Why is there No antidepressant with same makeup of Tramadol

tacogirl

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Joined
Jul 17, 2014
Messages
28
Hello,

I used to take Aramadol, no more, but it did improve my mood. My doctor started me on Cymbalta (Duloxetint} a month ago, felt nothing, and he just added Abilify. Why are they No antidepressant with the exact qualities?...or a combination of drugs. I've herd this many times and there just not seem to be a dupe...does anyone know why??

 
I find ODSMT, which is main active metabolite in Tramadol, to have incredible anti-depressant properties and not to lead to crippling opiate addiction as long as you maintain on low doses.  It's sold as an RC, although it has been studied for ages and is likely to receive FDA approval as a prescription drug soon, and is much more affordable than Tramadol. Your doctor won't  be able to prescribe it but it's something that has really helped me and is fairly easy to locate online.

 
lol... easier said than done
You're not wrong there 😂 but at least it's cheap. And I find that capsuling my intended daily dosages up as soon as the powder arrives helps me to stick to my planned dosing schedule vs. just having a big baggy of powder sitting around.

 
I've studied quite a bit of psychopharmacology, so I think I can shed some light on the OP's question.  Until pretty recently, antidepressant discovery was largely trial-and-error, or random luck/observation.  Only rather recently have chemists begun designing antidepressants by first figuring out what the molecule should look like, and then make and test it.  ("Rather recently" = ~20+ years, but recent compared to other medical advances).  Even now the bulk of new-drug development in this form entails things like selecting a particular optical isomer of a known drug, or modifying like one moiety not thought to be the main driver of the drugs effects.

You'll notice that new antidepressants kind of come in waves—like prozac came out, the shortly(ish) thereafter, a bunch of other SSRIs came out.  Same thing, more or less with MAOIs and tricyclics.  Developing from scratch a drug that has certain desirable clinical effects is really, really hard, and usually requires some luck.

As for combinations of drugs achieving a desired therapeutic outcome, this is really hard for researchers to study, for statistical reasons that I'll spare you unless you're interested.  When psychopharmacologists start down the polypharmacy road with a patient, there's a lot of guesswork and trial-and-error.  The good ones can often develop a successful polypharmacy course of treatment for a given patient, but it's a bumpy process that often takes years of experimentation and evaluation.

But getting back to the thing you (the OP) actually care about, ask your doctor about switching to Effexor (venlafaxine) instead of cymbalta.  If s/he chose Cymbalta because it has some efficacy against chronic pain and neuropathy, ask about accomplishing that with perhaps gabapentin instead, so that you'd be swapping out Cymbalta for Effexor and gabapentin.

As for the Abilify, I urge you to stop that (ask your doctor first, of course...), especially if you are young-ish, i.e., if you expect to live more than another 5-10 years.  My understanding, informed by three expert doctors, is that for someone taking abilify, the question is not *if* they'll develop tardive dyskinesia, but rather *when* they'll develop it.  And TD is largely irreversible, I think.  At a minimum, you should seek a second opinion.  Also, I don't know your insurance or financial situation, and I'm not sure whether it's still on-patent, but back when I briefly took it, only the brand-name was available, and the cash price was like $700/month.  I had pretty decent insurance, but I still had a $60 copay each month.  

But I digress...  Best of luck and G*d bless!

 
I've studied quite a bit of psychopharmacology, so I think I can shed some light on the OP's question.  Until pretty recently, antidepressant discovery was largely trial-and-error, or random luck/observation.  Only rather recently have chemists begun designing antidepressants by first figuring out what the molecule should look like, and then make and test it.  ("Rather recently" = ~20+ years, but recent compared to other medical advances).  Even now the bulk of new-drug development in this form entails things like selecting a particular optical isomer of a known drug, or modifying like one moiety not thought to be the main driver of the drugs effects.

You'll notice that new antidepressants kind of come in waves—like prozac came out, the shortly(ish) thereafter, a bunch of other SSRIs came out.  Same thing, more or less with MAOIs and tricyclics.  Developing from scratch a drug that has certain desirable clinical effects is really, really hard, and usually requires some luck.

As for combinations of drugs achieving a desired therapeutic outcome, this is really hard for researchers to study, for statistical reasons that I'll spare you unless you're interested.  When psychopharmacologists start down the polypharmacy road with a patient, there's a lot of guesswork and trial-and-error.  The good ones can often develop a successful polypharmacy course of treatment for a given patient, but it's a bumpy process that often takes years of experimentation and evaluation.

But getting back to the thing you (the OP) actually care about, ask your doctor about switching to Effexor (venlafaxine) instead of cymbalta.  If s/he chose Cymbalta because it has some efficacy against chronic pain and neuropathy, ask about accomplishing that with perhaps gabapentin instead, so that you'd be swapping out Cymbalta for Effexor and gabapentin.

As for the Abilify, I urge you to stop that (ask your doctor first, of course...), especially if you are young-ish, i.e., if you expect to live more than another 5-10 years.  My understanding, informed by three expert doctors, is that for someone taking abilify, the question is not *if* they'll develop tardive dyskinesia, but rather *when* they'll develop it.  And TD is largely irreversible, I think.  At a minimum, you should seek a second opinion.  Also, I don't know your insurance or financial situation, and I'm not sure whether it's still on-patent, but back when I briefly took it, only the brand-name was available, and the cash price was like $700/month.  I had pretty decent insurance, but I still had a $60 copay each month.  

