madinamerica
Editor’s note: We know that our reviews of the withdrawal literature are incomplete, and we urge readers to help us add to them. Please send study citations that are relevant to the withdrawal literature for benzodiazepines to rwhitaker@madinamerica.com.
7) File SE, Pellow S. Chlordiazepoxide enhances the anxiogenic action of CGS 8216 in the social interaction test: evidence for benzodiazepine withdrawal? Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior. 1985 Jul 1;23(1):33-6. PubMed link
28) Hallstrom C, Lader MH. Benzodiazepine withdrawal phenomena. International Pharmacopsychiatry. 1981. PubMed link
51) Busto U, Fornazzari L, Naranjo CA. Protracted tinnitus after discontinuation of long-term therapeutic use of benzodiazepines. Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology. 1988 Oct 1;8(5):359-62. PubMed link
56) Lader MH, Morton SV. A pilot study of the effects of flumazenil on symptoms persisting after benzodiazepine withdrawal. Journal of Psychopharmacology. 1992 May 1;6(3):357-63. PubMed link
82) Wafford KA. GABA A receptor subtypes: any clues to the mechanism of benzodiazepine dependence? Current Opinion in Pharmacology. 2005 Feb 28;5(1):47-52. PubMed link
Editor’s note: We know that our reviews of the withdrawal literature are incomplete, and we urge readers to help us add to them. Please send study citations that are relevant to the withdrawal literature for benzodiazepines to rwhitaker@madinamerica.com.
Introduction
Benzodiazepines have a sedating effect due to agonism of certain subtypes of GABA receptors in the amygdala. Studies have focused on involvement of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) system, glutaminergic strength, NMDA, and serotonin.Biology of Withdrawal Effects
- Wichniak A, Brunner H, Ising M, Gil FP, Holsboer F, Friess E. Impaired hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) system is related to severity of benzodiazepine withdrawal in patients with depression. Psychoneuroendocrinology (2004) Oct 31;29(9):1101-8. PubMed link
This study found that benzodiazepine
withdrawal may be due to disinhibiting the
hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) system.
2) Song J, Shen G, Greenfield LJ, Tietz EI. Benzodiazepine
withdrawal-induced glutamatergic plasticity involves up-regulation of
GluR1-containing α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionic acid
receptors in hippocampal CA1 neurons. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics (2007) Aug 1;322(2):569-81. PubMed link
Researchers found that benzodiazepine
withdrawal leads to an increase in glutaminergic strength and
excitability of CA1 in the brain, and that these changes can underlie
the mechanism of physiological adaptations to drug withdrawal.
3) Xiang K, Tietz EI. Benzodiazepine-induced hippocampal CA1 neuron
α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxasole-4-propionic acid (AMPA) receptor
plasticity linked to severity of withdrawal anxiety: differential role
of voltage-gated calcium channels and N-methyl-D-aspartic acid
receptors. Behavioural Pharmacology. 2007 Sep 1;18(5-6):447-60. PubMed link
These authors showed that increased AMPAR
activity during benzodiazepine withdrawal contributes to anxiety
experienced when people withdraw from benzodiazepines, and that NMDAR
activity is downregulated. The authors speculate that increased
plasticity of glutamate receptors and certain types of receptor
signaling may underlie withdrawal anxiety and substance dependence.
4) Shen G, Tietz EI. Down-regulation of synaptic GluN2B
subunit-containing N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors: a physiological brake
on CA1 neuron α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid
hyperexcitability during benzodiazepine withdrawal. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics. 2011 Jan 1;336(1):265-73. PubMed link
Researchers suggest that a subtype of
NMDA receptor (GluN2B) may modulate the strength of the gluteminergic
synapse during benzodiazepine withdrawal (because there is neuronal
hyperactivity resulting from withdrawal, which may cause anxiety), and
thus may be an attempt to achieve homeostasis.
5) Benyamina A, Naassila M, Bourin M. Potential role of cortical 5-HT
2A receptors in the anxiolytic action of cyamemazine in benzodiazepine
withdrawal. Psychiatry Research. 2012 Jul 30;198(2):307-12. PubMed link
This study found that the
anxiety-reducing effect of cyamemazine in withdrawal from
benzodiazepines is likely due to serotonin receptor antagonistic
activity in the cortex.
