How to lose weight while taking Seroquel
doctorzoidburg
Posts: 1 Member
Hello there,
If you have just recently started or have been taking Seroquel you may have noticed some weight gain. This seems to be a very common side effect of the medication and can be very upsetting. I have been taking this medication for four years now and have gained over 40 pounds since I started taking it. I have read countless online forum posts about the weight gain from Seroquel and there seems to be very little information on how to not gain weight from this drug. Another point I noticed was people saying it seems like losing weight on this medication is nearly impossible. In this post I am going to go over some things to help others on their weight loss journey while taking this medication.
First, I want to say their isn't any quick and easy way to lose weight while on this drug. It is the same as anyone else looking to lose weight. Its about calories in/calories out, getting enough exercise, and getting proper nutrition.
Some information on me : I'm 5'4 SW 183-CW 172. I take 100mg seroquel at bedtime.
Now, I'll start with explaining why someone gains weight while taking this drug. Some people state it slows the metabolism down and some say it has to do with glucose levels. It is known to raise glucose levels, however, the main reason it causes people to gain weight is because when the medication kicks in they get hungry. REALLY hungry. I deal with it every night and it has drastically affected my weight. However, there are ways to deal with it. I do not recommend appetite suppressants. The best thing to do is plan for it. If you know you are going to get really hungry at night plan your meals properly throughout the day so you don't go over your calorie limit for the day. It may seem like a lot of work, but it is necessary if you want to stay within your calorie limit and actually lose weight. I cannot stress this enough. It is the main reason I have lost weight!
Now, when you are trying to lose weight while on seroquel it is important to not have foods you know you will over eat. Like chips, pop, candy, cereals, etc. Whatever that food is you won't be able to control yourself from eating when you take this medication, just don't have it around! From personal experience I know you get insanely hungry (ESPECIALLY for sweets and chocolate!! ) and will just grab whatever you crave and chances are you won't eat it because you will be too sleepy to get it! There is really no way( at least for me personally/may not be the same for others) around this hunger you get and if your like me you can't sleep unless you eat something. The best thing to reach for is fruit and vegetables. I find that one banana will really help make you feel full so you can get to sleep.
An important thing I want to note is that some people think that because they take this medication they just can't lose weight and don't try. Only 25% of people gain weight from this drug ( statistics taken from case studies ). Weight gain from seroquel is not an unknown phenomena that cannot be explained. I've read countless forum posts of people stating its unknown and uncontrollable and this is just simply not true.
I hope this advice helps, and feel free to send me any questions and I will do my best to help
Good luck! You can do it!!!
If you have just recently started or have been taking Seroquel you may have noticed some weight gain. This seems to be a very common side effect of the medication and can be very upsetting. I have been taking this medication for four years now and have gained over 40 pounds since I started taking it. I have read countless online forum posts about the weight gain from Seroquel and there seems to be very little information on how to not gain weight from this drug. Another point I noticed was people saying it seems like losing weight on this medication is nearly impossible. In this post I am going to go over some things to help others on their weight loss journey while taking this medication.
First, I want to say their isn't any quick and easy way to lose weight while on this drug. It is the same as anyone else looking to lose weight. Its about calories in/calories out, getting enough exercise, and getting proper nutrition.
Some information on me : I'm 5'4 SW 183-CW 172. I take 100mg seroquel at bedtime.
Now, I'll start with explaining why someone gains weight while taking this drug. Some people state it slows the metabolism down and some say it has to do with glucose levels. It is known to raise glucose levels, however, the main reason it causes people to gain weight is because when the medication kicks in they get hungry. REALLY hungry. I deal with it every night and it has drastically affected my weight. However, there are ways to deal with it. I do not recommend appetite suppressants. The best thing to do is plan for it. If you know you are going to get really hungry at night plan your meals properly throughout the day so you don't go over your calorie limit for the day. It may seem like a lot of work, but it is necessary if you want to stay within your calorie limit and actually lose weight. I cannot stress this enough. It is the main reason I have lost weight!
Now, when you are trying to lose weight while on seroquel it is important to not have foods you know you will over eat. Like chips, pop, candy, cereals, etc. Whatever that food is you won't be able to control yourself from eating when you take this medication, just don't have it around! From personal experience I know you get insanely hungry (ESPECIALLY for sweets and chocolate!! ) and will just grab whatever you crave and chances are you won't eat it because you will be too sleepy to get it! There is really no way( at least for me personally/may not be the same for others) around this hunger you get and if your like me you can't sleep unless you eat something. The best thing to reach for is fruit and vegetables. I find that one banana will really help make you feel full so you can get to sleep.
