The answer would be St. John's Wort.....if you are taking a SSRI(selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor) and you are no longer able to take it, you can take St. John's Wort in order to cope with your withdrawal symptoms. However, if you are actively taking an SSRI, you should not take it without consulting your physician. Studies have shown that taking 1800 mg/day of St. John's Wort is the equivalent of taking 40 mg/day paroxetine. If you are having severe enough withdrawal and you can't take anything else, you should at least try this fix.
Research done at:
http://www.qualitycounts.com/fpstjohns.html
also, you could look at:
http://www.anxietysecrets.com/nutrition-3.htm
for most people, withdrawal effects peak during week 2 after quitting completely, improving thereafter. It helps to cut down slowly - be prepared for the process to take several months, and to still have a number of symptoms, especially quitting that last little bit. brain zaps were worst for me.
Medication used to avoid withdrawal symptoms is known as a withdrawal management or detoxification medication. These drugs help manage the symptoms that can occur when someone stops using certain substances.
Antivert, a combination of antihistamines, is commonly prescribed for nausea associated with motion sickness. Since it can cause drowsiness, it may help take the edge of some of the withdrawal symptoms, but will do nothing for the cramps, chills, etc.
There are a number of ways to get withdrawal symptoms. If you are using drugs, smoke cigarettes, or take pain killers you would be at most risk of having symptoms of withdrawal when you stop taking them. You can even have withdrawal symptoms from some antidepressants and steroids if you stop taking your medication at once.
Cannabis isn't physicaly addictive, so you wont get any withdrawal symptoms.
No, Methadone should take away the withdrawal symptoms. If you are experiencing withdrawals long after it has been taken, consult your physician about adjusting your dosage.
The behavior of continuing to take a drug to avoid withdrawal symptoms is known as drug dependence. This can indicate a physical or psychological reliance on the substance to function normally.
7-8 hours
only unconsciousness will spare you the withdrawal symptoms from opiates.
We cannot give medical advice. Alcohol withdrawal is a life-threatening condition, and should be carried out in a medically-supervised setting.
yes you can take the two combined meds of doxepin and paroxetine. most ofter the 2 drugs are prescribed together for patients over the age of 60 for extreme cases of depression
be careful not to take too much!