How Antidepressants Ruined Luke’s Life

MontaguFamily

 

MappertonLuke Montagu, aka Viscount Hinchingbrooke, will one day become the Earl of Sandwich. He, his wife Julie and their four children (top) live in their ancestral home (left) at Mapperton in Dorset, named by Country Life as the finest manor house in England.

Those who don’t know Luke may think at this point that he must have an idyllic life. It may well have been so, if it weren’t for the suffering caused by crippling withdrawal symptoms from medication that he should never have been prescribed in the first place.

JuliaLlewellynSmith2

How antidepressants ruined my life” is the headline above an article written by Julia Llewellyn Smith (right), which appeared in yesterday’s edition of the Times Magazine. The article describes in detail the terrible ordeal that Luke has endured for more than half his life.

When he was first prescribed antidepressants at the age of 19, Luke was not depressed and had never been diagnosed with depression. He was a student at Columbia University in New York City, and had recently undergone a general anaesthetic for a sinus operation that left him with headaches and feeling “not myself”. Without carrying out any tests, a British GP announced that he had a “chemical imbalance of the limbic system” and prescribed Prozac (Fluoxetine). Luke, “impressionable and in awe of doctors”, swallowed the tablets unquestioningly.

However, he felt no better and, over the course of the next five years, saw various doctors who switched him to different drugs no less than nine times. Luke was given a variety of different diagnoses: “One doctor said it was anxiety, another suggested conversion disorder. None of them seemed to accept what I knew – and would point out quite heatedly – which was this was all a consequence of the sinus operation and the chopping and changing of the various drugs.”

On a couple of occasions, Luke had tried to quit, but always felt so bad that he quickly resumed the drugs. He said, “I thought it was because I needed the medication; now I understand that it was because I was going into withdrawal each time I tried to come off the drugs. But the doctors never spotted that.

When I restarted the drugs, I would feel better, at least initially. At the time, I didn’t realise that I was just like a junkie who needed a fix – my body and brain had become dependent on these chemicals … eventually, I decided just to stay on the drugs and only went to the doctor for repeat prescriptions; I kept taking what was prescribed and managed to keep functioning even though I didn’t feel 100 per cent.”

At the end of 2008, however, Luke, by then 38, resolved that enough was enough. He was on a new antidepressant, Effexor (Venlafaxine), that made him feel wired. To counteract this, he had been prescribed Clonazepam, a benzodiazepine, but they made him forgetful. He decided to start the new year clean.

MarkCollins1At the time, he was seeing Dr Mark Collins (left), a psychiatrist at the Priory Hospital in South West London.

On Dr Collins’s advice, Luke checked himself in to the Priory, where his Clonazepam was withdrawn, although he stayed on Effexor. “I thought I wouldn’t sleep for two or three nights, then I’d be so tired I’d crash out. Instead, it felt like my brain was torn into pieces.”

As Luke was to learn later, Dr Collins had made a dreadful mistake: long-term users of “benzos” need to taper off over months, or even years. Over the next few days, Luke experienced a “tidal wave of horrific symptoms”.

Initially, he couldn’t walk. “I couldn’t co-ordinate my body or judge distances, I didn’t know how far things were away from me. There was this incredibly loud ringing in my ears. I couldn’t see – everything was blurry and I was having flashback after flashback of distant memories, things dredged up from years gone by. I was crying for no reason, sobbing hysterically.

“It was like the detox hell I’d seen in films like Trainspotting. I thought, I’m just going to have to ride this out and it will get better in the same way heroin withdrawal eventually loses its grip. But I had no idea that withdrawal from long-term use of sleeping pills can take months and sometimes years.”

A few days later, Luke discharged himself. “I was in a state of absolute terror. I just wanted to get out of the hospital because I knew that something dreadful had been done to me. Somehow I made it home, but there I realised everything was different. I’d left the house as one person, but returned as another. In a quite literal way, I had lost my mind.”

Since then, Luke has endured seven years of what can only be described as hell. Back home, he found himself unable to focus. “I could barely put a sentence together, remember who I was or what I was supposed to do. It was as if parts of my brain had been erased. For the first couple of years, I had to try to pretend to be the person that I was, while knowing inside that that person had gone.”