An important thing I want to note is that some people think that because they take this medication they just can't lose weight and don't try. Only 25% of people gain weight from this drug ( statistics taken from case studies ). Weight gain from seroquel is not an unknown phenomena that cannot be explained. I've read countless forum posts of people stating its unknown and uncontrollable and this is just simply not true.
I hope this advice helps, and feel free to send me any questions and I will do my best to help
Good luck! You can do it!!!
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Replies
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My son was on Seroquel for several years, and he changed to Abilify in August. He has lost 26 pounds since then. It was like you said....his cravings (specifically very carby foods) were crazy, and he would get up in the middle of the night eating. Definitely keeping those trigger foods out of reach will help those struggling with it.
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The cravings are maddening!0
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I'm on 600 milligrams at night as a sleep aid. I was skinny when I started taking it for sleep. My psychiatrist tried me on every known sleep medication there was to no avail. I would literally not fall asleep. My insomnia is off the charts.
So when he gave me the seroquel, we had a long talk about the weight gain potential. I was so desperate for sleep that I didn't care. I gained 70 pounds. Suddenly I craved things I had NEVER craved before ... ice cream, cookies, brownies, pasta, bread. I couldn't eat enough. And even on a VLCD, the weight would trickle off. My metabolism is just not the same anymore.
So now I;m trying once again to get the weight off. It's so hard, but I'm afraid of the side effects of being obese. I know it will take a long time to get back to where I once was, but I have to try.2 -
I have been on 300mg at 6pm for years. In Oct. 2014 I weighed 292 today I weigh 235. I leave enough calories that I can munch on rice cakes throughout the evening. For me it is all about CICO.3
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This also goes for other medications that make you more hungry and therefore make you gain weight. I was on high doses (95mg at one point) of prednisone and that made me mad hungry too. I learnt to deal with it in the end by not blaming the medication. I realised that if I blamed the medication it was too easy to just eat when I didn't need food. Like 'oh, it's the medication, there's nothing I can do about this hunger so it's not my fault if I eat'. I dealt with it by realising that WASN'T true. The medication did NOT have control over what I put in my mouth, only I had that power. I made myself gain weight, not the prednisone. I lost about 45lbs whilst on the prednisode with that mindset, and I've lost another 6lbs since coming off it a little over a month ago.4
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There are multiple mechanisms involved in weight gain and Seroquel -- most of them not clearly understood. Some people manage by staying away from carbs. This explains some research on other medications that can help sometimes..
http://www.consultant360.com/article/psychotropic-induced-weight-gain-review-management-strategies0 -
After years of messing with clonazepam and lunesta (followed by periods of ambien use), I suggested seroquel to my psychiatrist and she was very happy that i did so, because she knows I'd balk at the threat of medicine-induced weight gain.
My previous psych had me try it during the day, and 25 mg knocked me out. But I'm low range manic depressive and borderline bipolar, and I know when I hit a hyper manic state. The problem is that my brain is no longer allowing the sleep aids to do their job, so I'm giving in with the seroquel.
Now that I realize that it's more about cravings for sweets, I can absolutely control that. My biggest worry then is about the blood levels of cholesterol and triglycerides. I've been a strict vegan since 2008, and I think my age and ancestry (48, Eastern European Jewish descent) has enabled my body to put those on the increase. The last fasting blood test I had, my chol was 179 (LDL was in the 80's) and my tri's were high too. It's just what my body was manufacturing. I'm going to do a baseline test asap and see what happens with the seroquel after 3 months (in addition to hopefully being able to fit in my clothes!). I'm 5'8, 132 lbs....
So I'm thinking would it be best to go raw vegan, maybe 80/10/10, in order to offset what the seroquel may do to my blood levels? I don't mind craving food, esp if I can snarf on banana's and berries, etc. I never eat at night anyway because then I won't be able to sleep, and that's what I taking this for in the first place (50 mg at night).
