Brian0787 wrote:
colliegrace wrote:
I recently was in the ER due to an anxiety attack pushing me into dangerous levels of blood pressure. They had to give me Ativan to bring my heart rate down.
My anxiety was extreme from October to mid January. I'm back on meds prescribed for anxiety. Mine is an antipsychotic, anxiety is an off-label use.
Sometimes you just gotta. Same as I need meds and insulin for diabetes.
Thank you for sharing colliegrace
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
Being in the ER with anxiety is nerve wracking. A month ago I had an ambulance take me to the ER as I thought I was having a heart attack but was just a severe panic attack. Ativan is very helpful in reducing blood pressure. I'm glad your meds are working for you! I am hoping a new Psychiatrist I am seeing tomorrow will be able to help me find the right med. It's definitely like managing diabetes which I know is very very difficult to manage.
It's not much fun, idn't it. I walked out of there with 6 new prescriptions.
Mental health science is still in its early stages, so meds are veryyy much trial and error, even moreso than stuff like diabetes or hypertension meds.
And I do think they sometimes push meds when they're not necessarily needed, but for severe cases like mine or yours, they are at least needed for a time. Anxiety and depression have so many different and varied causes and triggers that are still not well known or understood.
For some with depression, it's a chemical imbalance and the right meds that correct that imbalance improves their quality of life, and it may be necessary lifelong.
For someone else with depression, it may just be circumstantial and something that will eventually correct itself. In that case, meds may still help for a time, even if not lifelong.
Imo of course.
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He/him or they/them pronouns, please.
ASD level 1 & ADHD-C (professional dx), dyscalcula (self dx), very severe RSD.
Currently in early stages of recovering from autistic burnout.
RAADs: 104 | ASQ: 30 | CAT-Q: 139 | Aspie Quiz: 116/200 (84% probability of being atypical)