His business needed him, but he couldn’t function, and he realised that he could no longer work. For the next three years, Luke was stuck at home in agonising physical and mental pain. Horrified by the risk of additional drug harm, he decided to wean himself very slowly from the Effexor, leaving him with severe burning nerve pains, like pins and needles, all over his body, that continue to this day.

CEPAs he slowly began to feel better, Luke poured his energies into fighting back. Knowing his experiences would be dismissed as anecdotal, he joined with various credible medics and co-founded CEP, the Council for Evidence-based Psychiatry, which gathers evidence of the harm caused by psychiatric drugs in order to lobby politicians and medical bodies. To give others hope, he uploaded short films of recovery stories to the website. They have become a popular resource.

It’s pretty shocking that there are virtually no NHS resources to help people get though the hell of withdrawal, particularly since the problem has largely been caused by NHS treatment,” said Luke. “It’s getting worse – more than 57 million prescriptions for antidepressants were issued in England last year. That’s 7 per cent more than 2013 and 500 per cent more than 1992.”

Luke continued: “Psychiatry is a corrupt and dishonest business: it treats so-called illnesses that don’t exist with drugs that don’t cure and can cause great harm. And once you have been harmed, it then diagnoses further illness and prescribes yet more drugs.

I know they can help some people in the short term, but they’re just psychoactive like alcohol or cocaine – they can make you feel better initially, but over the long term they cause dependence and destroy your physical and mental health.”

Luke eventually sued Dr Collins for the rapid withdrawal and long-term mis-prescribing of Clonazepam, which led to a £1.35m ($2.1m) out of court settlement.

The article concludes with the information that a CEP conference, More Harm Than Good: Confronting the Psychiatric Medication Epidemic takes place in London on September 18th. Although Luke (below) and I have exchanged occasional emails since the launch of the CEP last year, I have not yet had the pleasure of meeting him. AntiDepAware will be repesented at the conference.

LukeMontagu

Further Reading:

“A Not-so-Charmed Life” by Redmond O’Hanlon

Related Articles:

Antidepressants and the Politics of Health

The Council for Evidence-based Psychiatry

More Harm than Good

Hope in Copenhagen

Her Lost Year

How Antidepressants Ruined Luke’s Life

The Stolen Year: Katinka’s Story

Out of the Hole: Khanada’s story

Mental Health Disability: the Antidepressant Connection

The Lawyer and the Nightingale

Treated at the Priory

A Sunday Afternoon in Summer

 

6 Replies to “How Antidepressants Ruined Luke’s Life”

  1. I too have a story to tell. Of horrors past and still current.
    So scaringly similar. Nearly two decades taken from a life.

  2. This story rings so true. 4 years off Seroxat and in Hell everyday. I was put on it for panic attacks and left on it for 13 years. I’m not the same person. I pray literally every night I’ll get better. I never had the symptoms I have now. I’m convinced it’s permanent brain and nervous system damage.

  3. My husband was taken off an antidepressant very quickly some 4 years ago. Within a month or so, severe withdrawal symptoms set in and he has gone through hell. Our doctor washed his hands of him after prescribing 4 different antidepressants in 6 months, one after the other. We paid to see a physchologist and saw him for almost a year. By now he was experiencing anxiety which he still has to this day.
    He has missed so much, can’t face going out socially and has frightening thoughts in his head. It has totally ruined our lives. He is 74 and does not have a lot of time on his side. We were not made aware of the fact that he should have only been on the antidepressants for a short time.

  4. Me too. I am still suffering the hell of Lorazepam withdrawal, and my doctor offered me an SSRI to come off them. I said no, as eventually I would have to come off those because who knows what damage they do, fuelled by pharmaceutical companies. I feel they just leave one in limbo with no help and support and my poor husband of 80 is having to be put through this also. I am 70. I feel we are all due compensation for major injustice. Can anyone help me with this? I feel life is not worth living.