So I guess my issue is if I do gain the weight and my blood levels change for the worse (I do P90X and Insanity 6 days/wk), will going raw vegan keep things safe for me? Oh, and my trick to not eat after dinner? Brushing my teeth, followed by a wicked strong mouthwash to kill my palate. Works every time.2 -
I have to comment on the Seroquel XR. Prescribed to me to help with depression / anxiety etc - along with lots of other pills. I wasn't warned I could gain weight, it just started coming on and before I knew it I was 40 pounds up. I'm not convinced that the food people are putting into their mouths is the problem. I had gastric bypass about 10 years ago and kept myself just where I wanted to be for more than 5 years. Started taking the Seroquel and maybe it's the slowing of metabolism - I can't say but I know it is not what I am eating. I do not eat pasta / rice / bread. I always eat my protein before eating anything else and next my veggies. If I really want to try something I'm ok with taking a bite and deciding it isn't worth the fat so I stop there. I've been seeing a nutritionist etc and following closely what I have been told to eat. Never more than 1200 calories a day. minimal sugar / carbs/fat. I bought a fit bit and I've been exercising but the weight will not budge. So my question to anyone out there is this. What if I were to get off of the Seroquel? Would the weight start to come off? If anyone knows please help me out here.1
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I started on 400mg of Seroquel last December and gained 18lbs within a couple months. It does increase the cravings immensely, I'm almost ravenous. I take it for sleep and like someone here also said, I am resistant to all the sleep meds on the market and we've tried them all. It's a 20 year old problem. Most are comprised of benzos and I've developed a tolerance so they're out. Any new one might work for a month before it stops working.
I saw my doctor two days ago to discuss getting off the Seroquel and trying Trazadone. The Seroquel also causes me to have Restless Leg Syndrome so he added Requip which works like a charm. I've tried Trazadone in the past and it also causes RLS, but I figured since I'm already on the Requip I've got that covered.
I take many meds for bipolar, depression, ADHD, PTSD, etc. He said he will no longer keep throwing drugs at me and I need to get off the Seroquel before we try the Trazadone and lowered the Seroquel down to 300mg. I'm to go back in two weeks and he'll make another cut. In the meantime he has me taking 3mg of Klonopin at bedtime and said it should cover the sleep problem. I was so anxious to get off the Seroquel I didn't think to point out that Klonopin is a benzo. Wednesday night it took me two hours to get to sleep, but once I got to sleep I slept thru the night. Last night wasn't great and I woke up at 5am. I'm determined to get off the Seroquel thou so hope I can tough it out until I can try the Trazadone.
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Reading all these postings where people say they just can't lose weight no matter what they try, when on Seroquel, is very discouraging. I am gaining in my belly, not everywhere else. it's bizarre and distressing.
Weight gain is evident, and about 20 lbs, though my goal is to take off about 15. I don't like to be too skinny.
Stopping the meds. isn't an option, and I didn't want to take weight loss pills.
I am on 400mg of lithium a day and 600mg of seroquel at night.
I also take omega-3, biotin, a multivitamin, iron, and two laxatives.
by the way, I was on 300 mg. of seroquel alone, last year, and I was depressed 3months and manic the next 3, with no in between. basically, it DID NOT WORK. The lithium and 600mg of seroquel seems to be work. thank God something is.
I am dehydrated (probably from the lithium) and have to drink 8 glasses of water a day. If I don't I feel really sick and get headaches. Also I was constipated (from the iron and the seroquel?) and my internist put me on two kinds of laxatives.
I do NOT want to get diabetes. and I do not want to look pregnant or with a beer belly. I hear about people gaining 300 lbs on seroquel, and that is NOT going to be ME.
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It's going to take a while to get used to eating dark green vegetables, and some fruits, and protein, and not eating carbs and sugar. Those were my psychiatrist's instructions.
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I tried not eating breakfast but that didn't work for me at all. I was miserable and craved junk food.
From the charts I got from my dr., anything that has alot of fiber (like oats) doesn't count as a carb.
Here's my basic diet, so far:
breakfast - oatmeal raw, with raisins and milk
lunch - varies: a salad, or sandwich without the bread, or cooked peppers with kidney beans, or tuna,
dinner-frozen broccoli and a card deck sized piece of steak
run - 6 o'clock most evenings, maybe a few miles. usually the same course each day
I used to work out at a health club for 2 hours when I went, but then, I didn't go every day, and what I really need to do for my body to get in shape is run, and this health club doesn't have a track, and I hate treadmills. I've been trying to get my roommate/boyfriend to run with me, and sometimes he bikes next to me, and that helps a lot. My running muscles are starting to come back.
