Dr Steve
07-06-2008, 07:23 PM
Love your contribution to 202 and how professionally you can make a prostate exam on a homeless guy sound. I was wondering what you thought of Lexapro. My Dr prescribed it because I have a lot going on between work and studying for my graduate school entrance exam that I just can't seem to concentrate and retain anything at all and the stress gets to me and I can't seem to be able to finish anything that I start. I am concerned about the weight gain and other side effects of Lexapro such as the insomnia at night and the run down feeling I will get at least 3 days out of the week. I am just not sure that it's right type of medication for me, especially the weight gain part, I am overweight right now and I don't want to gain any more weight, on top of the stress I also have polycystic ovary syndrome and since there isn't a cure or treatment for that I don't want to do anything to contribute to weight gain becuase it is very difficult for me to lose weight. Any ideas on the PCOS would be beneficial, I have already seen an endo and nothing helpful came out of that.
thanks for the kind words!
Lexapro is an antidepressant and it's good for anxiety, depression, and OCD. it's a pretty "clean" drug as far as those go. My main question would be...is it actually helping the problem that your doctor started it for? You said " just can't seem to concentrate and retain anything at all and the stress gets to me and I can't seem to be able to finish anything that I start. " ...is that any better? If so, it may be worth continuing with the Lexapro to see if the side effects go away. If not after an adequate trial (2-4 weeks at least), then it's worth a trip back to your doctor to say "this stuff isn't working for me".
Regarding the PCOS, it most certainly is treatable, in the sense that certain medications and dietary adjustments can improve the situation, especially with regard to fertility and male-hormone effects. What did they try you on? Someone very close to me has PCOS and she did great on Metformin (a drug usually used in diabetics).
Let me know if this helps at all.
your friend,
Steve
thanks for the kind words!
Lexapro is an antidepressant and it's good for anxiety, depression, and OCD. it's a pretty "clean" drug as far as those go. My main question would be...is it actually helping the problem that your doctor started it for? You said " just can't seem to concentrate and retain anything at all and the stress gets to me and I can't seem to be able to finish anything that I start. " ...is that any better? If so, it may be worth continuing with the Lexapro to see if the side effects go away. If not after an adequate trial (2-4 weeks at least), then it's worth a trip back to your doctor to say "this stuff isn't working for me".
Regarding the PCOS, it most certainly is treatable, in the sense that certain medications and dietary adjustments can improve the situation, especially with regard to fertility and male-hormone effects. What did they try you on? Someone very close to me has PCOS and she did great on Metformin (a drug usually used in diabetics).
Let me know if this helps at all.
your friend,
Steve