My doctor has been prescribing different meds to see which work for me. He’s reluctant to prescribe Adderall because of the (artificial FDA-created) shortage. Here’s what we’ve tried so far:

Wellbutrin: Awful, made me feel depressed and generally shitty, quit after a few days.

Strattera: Better reading comprehension, less scattered thoughts. But I was sometimes tired, confused, and unfocused after meals. Also I had a weird tingly sensation on my tongue like I was drinking soda.

Strattera plus Methylphenidate: My doctor had me take a lower dose of Strattera with 10 mg time-release Methylphenidate for a week as a transition between the two. The combo was effective in that it got me to focus, but it effectively killed my inner monologue and made it nearly impossible to have any creative thoughts. Made me feel like the aliens in Blindsight: intelligent but not sentient.

Methylphenidate: What I’m on right now. 10 mg time-release first thing in the morning, plus another 5 mg quick release in the afternoon if I’m feeling tired or unfocused (not sure if I should make that an everyday thing). Generally, it seems very similar to caffeine, but more mellow and consistent over time, and I’ve been able to cut my caffeine use in half. It seems to help with focus and energy, but not as much with procrastination (I should really be doing chores right now).

I’ve seen people on here and elsewhere say that Vyvanse helped them, should I ask my doctor if I should try that next? Or does it have the same problems with shortages that Adderall does? Would Strattera plus Vyvanse have the same effects as it did with Methylphenidate?

  • fanbois [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    1 month ago

    If the doctor is unsure, they should perform proper differential diagnostics or request a second opinion. Many doctors of course will never admit that they lack the knowledge to perform a proper ADHD diagnosis beyond the standardized questionnaire.

    If there is a strong indication for both, a psychiatrist must figure out if the ADHD is the (or one of the) major cause of the depression or the depression is it’s own thing. And then treat first what is more critical to the well being of the patient.

    Bupropion is an anti-depressant and should be prescribed as such, even though it is an amphetamine-derivative. Pharma companies have tried to qualify it as ADHD medication as well, but it simply doesn’t show efficacy beyond placebo.

    Likewise, if you give a depressed person some Adderall, you now have an highly anxious, still depressed person tweaked out on speed that’s gonna get a serious dopamine crash after 3-4 hours. The stuff is, unfortunately, highly specific and can be dangerous if admitted wrongly.

    US doctors are fairly known to… let’s say, medicate first and ask questions later, due to the broken for-profit healthcare system and pharma lobbying. I don’t blame any patient struggling to take what they can get, but maybe we shouldn’t throw useless psychoactive drugs around because we couldn’t bother to have another session of diagnosis.