But I digress...  Best of luck and G*d bless!
Effexor is hands down the worst thing I've ever been prescribed. It made my life a nightmare, and this was before I ever "self-prescribed" myself other drugs or took recreational drugs at all.

Of course, everything affects everyone differently, so who knows how it will affect you. But just sharing my experience.

 
@JeffRX  Useful input (seriously!)  Even though drugs affect different people in different ways, I think it's valuable to share our experiences so that if someone else notices the same thing, they'll know it's not just in their head.

For me, Abilify was absolute hell.  I won't even write down the lengths to which I would be willing to go to avoid taking that stuff again.  But for some people, under some circumstances, it's a miracle drug.  Go figure...

Likewise, citalopram gave me disabling vertigo (I couldn't go up or down stairs), and apparently that's a relatively rare side effect, but you never adapt to it, so citalopram is off the table for me.  But my doctor switched me to escitalopram (the "S" enantiomer of racemic citalopram), and it worked pretty well with no trace of vertigo.

To end on a lighter note (kind of), when my brother got his wisdom teeth removed, he was prescribed tylenol with codeine, and he complained to the doctors that it was doing anything at all.  The doctors thought he was just trying to score some stronger opioids, so they blew him off.  He took a lot of recreational drugs at that point, so the doctors seemed to be making a responsible call.  But flash forward several years, and my brother discovers that he has some abnormality with one of his CYP450 enzymes, and he literally can't metabolize codeine!

 
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  1. P @ psychedpsych: Have good day people, and I hate texting messages lol
  2. B @ bigblueallda: @drjimmy1964 lol I am actually surprised it is a real ID. I needed those documents because my license had been expired for over a year and I had to start all over. Nothing was in the system. It was a huge mess. I had no clue I was signing up for Real ID. They asked me for the exact same documents that I needed for a State ID Card.
  3. S @ soupson: bless your heart buddy. no sense of grammar or proper insults/jokes. you need this place in ways i can’t comprehend
  4. drjimmy1964 @ drjimmy1964: Sweet Ol' Me asked about Real ID, Stoup. Are you responsive to emails ? LMAO
  5. drjimmy1964 @ drjimmy1964: I smell some Stoup. Is Stoup's on ?
  6. drjimmy1964 @ drjimmy1964: @bigblueallda You win. I am lost. Thought you were surprised your license was a Real ID, now you say you provided those items.
  7. drjimmy1964 @ drjimmy1964: @bigblueallda I was under the impression that you'd need all of the points to get a real ID . I'd check it's validity if you're gonna fly domestic any time soon, just to make sure. Not to tell you what to do, sorry -
  8. B @ bigblueallda: @drjimmy1964 In my state to get a Real ID, I need SS card, Birth Certificate and two proofs of residency. Which I am positive I had to provide to get a new ID when it had been expired.
  9. drjimmy1964 @ drjimmy1964: @Turbo259 advertising - putting in writing for example an negative action to show they are guilty prior to taking action.
  10. B @ bigblueallda: I haven't flown in an airplane in 20 years lol. Can't recall the last government building I have been in either. According to the symbol it tells me I should have on my ID to make it a Real ID I do have one in my state
  11. Gracie5 @ Gracie5: Hey @CuCeltic99!
  12. drjimmy1964 @ drjimmy1964: @Turbo259 advertising - putting in writing for example an negative action to show they are guilty prior to taking action.
  13. drjimmy1964 @ drjimmy1964: @bigblueallda are you sure you have a Real ID ? I mean , they really want 6 points of proof and 1 for your addy and 1 for your SSN. Did you maybe get it done and forgot and flew out of the country or something ?
  14. drjimmy1964 @ drjimmy1964: @bigblueallda are you sure you have a Real ID ? I mean , they really want 6 points of proof and 1 for your addy and 1 for your SSN. Did you maybe get it done and forgot and flew out of the country or something ?
  15. S @ soupson: did anyone ask about real id or is sweet ol jimmy just rambling
  16. T @ Turbo259: @drjimmy1964 what did you mean by advertise? not gettin the verbiage, DM works if anything, just didnt understand
  17. B @ bigblueallda: {Visit your local Driver Service Bureau with the necessary documents: original birth certificate, Social Security card, and two proofs of your state's residency. } I definitely provided this when I had to get a new ID when i let mine go expired too long maybe I unknowingly got one but I think it is pretty standard here.
  18. B @ bigblueallda: Well it was a state id renewal. Before that there was a mixup and I had lost my birth certficate and social security number. After a couple of weeks and finally getting several documents in order I was able to get a state ID. It had been expired previously for a little too long and they wanted all kinds of proof. It was a mess. But nah I looked up what to look for an my state's ID to see if it is a Real Id or not and my card as the symbol it is supposed to have. I'll take a closer look though
  19. drjimmy1964 @ drjimmy1964: @bigblueallda are you sure you have a Real ID ? I mean , they really want 6 points of proof and 1 for your addy and 1 for your SSN. Did you maybe get it done and forgot and flew out of the country or something ?
  20. drjimmy1964 @ drjimmy1964: Actually it says "Not For Real ID Purposes". That is my 2022 renewal of my 2018 picture ID. I am not due till 2026 and I am sure they will make me go in since my pic would be 8 years old - they used to make you go in in my state for aging when I was younger, then went paper - then back to picture ( I think 9/11 to blame for that ) but relaxed it.
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