitive to medication
I can come off Effexor - it's an unpleasant withdrawal process but I can tolerate it and it's easier if on a lower dose
I just end up depressed again if I'm off it too long though
I would describe myself as clinically depressed at periods, I would at the moment. However, I don't think it's the Effexor doing that for me, I think it's that it doesn't do it's job properly or at all in my case. I too am pretty sensitive to medications, I do get side effects from all the ones I take, it's more that the side effects are livable in relation to the relief the drugs give me. Seroquel is incredibly sedating but I take it to get me to sleep so it does the desired job. I canot take it during the day at all and I have to take the ones that aren't the XL modified release versions. That led to some incredibly embarrasing incidents the day after when I was in IP, I spent pretty much the whole week falling asleep, I won't be trying that again. The pregabalin makes me very internal but I don't mind that, infact it's ofen preferable.
Do you think it's the meds or how you might actually be, do you think you could be too depressed and the medication simply isn't helping? God, I hope that doesn't offend you, that really isn't my intention, I am just not able to think of a less clumsy way to put it today, stupid brain day. x
I don't know
If I take less I can feel better for a short while but then start to feel worse
So I switched to a higher dose but that's just making me feel more tired and probably more depressed as I don't feel like doing anything
I think I will ask my Dr if I can try something else as I need something but something that doesn't stop me wanting to do anything.
I don't feel that depressed but i have no motivation to do anything and if I lie in bed awake I will ruminate negatively
All I feel like doing is sleeping or reading in bed, going online or watching TV and if I could I'd be eating chocolate etc too
With the cold weather I just feel like I'm hibernating and everything is too much trouble
When I get really depressed I don't feel like eating so I haven't reached that stage yet
I just never seem to have much of the 'feel-good' chemicals in my brain
All I feel like doing is sleeping or reading in bed, going online or watching TV and if I could I'd be eating chocolate etc too
With the cold weather I just feel like I'm hibernating and everything is too much trouble
Maybe you have SAD?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seasonal_a ... e_disorder
_________________
BOLTZ 17/3 2012 - 12/11 2020
Beautiful, sweet, gentle, playful, loyal
simply the best and one of a kind
love you and miss you, dear boy
Stop the wolf kills! https://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeact ... 3091429765
All I feel like doing is sleeping or reading in bed, going online or watching TV and if I could I'd be eating chocolate etc too
With the cold weather I just feel like I'm hibernating and everything is too much trouble
Maybe you have SAD?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seasonal_a ... e_disorder
I thought bad depression was more serious than SAD
I do have a lightbox so will try using that
Generally though I can feel like this any time in the year if my mood drops low enough
Mmuffinn
Pileated woodpecker
Joined: 4 Oct 2011
Age: 39
Gender: Female
Posts: 181
Location: Ontario, Canada
Seroquel 100mg
Concerta 36mg
Clonazepam 0.5mg
Metoprolol 50mg
Is the Metoprolol (a beta-blocker) for anxiety? And if so, is it a diagnosed anxiety disorder, like social anxiety or GAD?
It is for GAD and panic disorder and also helps with my migraines.
_________________
Diagnosed with aspergers January 17, 2012. Diagnosed with depression in 1998. I just started a blog: http://depressiveaspiegirl.blogspot.com
All I feel like doing is sleeping or reading in bed, going online or watching TV and if I could I'd be eating chocolate etc too
With the cold weather I just feel like I'm hibernating and everything is too much trouble
Maybe you have SAD?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seasonal_a ... e_disorder
I thought bad depression was more serious than SAD
I do have a lightbox so will try using that
Generally though I can feel like this any time in the year if my mood drops low enough
Oh. I thought with that last sentence in my quote "With the cold weather I just feel like I'm hibernating and everything is too much trouble" that it might be the season that got to you since a lot of people are affected by winter. It was just a thought.