The first two weeks I tried to diet, I just kept my weight the same. which is an improvement, I was gaining before, without overeating. I am not extremely hungry, unless I skip meals, and then I am. I had started to run about a week before. Two days ago the scale said I had lost one pound. and now it's down three pounds.2 -
Perhaps ask your psych / doctor to take it just before going to sleep. Then hopefully sleep all night and wake up (although) hungry in the morning but this way you won't have the midnight cravings.0
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My husbands doctor prescribed him Seroquel 25mg purely as a sleeping tablet, no mental issues. I'll have one every now and then, and it knocks me out to the point I don't even remember going to bed, and I also wake up ravenous the next day.
How on earth do people take 300mg during the day????? I'd be asleep on the couch all day and undoubtedly would put on weight because I would not be able to put one foot in front of the other...0 -
When I was just on Seroquel, along with anti-depressants and anti-anxiety drugs, I had no problem losing weight while dieting and/or exercising; you can't just stop, though, because then you will gain weight. But now being on Lithium - though withdrawing under a doctor's supervision - and Risperdal, NOTHING that I do will help me to lose weight. If kicking the lithium doesn't do it, I'm dropping the Risperdal. But Seroquel alone will give you a fighting chance to be fit.0
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I went from 235 down to 170lb by enacting permanent diet changes. I did that 5 years ago and now I am pushing a second time to get down to my goal of 140lb.
I found it easier to lose weight by going on to more sequel than less. On 100mg at evenings I was still going into depressive states and binge eating occasionally. At 350mg I was sleeping like a baby and on top of the world. Only problem is i do get the hunger pangs all day. I find my stomach calms down a little bit if I really majorly increase the liquids (I drink 3litres a day MINIMUM -or 3 x 32oz). Exercise also helps to hold back the hunger for me too. I wait until my stomach is really giving me a strong sensation of hunger (but not growling) and then start my routine and I get a good 2-3 hours relief. I also love going shopping....any distraction will do. I just time my distraction to those couple hours before meals where I always cave in.
In the end I just had to learn that my stomach was and is no longer a valid indicator of my state of hunger. Essentially, the feelings of "you need to eat" are chemically (Seroquel) induced and meaningless. Mind you, I still think that when it gets to the stage where you can hear it growling then you are taking it too far and should scale back the aggressiveness of your diet (everything up to that point I put down to "seroquel hunger" and is largely a mental state rather than physical).
I'm not saying it's easy to ignore my stomach, it's unbelievably difficult, but I just want to put it out there that it can be done, I lost 65lb and have largely kept it off even when taking 350mg of seroquel for 5 years (10 years total - my weight when I first began seroquel was 140lb by the way, so I did initially gain a lot of weight). My weight loss is just very slow and requires a lot of experimentation on my part.....diet apps don't have a "I'm on seroquel" button and I try to always keep that in my mind. In the end, if the seroquel is helping me to be happier (and it most definitely is) then I am in a better state to focus more on my health.
I just keep making little, permanent changes to my diet and lifestyle. I never stop. Plus, Maintaining weight is just as much a success as losing! And I JUST. KEEP. GOING.
It's a long game. But I am better off this way.5 -
I took it for over a year at 200mg per day. I gained about 40 lbs while on it. Good luck with losing weight. It also made me insulin resistant.2
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i am on 400 XR. i gained so much weight as soon as i got on it, and i didn't change my dietary habits. the drug put the weight on me. i know alot of people disagree, but that was my experience. i am now on metformin to try to cut some of my weight, had tried topamax in the past but it didn't do anything. i know that my mental health is important, so i have to continue to take it right now. it also increased my cholesterol, it is horribly horribly high. hoping the metformin and some dietary changes can help lower that.0
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christinev297 wrote: »My husbands doctor prescribed him Seroquel 25mg purely as a sleeping tablet, no mental issues. I'll have one every now and then, and it knocks me out to the point I don't even remember going to bed, and I also wake up ravenous the next day.
How on earth do people take 300mg during the day????? I'd be asleep on the couch all day and undoubtedly would put on weight because I would not be able to put one foot in front of the other...
seroquel is not to be taken during the day. it is to be taken about 3 hours before bedtime. of course you can get used to it, like i did, and now 400 mg doesn't even make me drowsy anymore.
