Do you have a patient suffering from medication side effects? Do you have patients that are ready to get off their medications? A step-by-step method is now available. Insomnia, anxiety, head symptoms are the common withdrawal side effects from psychoactive drugs which stops most people from being able to completely get off their medication. Those symptoms no longer need to get in the way of a successful taper.
Deciding how fast to titrate off a medication can be a confusing decision. Which medication to taper first needs to based on drug/drug interactions associated with the CYP enzymes. Did you know, if you taper a patient off the antidepressant first, while they concurrently take a benzodiazepine, the patient will go into withdrawal on the benzodiazepine as well? Click here for the method used by physicians worldwide to taper patients off psychoactive medications.
Review by Dr. Hyla Cass M.D. Psychiatrist "Here
is an essential handbook on how to safely and more easily wean
yourself (under medical supervision) off the heavily over-prescribed
psychotropic medications. I have used the program with my patients
and it works!” Hyla Cass M.D. Author of Supplement Your Prescription

Anxiolytic
Chlordiazepoxide possesses sedative, hypnotic, anxiolytic and muscle relaxant properties. These effects appear to be mediated through facilitation of the actions of gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA) in the CNS. Chlordiazepoxide acts selectively on polysynaptic neuronal pathways and may inhibit or augment transmission, depending on the endogenous function of GABA. It does not produce ganglionic blockade or reduce affective responses at therapeutic dosage as do phenothiazine drugs and reserpine. Amine oxidase inhibition has not been demonstrated with chlordiazepoxide.
Following oral administration, the drug appears in the blood stream in 0.5 to 1 hour; peak blood levels occur in 2 to 4 hours. After i.m. administration effects of the drug appear in 15 to 30 minutes, and following i.v. administration, within 3 to 30 minutes. Following administration of radioactive chlordiazepoxide to rats, distribution of the drug or its metabolites has been shown to be fairly even throughout all body tissues. Chlordiazepoxide readily passes the placental barrier, with the concentration of the drug in the fetal circulation approaching or equaling that in maternal circulation. Chlordiazepoxide has a volume of distribution of 0.3 L/kg and is 96% protein bound. The plasma half-life of a single dose of chlordiazepoxide in healthy subjects has been reported to range from 5 to 30 hours. Pharmacologically active metabolites of chlordiazepoxide include desmethylchlordiazepoxide, demoxepam, desmethyldiazepam and oxazepam. Less than 1% is excreted in the urine unchanged.
I.V. chlordiazepoxide is indicated for the relief of acute agitation and hyperactivity (e.g., alcoholism, anxiety, hysterical and panic states, drug withdrawal symptoms) when rapid action is required or oral administration is not feasible.
Caution should be exercised and the minimal effective dosage that does not cause ataxia or over-sedation should be maintained in elderly or debilitated patients. Dosage should be increased gradually as needed and tolerated.
Occupational Hazards:
Caution patients about engaging in activities requiring mental alertness, judgment and physical coordination, such as driving an automobile or operating dangerous machinery.
Though generally not recommended, if combination therapy with other psychotropics seems indicated, carefully consider individual pharmacologic effects, particularly the use of potentiating drugs such as MAO inhibitors and phenothiazines. Patients should also be warned against the ingestion of alcohol, since tolerance may be decreased and effects enhanced.
Since it has not been found of particular value in psychotic patients, chlordiazepoxide should not be used in place of appropriate treatment.
Periodic blood counts and liver function tests are recommended if the medication is administered over a protracted period of time.
Pregnancy and Lactation:
Several studies have suggested an increased risk of congenital malformations associated with the use of diazepam, chlordiazepoxide and meprobamate during the first trimester of pregnancy. Therefore, the administration of chlordiazepoxide is rarely justified in women of childbearing potential. If the drug is prescribed for a woman of
childbearing potential, she should be warned to contact her physician regarding discontinuation of the drug if she intends to become or suspects that she is pregnant. Use in lactation should be avoided.