_________________
BOLTZ 17/3 2012 - 12/11 2020
Beautiful, sweet, gentle, playful, loyal
simply the best and one of a kind
love you and miss you, dear boy
Stop the wolf kills! https://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeact ... 3091429765
All I feel like doing is sleeping or reading in bed, going online or watching TV and if I could I'd be eating chocolate etc too
With the cold weather I just feel like I'm hibernating and everything is too much trouble
Maybe you have SAD?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seasonal_a ... e_disorder
I thought bad depression was more serious than SAD
I do have a lightbox so will try using that
Generally though I can feel like this any time in the year if my mood drops low enough
Oh. I thought with that last sentence in my quote "With the cold weather I just feel like I'm hibernating and everything is too much trouble" that it might be the season that got to you since a lot of people are affected by winter. It was just a thought.
The cold weather is basically giving me an excuse not to make any effort as in 'It's far too cold outside, better to stay indoors'
In the past my GP noted that my depressions seemed to come on around March, like a cyclical thing, so perhaps it is season related. I do tend to go downhill around March, which is when my birthday is as well lol. Long before I ever got started on anti-depressants, there's a photo of me on my 21st Birthday sitting with my Mother and brother, holding a cake and trying to force a smile. I've never been a happy person to be quite honest. my role in life seems to be to find people information and listen to their troubles as I certainly don't entertain or cheer them up!
Oh no, prescribed medication should only be considered mandatory to ASD individuals who are afflicted with a concurrent psychiatric or medical disorder, that is construed and professionally diagnosed by a licensed physician (clinical psychologist, psychiatrist, doctors etc.). They are not neurologically defective and cannot be cured by generic drugs or controversial treatments; however, early intensive behavioral interventions might be effective into stimulating cognitive and linguistic development in early diagnosed children with an ASD, irrespective of severity. It may help some to move along up towards the high functioning end of the spectrum later in life.
As a person who has gladly never been on medication, I find it somewhat perturbing on the accountability of adverse effects that prescribed medication like anti-psychotics or psycho-tropics may have upon high-functioning individuals with ASD, such as temporal deterioration of invaluable cognitive abilities, weight gain, attentiveness, hindrance of visual thinking strategies, and minor risk of induced epileptic seizures.
Hypothetically speaking, if it wasn’t for bullying, child abuse, inadequate nurturing, domestic violence, and environmental intolerance, people with ASD’s wouldn’t be unjustly predisposed or susceptible to developing any form of psychopathological illness. Only self-acceptance and acknowledgment of ASD's individuals to thrive and contribute to society can preclude these environmental denominators. If this happened to be the case in reality, autism as a neurological “difference” probably wouldn’t have generated a multi-billion dollar industry for the “evil” pharmaceutical companies and the health insurers, despite the fact that fairly common underlying conditions like Tourette syndrome, Epilepsy, ADHD, Allergies, sensory processing disorder, chromosomal abnormalities, Fragile X syndrome, and Tuberous sclerosis, which may genetically correlate with ASD, are ideal for treating with non-psychiatric orientated medication. I’m entirely convinced that the American Psychiatric Association (APA) shares a much more formal alliance with the pharmaceutical industry, and it has been long known conceived by the public that the APA is partially funded and financially dependent on the drugs companies themselves.
I did have trouble integrating within society as a child, but I overcame my early behavioral problems and I am intellectually, conscientiously, and physically well brought up neurologically and psychologically, and there is no need for my exceptional mind to be demonized by unnecessary medication, and I’m certainly not the first or the last.
_________________
Diagnosed with "Classical" Asperger's syndrome in 1998 (Clinical psychologist).
Alexithymia Questionnaire Score: 158/185
Ritvo Autism Asperger Diagnostic Scale-Revised (RAADS-R): 231/240
Aspie score: 186 out of 200
Neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 12 out of 200
AQ: 48/50 EQ: 9/80
Last edited by TheRedPedant93 on 29 Apr 2013, 5:58 am, edited 4 times in total.