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I have a theory that it's the drowsiness that triggers my body into falsely thinking it needs more energy since it always seems to be highly stimulating things that wake me up (exercise, drinking caffeine etc) that make me feel less hungry.....a can of Pepsi max keeps the hunger at bay for 90 mins or more in my case.....but I could be crazy.....I am on seroquel after all (jk!)
And I also agree with earlier posts......If you are really suffering mentally, fix mental health before worrying about physical health. Gain the weight knowing that your mind is healing and then get rid of the weight again when you are ready to face the world again. It may seem crazy to do it that way but sometimes you have to be patient if you want to change your life in the long term. One thing at a time.2 -
I take xanax for anxiety and to sleep. Been on it for almost 20 years. It always makes me hungry so i always eat dinner late so im not hungry before bed. (I cant sleep if im hungry). Never thought of it as a cause of weight gain. I honestly would not take that medication if it "actually" causes weight gain. It seems to me people are just trying to pass the blame onto a medication that makes you hungry as the cause of their weight gain.0
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I take xanax for anxiety and to sleep. Been on it for almost 20 years. It always makes me hungry so i always eat dinner late so im not hungry before bed. (I cant sleep if im hungry). Never thought of it as a cause of weight gain. I honestly would not take that medication if it "actually" causes weight gain. It seems to me people are just trying to pass the blame onto a medication that makes you hungry as the cause of their weight gain.
it's easy to say you wouldn't take it, but after spending months and months trying to find a medication that actually works, it's not so easy to just drop it from my regime. i have heard alot of people say that i use the med as an excuse for my weight, but it was a direct cause. i was about 150 when i started it and i topped-out at 184 after only a few months on it with no change in my eating habits. i don't feel that i have an increase in hunger at all.
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WeddedBliss1992 wrote: »
it's easy to say you wouldn't take it, but after spending months and months trying to find a medication that actually works, it's not so easy to just drop it from my regime. i have heard alot of people say that i use the med as an excuse for my weight, but it was a direct cause. i was about 150 when i started it and i topped-out at 184 after only a few months on it with no change in my eating habits. i don't feel that i have an increase in hunger at all.
I just dont see how this is possible. How many calories are in one pill?
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I just dont see how this is possible. How many calories are in one pill?
"Werk2eat" There is very strong scientific evidence (based on very reputable studies) out there that seroquel does influence weight gain so no need to be clever or snarky like that!
I don't think any of the people above are imagining seroquel's effects. Some might be blaming it disproportionately but it's nearly impossible to tell where the seroquel ends and the lifestyle influence begins and I don't think that demarcation is well understood scientifically either yet, given that many of the things seroquel treats have a strong influence on weight in themselves. A bit of understanding goes a lot further than ridicule.
What I was trying to say in my comments above however is that while seroquel can lead to weight gain, it does not eliminate the possibility of weight loss. If you are on seroquel you have enough problems without having people telling you that you should be blaming yourself more than you already are.
Hang in there seroquel users! if it is helping you to become a happy balanced person, then there is light at the end of the tunnel! You don't have to drop the one drug that is saving your sanity! You just have to keep working at making small changes, seroquel's influence is possible to overcome!!!! I promise!5 -
WeddedBliss1992 wrote: »
it's easy to say you wouldn't take it, but after spending months and months trying to find a medication that actually works, it's not so easy to just drop it from my regime. i have heard alot of people say that i use the med as an excuse for my weight, but it was a direct cause. i was about 150 when i started it and i topped-out at 184 after only a few months on it with no change in my eating habits. i don't feel that i have an increase in hunger at all.
Once you find mental stability you would be amazed at how much easier it becomes to deal with the weight you just put on. Yes the gain hurts and yes it's hard to undo. But until you deal with your mind you are in no position to deal with your body. It sounds like you are on the right track and this stage in your treatment will turn out to be a hiccup.....just "keep on truckin" and make little changes for the better. (Friend me if you want to talk more outside this thread!)
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Seroquel makes me hungry and tired. It is also the best med for me. I go to a weight loss program at the local hospital who has helped me make changes in my eating habits so I'm slowly losing the lbs I've gained. Low carb, no refined sugar. They call it a Mediterranean diet. I make it my own. I work out 4x a week at least. I'm losing.
