Are there older people with ADHD still taking stimulants?
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I never hear about older people who take stimulants
I stopped, due to the very scary aide effects of taking almost a gram evey 8 hours...... I couldn't sleep, had heart palpitations, breathing was becoming a "I have to remember to do it constantly" thing......
shit was not fun. now I just do things via coping strategies. I won't share mine because they'd work explicitly for me, and I don't want to get bashed for "doing it wrong".
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I stopped, due to the very scary aide effects of taking almost a gram evey 8 hours...... I couldn't sleep, had heart palpitations, breathing was becoming a "I have to remember to do it constantly" thing......
shit was not fun. now I just do things via coping strategies. I won't share mine because they'd work explicitly for me, and I don't want to get bashed for "doing it wrong".
A gram??? As in 1000mg?? With respect, what the hell were you taking
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I never hear about older people who take stimulants
Depends how old you mean. I've heard of many older (50+) adults getting diagnosed and medicated (usually lower dosages) after realizing they've been dealing with it their whole life.
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A gram??? As in 1000mg?? With respect, what the hell were you taking
adderall. and yes, a gram.
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adderall. and yes, a gram.
Please listen to the huberman podcast on ADHD and medicating it. You will discover that you take an exceptionally high dose which is not likely to be necessary. Please consult another doctor.
They should be ramping it up from a very low dose slowly and keep it at the lowest working dose four exactly the reasons you have set out.
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Please listen to the huberman podcast on ADHD and medicating it. You will discover that you take an exceptionally high dose which is not likely to be necessary. Please consult another doctor.
They should be ramping it up from a very low dose slowly and keep it at the lowest working dose four exactly the reasons you have set out.
this was years and years ago, when docs ramped it up in the name of medical profits,..... and I never really ended up needing then after a few years of "getting gud"
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I never hear about older people who take stimulants
Middle aged ADHDer here
I rawdogged ADHD my entire life until I was diagnosed within the past year. I’ve been on atomoxetine, but its effectiveness for me isn’t worth a bucket of warm piss. I’m going to see my pysch in a little while and ask what my other treatment options are. So I may well become one of those using stimulant treatments.
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this was years and years ago, when docs ramped it up in the name of medical profits,..... and I never really ended up needing then after a few years of "getting gud"
wrote on last edited by [email protected]Ya but thats honestly insane. Isnt the highest dose of Adderall like 50 or 60 mg?
Why did you go along with that? They literally forced you to up-titrate to that level, nothing less was sufficient, like, ever?
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Depends how old you mean. I've heard of many older (50+) adults getting diagnosed and medicated (usually lower dosages) after realizing they've been dealing with it their whole life.
Thats actually valid aha, I guess I was thinking more in terms of chronic long -term
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adderall. and yes, a gram.
The highest dosage of adderal that I can find is 60mg, and that's typically only for narcolepsy patients.
To be taking "a gram every 8 hours", you'd need to be taking ~16 pills every 8 hours, or close to 50 pills a day. You're approaching OD risk at that point.
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Middle aged ADHDer here
I rawdogged ADHD my entire life until I was diagnosed within the past year. I’ve been on atomoxetine, but its effectiveness for me isn’t worth a bucket of warm piss. I’m going to see my pysch in a little while and ask what my other treatment options are. So I may well become one of those using stimulant treatments.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]It really sucks that so many people were missed like that. Same as autism
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Thats actually valid aha, I guess I was thinking more in terms of chronic long -term
I'd rather not share my age, but I can attest to having used medication therapy successfully for about 15 years.
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I'd rather not share my age, but I can attest to having used medication therapy successfully for about 15 years.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]You still use it? Im legit curious if it becomes medically and physiologicaly inadvisable at some point. Also, when people have a pension and other supports, I'm curious if ADHD stuff is much easier to cope with. I feel like it cant be any worse
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I never hear about older people who take stimulants
I’m 40 and start my day off with a white monster. It calms my mind and lets me think.
Probably not the best for my heart, but who among us is the picture of discipline?
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I’m 40 and start my day off with a white monster. It calms my mind and lets me think.
Probably not the best for my heart, but who among us is the picture of discipline?
Wats a white monster? Vyvanse or generic adderall?
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You still use it? Im legit curious if it becomes medically and physiologicaly inadvisable at some point. Also, when people have a pension and other supports, I'm curious if ADHD stuff is much easier to cope with. I feel like it cant be any worse
It varies highly person to person. I've been able to reduce my dosage considerably over time, but I still require it.
I occasionally take a weekend break from my medication, so I know how I function without it. When unmedicated, there are certain tasks that I can't do because they are more difficult, and there are certain tasks that I don't do because I become more of a risk - for example, driving and cooking.
Driving because I am prone to space out behind the wheel. Cooking because I'm liable to leave the stove or oven on and forget about it until I smell fire.
So, if I someday have enough money to hire a private driver and personal chef, I could ditch the meds.
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Wats a white monster? Vyvanse or generic adderall?
They mean a Monster Energy drink, the white flavor, but the idea of calling your medication "the white monster" is hilarious to me
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Middle aged ADHDer here
I rawdogged ADHD my entire life until I was diagnosed within the past year. I’ve been on atomoxetine, but its effectiveness for me isn’t worth a bucket of warm piss. I’m going to see my pysch in a little while and ask what my other treatment options are. So I may well become one of those using stimulant treatments.
Similar situation, started on Concerta which worked great, but then I built a tolerance to it. Tried lots of meds since but nothing has worked. The adderal family didn’t help much and some really messed with my pulse. The Ritalin family seems to be affected by my tolerance to Concerta. I’ve tried Wellbutrin now as my first non-stimulant but it doesn’t seem to be doing anything. I actually see the doctor this week to figure out our next steps.
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It varies highly person to person. I've been able to reduce my dosage considerably over time, but I still require it.
I occasionally take a weekend break from my medication, so I know how I function without it. When unmedicated, there are certain tasks that I can't do because they are more difficult, and there are certain tasks that I don't do because I become more of a risk - for example, driving and cooking.
Driving because I am prone to space out behind the wheel. Cooking because I'm liable to leave the stove or oven on and forget about it until I smell fire.
So, if I someday have enough money to hire a private driver and personal chef, I could ditch the meds.
I've found as a young-adult diagnosed person, it heavily affects my social functioning to the extent i dont use it on social occasions and successfully get by with the systems i setup to support myself generally and it covers times i dont use meds.
Id never not want to have access to my my meds but im genuinely curious if i will find the same need for them in my later years
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They mean a Monster Energy drink, the white flavor, but the idea of calling your medication "the white monster" is hilarious to me
You cant fault me for interpolating that