Employ the usual precautions in treatment of anxiety states with evidence of impending depression; suicidal tendencies may be present and protective measures necessary.
Variable effects on blood coagulation have been reported very rarely in patients receiving the drug and oral anticoagulants; a causal relationship has not been established clinically.
Parenteral chlordiazepoxide should be administered with caution to patients in whom a drop in blood pressure might lead to cardiac complications.
Physical and psychological dependence:
Physical and psychological dependence have rarely been reported in persons taking recommended doses of chlordiazepoxide. Withdrawal symptoms following abrupt discontinuation of chlordiazepoxide have been reported in patients receiving treatment over extended periods of time. These symptoms may resemble those seen with barbiturate
withdrawal. The more severe withdrawal reactions have usually been limited to those patients having taken excessive doses over extended periods. Consequently abrupt discontinuation after long-term use should generally be avoided and a gradual tapering of dose followed.
Chlordiazepoxide must be administered with caution to addiction-prone individuals or to those whose history suggests possible abuse.
In clinical use, parenteral administration has occasionally produced mild, transitory fluctuations in blood pressure. These reactions have not presented a clinical problem and have not required supportive therapy. Following injection, some patients may become drowsy or unsteady. For these reasons, ambulatory patients should be kept under observation, preferably in bed, after treatment.
Treatment:
Gastric lavage; or, in children, induce emesis and if there is no immediate response, use gastric lavage. Management consists of supportive measures, close supervision and monitoring. I.V. fluids should be administered if required and an adequate airway maintained. Cardiovascular and CNS stimulants may be used if necessary. Dialysis
appears to be of limited value. There have been occasional reports of excitation in patients following chlordiazepoxide overdosage; if this occurs, barbiturates should not be used. As with the management of intentional overdosage with any drug, it should be borne in mind that multiple agents may have been ingested.
Oral:
Adults:
Usually 10 to 40 mg daily in divided doses. In severe cases, 25 mg 3 or 4 times a day may be given.
Elderly or debilitated patients:
5 mg 2 to 4 times daily.
Preoperative apprehension:
5 to 10 mg, 3 to 4 times daily on days prior to surgery.
Obstetrics:
25 to 50 mg on admission.
Children:
Initiate therapy with 10 mg daily in divided doses, increasing if necessary to 30 mg daily in 2 to 3 divided doses.
Parenteral:
Injections should be prepared immediately before administration. Chlordiazepoxide for i.m. injection is prepared by adding 2 mL of the i.m. diluent to 100 mg of drug and agitating gently until a clear solution is obtained. (The diluent should not be used if it is opalescent or hazy.) Injection should be made into the deltoid or deep into
the upper outer quadrant of the gluteal muscle. A solution suitable for i.v. injection may be prepared by adding 5 mL of isotonic sodium chloride injection or sterile water for injection to 100 mg of chlordiazepoxide and agitating gently. Do not add to parenteral fluids or further dilute or mix with other drugs. The appropriate i.v. dose
may be injected directly into a large lumen vein slowly over a one minute period.
Alcoholism:
50 to 100 mg i.m. or i.v. initially; repeat in 2 to 4 hours if necessary.
Acute anxiety:
50 to 100 mg i.m. or i.v. initially; then 25 to 50 mg 3 or 4 times daily, if necessary.
Acute phobia or panic reaction:
50 to 100 mg i.m. or i.v. initially; repeat in 4 to 6 hours, if necessary.
Acute psychotic agitation:
50 to 100 mg i.m. or i.v. initially; repeat in 4 to 6 hours, if necessary.
Preoperative anxiety:
50 to 100 mg i.m. 1 hour prior to surgery.
Acute drug withdrawal:
100 mg i.m. or i.v. initially; then 50 to 100 mg in 4 to 6 hours, if necessary. Lower doses (usually 25 to 50 mg) should be used for elderly or debilitated patients and for children.
Maximum recommended parenteral dose:
300 mg daily in divided doses. In most cases, acute symptoms may be rapidly controlled by parenteral administration so that subsequent treatment, if necessary, may be given orally.