  5. I have been prescribed Citalopram on three separate occasions over many years and on each occasion I was climbing the walls with crippling anxiety within a few days of taking them and was told to keep taking them.
    I was fortunate (or so I thought) that my wife had private medical insurance through her employment and so on the two latter occasions I was admitted to the Priory first in Preston and a few years later in Altrincham.
    I have never met such a bunch of quacks simply following the drug company’s instructions and hoping for the best.
    One psychiatrist prescribed a particular drug that was very hard to get hold of and was an anti-sickness drug that was supposed to alleviate the feelings of dread and fear in my stomach.
    I will give the psychiatrists their due in that they quickly realised that SSRIs were definitely not suitable for me and so put me on Dosulepin, an older tricyclic drug that suited me much better.
    When I later ended up in the Priory at Altrincham I was was put on a different drug (Clomipramine) and the psychiatrists there completely rubbished the previous psychiatrist for prescribing the anti-sickness drug.
    On Clomipramine I felt a little better, but the side effects of a very dry mouth caused mouth ulcers but I persevered.
    When out with my wife one day I suddenly felt like I was standing on a vibrating piece of machinery. I was so concerned I went to A&E at our local hospital.
    After several hours and several tests and no ideas as to what might be causing this sensation, one of the doctors googled the symptoms and they came to the conclusion that it was a symptom of severe anxiety though at the time I did not feel particularly anxious at all.
    The Clomipramine was stopped and I was put back on Dosulepin which I am still on to this day. The last visit to the Priory was in 2016 so have been on Dosulepin for quite a few years now. Every time I try to reduce the dose to ween myself of these I feel so depressed I have to go back on them.
    I am constantly overly emotional and can cry at the slightest thing either when happy at something or sad.
    I have resigned myself that this is my life for the foreseeable future rather than put myself in the hands of the so-called experts and get prescribed yet another drug that they can’t guarantee won’t make me worse.
    Whilst in the Priory the first time, I met a couple of people who had also been on Citalopram and had had horrendous effects on them. One person was almost like a zombie until they were taken off this horrible drug.
    I hope my story helps the powers that be make some much needed changes to the mental health system.
    My wife has since retired so I no longer have any private medical insurance. I am dreading where I may end up if I go down hill in the future. The NHS mental health system is in crisis so doubt I would even get to see anyone for months being that I am now 63.

  6. Such sad and frightening accounts from people like me being prescribed antidepressants, benzodiazepines and sleeping meds.
    I’m 62 now and was prescribed Valium at age 12 for panic attacks (disorder) and Anorexia. I took a lot and have no idea how I made it through school/college. It was hell. During my mid twenties to forties I was given so many of these meds, stopped/started.
    I suffered horrendous side affects and withdrawals every time. The only time I didn’t take anything was when I was expecting my daughter. It was a terrible time because I was told to stop cold turkey.
    I suffered post natal depression and panic attacks daily so I was prescribed lots of different meds again. I was told to stop taking all these meds several times but only given a week or so to taper. Hallucinations, visual, audible plus a living nightmare ensued. Subsequently I ended up taking them.
    I tried so hard to taper Clonazepam for 10 months using jewellers’ scales and scraping small amounts every so often. Again it was awful, by month 10 I’m sure I had a seizure. I was alone and terrified, in desperation I sadly took more Clonazepam and things calmed down over 2 days. I’ve also tried several times to taper antidepressants but failed.
    I decided to start tapering Clonazepam again last week but despite doing so by scraping tiny amount off once by day 3 I thought I was dying. I am too scared to ask GP for help because they are so quick to take away your medications saying it can be done too soon. I would dearly love to be free of these evil pills.
    I know they have adversely affected every aspect of my life but the physical and mental harm is tangible to me.
    I try to look after myself through diet, but I developed Myalgic Encephalomyelitis in my 20’s and it’s pretty severe so I’m disabled.
    I wonder if my symptoms are solely due to the medications or the ME/CFS. I am reluctant to know for sure because that would mean my life could have been very different. I wasn’t able to realise my hopes both in my private life or in my working life.
    Nearly 50 years have passed, yet I would dearly love to know who I am without these medications, as frightening as that may be. My heart goes out to anyone going through this.
    Reading Luke Montague’s experience, especially his description of how he was affected really resonated and I feel very angry. I don’t know how to even go about beginning a taper that is sensible and possible after all these decades of a life taken from me.

Leave a Reply to Karl Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.