6) Preskorn SH. A Way of Conceptualizing Benzodiazepines to Guide Clinical Use. Journal of Psychiatric Practice. 2015 Nov 1;21(6):436-41. PubMed link
This article divides benzodiazepines into
4 classes depending on their characteristics on a continuum along 2
dimensions: length of half-life and potency of affinity for the binding
site (low to high) and proposes using medications for different clinical
indications depending on their classification.
Animal Research
Animal research has focused on anxiety as a withdrawal symptom of benzodiazepines. Increased serotonin release is hypothesized to play a role in this increased anxiety. Sudden withdrawal from alprazolam was associated with HPA axis activation, decrease in food consumption, and decrease in body weight.7) File SE, Pellow S. Chlordiazepoxide enhances the anxiogenic action of CGS 8216 in the social interaction test: evidence for benzodiazepine withdrawal? Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior. 1985 Jul 1;23(1):33-6. PubMed link
This study found that chlordiazepoxide
made animals less socially interactive (a measure of increased anxiety)
in the presence of a compound CGS 8216 after both acute and chronic
treatment, which was a surprising finding given that it is typically
anxiety-reducing. The authors speculate this effect may be due to
withdrawal from the high dose.
8) Baldwin HA, Hitchcott PK, File SE. Evidence that the increased
anxiety detected in the elevated plus-maze during chlordiazepoxide
withdrawal is not due to enhanced noradrenergic activity. Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior. 1989 Dec 31;34(4):931-3. PubMed link
In this study, researchers administered
chlordiazepoxide to rats and then put them in a maze 24-30 hours after
the last dose. Anxiety was measured by the percentage of time rats spent
in each arm of the maze. Researchers found that rats withdrawing from
CDP spent less time in the open arms of the maze, indicating anxiety.
Clonidine and DL-propranolol did not reverse these effects, indicating
that there is likely not noradrenergic involvement in the anxiety
component of benzodiazepine withdrawal.
9) Nutt DJ. Pharmacological mechanisms of benzodiazepine withdrawal. Journal of Psychiatric Research. 1990 Dec 31;24:105-10. PubMed link
This author discusses the role of
receptors in benzodiazepine withdrawal, stating that a shift in efficacy
occurs at different receptor sites (attenuation of agonist receptors
and enhancement of inverse agonist receptors) in the brain. The author
states that treatment with flumazenil has been shown in rats to prevent
or reverse the efficacy shift.
10) Andrews N, File SE. Increased 5-HT release mediates the
anxiogenic response during benzodiazepine withdrawal: a review of
supporting neurochemical and behavioural evidence. Psychopharmacology. 1993 Aug 1;112(1):21-5. PubMed link
This study sought to investigate whether
increased release of 5-HT in the hippocampus during benzodiazepine
withdrawal can be linked to anxious behaviors in animals. A group of
rats who did not show an anxious response also did not have increases in
5-HT release, which corroborated the hypothesis, but the authors did
not establish causality.
11) Goudie AJ, Harrison AA, Leathley MJ. Evidence for a dissociation between benzodiazepine withdrawal signs. NeuroReport. 1993 Mar 1;4(3):295-8. PubMed link
This study found that
chlordiazepoxide-withdrawal-induced weight loss occurred after just 10
days of treatment, and that the severity of weight loss is proportional
to the length of treatment.
12) Pires JP, Monteiro KC, Alvarenga SO, Costa MG. Evidence
suggesting that gonadal hormones influence benzodiazepine
withdrawal-induced weight loss in rats. Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry. 1998 Feb 28;22(2):425-33. PubMed link
The authors found that surgically
castrated rats had a statistically significant weight loss when compared
with rats withdrawing from benzodiazepines who were not castrated and
rats not withdrawing from benzodiazepines.
13) Pokk P, Zharkovsky A. Small platform stress attenuates the anxiogenic effect of diazepam withdrawal in the plus-maze test. Behavioural Brain Research. 1998 Dec 1;97(1):153-7. PubMed link
Mice were withdrawn from benzodiazepines
and then subjected to stress by standing on a small platform surrounded
by water for 24 hours. These mice were then placed into a maze, as were
mice who were not subjected to stress. The researchers found that
benzodiazepine withdrawal induced anxiety and small platform stress
inhibited anxiety; they state that the effect of stress on withdrawal
symptoms thus depends on the type and length of stress.