I take 300mg at night and 100mg in the am. 5'4 started at 140ish, seroquel brought me to the 180s, now in the 170s in 2 months. It's working slowly. As long as it works. Hard for a former WW Leader but things change. Best to everyone who struggles with seroquel and what it treats. It's not easy.1 -
So here is my horror story. I am male was 165 lbs ran 5 miles every other day and lifted weights when not running. I was in good shape and had very good eating habits. For me the low doses of seroquel 100 or 200 mg doses where a matter of don't eat when you get hungry when it is not feeding time, and if you do eat, work out harder the next day. Here is where it changes. My doses was moved up over time to 1000mg a day. Yep that is correct. 200mg more than the FDA says is ok. On the bright side, hallucinations stopped and I got a grip on reality for the first time is several years. Down side, even while dieting, exercising and not going into late night feedings I gained 80 LBS in 6 months. Half way through I had to stop running as the extra weight was hell on my knees. I have finally stopped gaining at 80 lbs. Doctor said with this high of a dose he would have been surprised If I didn't gain at least that much. For me it had nothing to do with diet, exercise. It was all about the pills.6
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Hi everyone, I have had a really positive experience with quetiapine. Admittedly I am on a low dose (75mg) and I have only been on it for two months.
I have recently been diagnosed bipolar and last year had a very very long period of bad depression. I was put on lamotrigine and two anti depressants duloxetine and mirtazapine. During the depression I put on about 56 lbs due to comfort eating and sitting on the sofa for four months! I had been a keen runner and have done several marathons and half marathons. This went out of the window.
Anyway, the medication I was on wasn't helping so two months ago my consultant added the quetiapine. I have come off the mirtazapine and duloxetine. I am still on the lamotrigine. The quetiapine has made a massive difference to my mood and has switched off my binge eating (two family sized bars of chocolate, two packs of cookies, tub of ice cream several times per week). I think this is probably because I am no longer depressed and my motivation has increased. I actually found that the mirtazapine made me feel hungry all the time, the quetiapine seems to be better. I have lost about 14lbs in the last couple of months and I hope to start running again soon.
As someone said earlier the studies on this drug show that only 23% of patients gain weight, that means 77% don't. I realise it is different for everyone, but it has helped me a lot. I was scared of trying it because of the weight gain issue in particular, but I am glad I gave it a try.1 -
the medicine itself is not the sole cause of weight gain... if you're feeling hungrier as a side effect and then subsequently eat more, of course you're going to gain weight.
i take lexapro and klonopin and have no issues as a direct result of the meds. weight issues are usually not directly related to taking medication. its the overeating and lack of exercise that brings on the pounds.1 -
Christine_72 wrote: »My husbands doctor prescribed him Seroquel 25mg purely as a sleeping tablet, no mental issues. I'll have one every now and then, and it knocks me out to the point I don't even remember going to bed, and I also wake up ravenous the next day.
How on earth do people take 300mg during the day????? I'd be asleep on the couch all day and undoubtedly would put on weight because I would not be able to put one foot in front of the other...
because seroquel is a weird drug in that the bigger the dose, the LESS sedating it is. when I was taking 150-250mg, I was taking it in the afternoon because it didn't make me sleepy. now that I'm down to 75mg, I take it shortly before bed and you better believe it makes me sleepy.3 -
the medicine itself is not the sole cause of weight gain... if you're feeling hungrier as a side effect and then subsequently eat more, of course you're going to gain weight.
i take lexapro and klonopin and have no issues as a direct result of the meds. weight issues are usually not directly related to taking medication. its the overeating and lack of exercise that brings on the pounds.
not true. seroquel causes something called metabolic syndrome, which causes weight gain among other health issues, including lots of fat in the stomach specifically. which explains why after my entire life of being able to eat whatever I wanted, as much as I wanted, and not ever gain a pound, after being on Seroquel for a year, I gained 30 pounds and my stomach got so big and round I looked 5-6 months pregnant.7 -
I am bumping this thread as I have suffered 60 lbs weight gain on 400 mg of this stuff. I will be the first to admit it has improved my mental health, but obesity gets me down. I take the 400 at night and then I "zombie eat". This is when I get up in the night and start raiding cupboards in a half wake/half sleep state. Sometimes I have no recollection of even doing this, but I am faced with the evidence of empty food packets strewn on the floor when I wake up. The doc is now weaning me off this stuff and I am down to 200, while they are adding in Abilfy. Yes, it has made me stable.....but at what cost to my self-esteem and physical health?2
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