Do you rate that better than Mirtazapine Joe? I was undecided between asking for Mirtazapine or Venlafaxine and went for Mirtazapine because there are no recordings of it causing tinnitus, as some other ADs do.
Louise -
I take Mirtazepan, which is sold by the brand name Remeron. It definitely does not cause any tinnitus. I love Remeron, because I sleep very well with it.
Years ago I took Paxil. How I hate that drug.
Waldo wrote:
After reading your opinions on some of the following "Anti-Depressant Drugs" Makes me wonder if i should consider any of the above? If so, which one would be best for a person like me that has tinnitus due to loud music. What do you guys recommend i do?
If you have trouble sleeping Mirtazepan/Remeron will help.
*******************************RAMBLING ALERT***********************************
This is how understand the problem: If one ear has cochlear hair damage/loss, the auditory system in the brain tells that ear to "crank up the volume" for a particular frequency. It does this by sending a signal along an efferent nerve leading back to the ear. This signal is interpreted as a frequency associated with the location of cochlear hair damage. Most frequently tinnitus occurs with age due to cochlear hair loss, which is why 27% of people over 64 years old have tinnitus.
Efferent nerves respond to a neurotransmitter called GABA. Benzodiadepine drugs, like clonezapam and Xanax, work on neuron gaba receptors sites, calming these nerves. Many people who take clonezepam experience a marked decrease in their tinnitus volume. That's because the efferent nerve is calming down/lessening the synaptic current back to the ear.
Trouble is, when you take a drug like clonezapam, it is absorbed by the entire brain - not just the offending efferent nerve! This is why people complain about taking drugs like this, because they don't like feeling doped-up, sleepy, blobby. I have read many discussions on the website about "how to boost GABA", as a way to fix tinnitus. Yeah, sure it can be done with benzos taken orally; however, your entire brain will become sluggish. That's the trade off. We can be alert and awake with tinnitus, versus doped-up with less tinnitus.
How can a drug like this be administered only locally, near the ear? If tinnitus researchers could only work on this more. What is the distance from the outside of the head to the cochlear nerves?...Say, one inch? How can we deliver a drug like clonezepam over
a distance of one inch to that nerve site? By injecting? By a surgically placed tube behind the ear? Hey, why not, doctors?
I have actually experimented with this (Experiment No. 383): I dissolved some clonezapam in a teaspoon of water, then placed the water behind my ear lobe. I had hoped that it would be absorbed by ear blood vessels (like using a "patch"), and go directly to the nerves leading to my cochlea.
Results of Experiment No. 383: False. No change. (Apparently the blood vessels in the ear lobe have no connection to the nerves in the ear.)
If we could somehow get clonezepam applied directly to the offending efferent nerve - Voila'! - temporarily no more tinnitus.
******************************END OF RAMBLING ALERT**************************
(...back to anti-depressants.) I recall reading that Kevin Hogan's program expects you to take quite a bit of clonezepam/Xanax and anti-depressants for about 6 weeks. I suspect this works on two levels: 1. The clonezepam/Xanax should calm down the offending efferent nerve and 2. the anti-depressants should help a person stop focusing on the sound.
A part of the problem of tinnitus is it bothers people the most who have a tendency to dwell on things and freak-out. Perfectionists/people with OCD/people with depressive tendencies have difficulty accepting the new sound. This is how it grows and grows. So it's not just caused entirely by cochlear hair loss, but there is a psychological driving engine, which exacerbates the problem.
Since tinnitus is initiated on a primitive brain level where we have no control, it becomes especially upsetting. We try and try to control this primitive brain thing, but we can't -> this gets us frustrated -> this feeds back to the primitive brain -> we get even more frustrated. The anti-depressants can address this frustration, and get us away from reinforcing the viscous cycle....
except Dr. Jastreboff doesn't agree with that approach!
Emminent TRT specialist Dr. Jastreboff, recommends that tinnitus suffers
should not take anti-depressants, because it will interfere with TRT therapy. In Jastreboff's TRT book, he explains that the tinnitus patient must understand what is causing tinnitus, and they must think clearly in order to do so. Jastreboff argues that anti-depressants cloud a person's thinking.
So, there you have it: No conclusions?