14) Metten P, Crabbe JC. Genetic determinants of severity of acute
withdrawal from diazepam in mice: commonality with ethanol and
pentobarbital. Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior. 1999 Jul 31;63(3):473-9. PubMed link
This study found that there are likely
common genetic factors contributing to seizures upon withdrawal from
diazepam, ethanol, and pentobarbital. The researchers speculate that a
common neural mechanism involved in actions of all three drugs are the
GABA/benzodiazepine receptor/chloride ionophore complex (GRC).
15) Stock H, Ford K, Biscardi R, Wilson MA. Lack of sex differences
in anxiety behaviors during precipitated benzodiazepine withdrawal in
rats. Physiology & Behavior. 1999 Mar 31;66(1):125-30. PubMed link
In this study, the researchers induced
benzodiazepine withdrawal with flumazenil and measured length of time
spent in the open arms of a maze to ascertain anxiety. They found that
rats withdrawing from benzodiazepines spent less time in the open arms
of the maze, but that there was also less activity overall. The authors
conclude that anxiety behaviors do not tend to increase upon
precipitated withdrawal from benzodiazepines and that there is no
hormonal influence.
16) Elliot EE, White JM. Precipitated and spontaneous withdrawal following administration of lorazepam but not zolpidem. Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior. 2000 Jun 30;66(2):361-9. PubMed link
Researchers administered Lorazepam,
zolpidem, or placebo to rats for 12 days and found that there was no
evidence of withdrawal syndrome in the zolpidem group despite the fact
that tolerance developed, but that there was evidence of withdrawal in
the lorazepam groups both after administration of flumazenil and in
spontaneous cessation. However, the results of this study contradict
studies in baboons and humans.
17) Nath C, Saxena RC, Gupta MB. Effect of dopamine agonists and antagonists on the lorazepam withdrawal syndrome in rats. Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology. 2000 Mar 11;27(3):167-71. PubMed link
This study investigated the effect of
dopaminergic agonists and antagonists in withdrawal from lorazepam in
rats by administering these compounds to rats after withdrawing them
from lorazepam and measuring withdrawal symptoms. The authors conclude
that dopamine D2 receptors (and partially dopamine D1 receptors) are
facilitators concerning benzodiazepine withdrawal syndrome.
18) Nath C, Gupta MB. Role of central histaminergic system in lorazepam withdrawal syndrome in rats. Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior. 2001 Apr 30;68(4):777-82. PubMed link
This study investigated the effect of
histaminergic agonists and antagonists in withdrawal from lorazepam in
rats by administering these compounds to rats after withdrawing them
from lorazepam and measuring withdrawal symptoms. Histamine-N-methyl,
which is an agonist of the H3 receptor, as well as the H1 receptor
antagonists promethazine and pheniramine, blocked all of the withdrawal
symptoms. The authors conclude that histamine H1 receptors are
facilitators and H3 receptors are inhibitors concerning benzodiazepine
withdrawal syndrome.
19) Isoardi NA, Martijena ID, Carrer HF, Molina VA. Increased fear
learning coincides with neuronal dysinhibition and facilitated LTP in
the basolateral amygdala following benzodiazepine withdrawal in rats. Neuropsychopharmacology. 2004 Oct 1;29(10):1852-64. PubMed link
This study found that when exposed to a
stimulus previously paired with an electric shock to the foot, rats that
were withdrawn from benzodiazepines experienced significantly more
freezing (fear conditioning) than control rats. The researchers think
this could be due to depressed GABAergic activity in rats withdrawn from
benzodiazepines.
20) Skelton KH, Nemeroff CB, Owens MJ. Spontaneous withdrawal from
the triazolobenzodiazepine alprazolam increases cortical
corticotropin-releasing factor mRNA expression. The Journal of Neuroscience. 2004 Oct 20;24(42):9303-12. PubMed link
This study found that sudden withdrawal
from alprazolam was associated with HPA axis activation, decrease in
food consumption, and decrease in body weight, as well as increased
corticotropin-releasing factor mRNA expression and is likely to play a
role in benzodiazepine withdrawal though the behavioral expression of
this is unclear.
21) Rada P, Hoebel BG. Acetylcholine in the accumbens is decreased by
diazepam and increased by benzodiazepine withdrawal: a possible
mechanism for dependency. European Journal of Pharmacology. 2005 Jan 31;508(1):131-8. PubMed link
The authors build upon the finding that
diazepam is addictive and that unlike other addictive drugs, it
decreases dopamine levels, by finding that it decreases acetylcholine
levels as well when administered in rats. The administration of
flumazenil increases both of these neurotransmitters and shows that
acetylcholine may play a role in benzodiazepine withdrawal.
22) Begg DP, Hallam KT, Norman TR. Attenuation of benzodiazepine
withdrawal anxiety in the rat by serotonin antagonists. Behavioural
Brain Research. 2005 Jun 20;161(2):286-90. PubMed link
This study showed that when diazepam was
abruptly withdrawn, rodents developed symptoms of anxiety such as
decreased social interaction and decreased exploration of open arms of a
maze compared to diazepam-treated and control rodents. Administration
of serotonin receptor antagonists ritanserin and mitanserin led to a
reduction in these anxious behaviors in the withdrawn animals,
indicating that blocking post-synaptic 5-HT2 receptors may assist in
alleviating anxiety associated with benzodiazepine withdrawal.
23) Fontanesi LB, Ferreira R, Cabral A, Castilho VM, Brandão ML,
Nobre MJ. Brainstem areas activated by diazepam withdrawal as measured
by Fos-protein immunoreactivity in rats. Brain Research. 2007 Aug 29;1166:35-46. PubMed link
This study used a technique to detect Fos
immunoreactivity in certain brain structures when rats were withdrawn
from benzodiazepines and found that benzodiazepine withdrawal activates
the same brain structures (midbrain tectum) as those activated when
exposed to dangerous situations.
24) Souza-Pinto LF, Castilho VM, Brandão ML, Nobre MJ. The blockade
of AMPA-kainate and NMDA receptors in the dorsal periaqueductal gray
reduces the effects of diazepam withdrawal in rats. Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior. 2007 Jul 31;87(2):250-7. PubMed link
This study investigated the effect of
administering AMPA-kainate and NMDA receptor antagonists to the dorsal
periaqueductal gray (dPAG) on symptoms of anxiety in rats withdrawing
from benzodiazepines and found that inhibition of glutamatergic
neurotransmission in the dPAG reduces symptoms of benzodiazepine
withdrawal.
25) Das P, Lilly SM, Zerda R, Gunning WT, Alvarez FJ, Tietz EI.
Increased AMPA receptor GluR1 subunit incorporation in rat hippocampal
CA1 synapses during benzodiazepine withdrawal. Journal of Comparative Neurology. 2008 Dec 20;511(6):832-46. PubMed link
This study showed a significant increase
in AMPAR GluR1-mediated glutamatergic neurotransmission in excitatory
synapses on hippocampal CA1 neurons during benzodiazepine withdrawal,
which gives insight into the physiological mechanisms underlying
benzodiazepine-induced withdrawal anxiety.
26) Das P, Zerda R, Alvarez FJ, Tietz EI. Immunogold electron
microscopic evidence of differential regulation of GluN1, GluN2A, and
GluN2B, NMDA‐type glutamate receptor subunits in rat hippocampal CA1
synapses during benzodiazepine withdrawal. Journal of Comparative Neurology. 2010 Nov 1;518(21):4311-28. PubMed link
This study extends prior research into
the role of Nmethyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) in anxiety during
withdrawal from benzodiazepines and proposes a benzodiazepine withdrawal
model.
27) Divljaković J, Milić M, Namjoshi OA, Tiruveedhula VV, Timić T,
Cook JM, Savić MM. βCCT, an antagonist selective for α 1 GABA A
receptors, reverses diazepam withdrawal-induced anxiety in rats. Brain Research Bulletin. 2013 Feb 28;91:1-7. PubMed link
Researchers treated rats with diazepam
for 21 days and found after abrupt cessation, rats displayed
anxiety-like behaviors. They found that both flumazenil and βCCT, an
antagonist selective for α 1 GABA A receptors, alleviated the anxiety
symptoms. This implies that antagonism at the GABA A receptors to reduce
anxiety from benzodiazepine withdrawal involves the α 1 subunits of
these receptors.
Withdrawal Symptoms
Benzodiazepine withdrawal has been characterized as a distinct syndrome consisting of symptoms such as severe anxiety, heightened sensitivity, weight loss, insomnia, and perceptual changes. It is protracted in nature and may last 5-54 days. Sudden cessation of benzodiazepines may result in seizures. It is both a physical and psychological experience that may warrant care from other providers in addition to the primary care provider.28) Hallstrom C, Lader MH. Benzodiazepine withdrawal phenomena. International Pharmacopsychiatry. 1981. PubMed link
This study describes a withdrawal
syndrome as benzodiazepines were withdrawn in 10 patients who stated
they were unable to discontinue benzodiazepines. Symptoms included
severe anxiety, heightened sensitivity, weight loss, and perceptual
changes.
29) Ashton H. Benzodiazepine withdrawal: an unfinished story. British Medical Journal (Clinical research ed.). 1984 Apr 14;288(6424):1135. PubMed link
This paper outlines distinct symptoms of
benzodiazepine withdrawal and describes it as being protracted in nature
lasting anywhere from 5-54 days, though in some cases recovery may take
six months to a year or more. The paper also describes it as a “severe
illness” that is readily dismissed by medical providers as being
anxiety-related, though the symptoms are distinct from anxiety.
30) Ayd FJ. Benzodiazepine Withdrawal Phenomena-New Insights. Psychiatric Annals. 1984 Feb 1;14(2):133-4.
This study reviews the results of a
double-blind study of benzodiazepine withdrawal in 41 long-term
benzodiazepine users conducted in Great Britain by Tyrer, Owen, and
Dawling. One group consisted of early withdrawers and the other of late
withdrawers. Between 44% and 50% of patients developed withdrawal
symptoms included anxiety, restlessness, anorexia, low mood, depression,
insomnia, and heightened sensitivity to light, touch, noise, and smell
despite gradual reduction in use. After stopping, clients became more
vulnerable to stress and illness, and symptoms were so distressing that
15 of 41 patients were again taking benzodiazepines at six-month
follow-up and 7 were taking other psychotropic medication.
31) Fontaine R, Chouinard G, Annable L. Rebound anxiety in anxious
patients after abrupt withdrawal of benzodiazepine treatment. Am J Psychiatry. 1984 Jul 7;141(7):848-52. PubMed link
The authors demonstrate that all patients
who experienced rebound anxiety in a double-blind RCT with placebo had
received benzodiazepines. There was a significant difference in dropout
rates between the abrupt withdrawal group and placebo.
32) Ashton H. Benzodiazepine withdrawal: outcome in 50 patients. British Journal of Addiction. 1987 Jun 1;82(6):665-71. PubMed link
This study examined clinical outcomes in
50 patients who had been taking benzodiazepines anywhere from 1-22
years. Almost half of clients (48%) were classified as fully recovered
10-42 months later following withdrawal; 6% were no better, and younger
age was significantly associated with favorable outcomes.
33) Noyes R, Garvey MJ, Cook BL, Perry PJ. Benzodiazepine withdrawal: a review of the evidence. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry. 1988 Oct. PubMed link
The authors review studies of
benzodiazepines and benzodiazepine withdrawal and recommend gradual
discontinuation lasting anywhere from 4-16 weeks with dose decreases not
exceeding thresholds from 2.5 mg to 5 mg. Clinicians should watch for
complications such as increase in alcohol use and depression, and be
prepared to treat anxiety emerging.
34) Onyett SR. The benzodiazepine withdrawal syndrome and its management. JR Coll Gen Pract. 1989 Apr 1;39(321):160-3. PubMed link
This author describes benzodiazepine
withdrawal as both a physical and psychological experience and discusses
the importance of structured withdrawal and provider-client
communication realistic expectations of the withdrawal experience. In
some cases, support from other practitioners, including mental health
practitioners, is warranted.
35) Schweizer E, Case WG, Rickels K. Benzodiazepine dependence and withdrawal in elderly patients. Am J Psychiatry. 1989 Apr 1;146(4):529-31. PubMed link
This study found that older patients had a
less severe withdrawal experience than younger patients when tapering
benzodiazepines; however, only 50% of each group remained free of
benzodiazepines after 4 weeks.
36) DuPont RL. Thinking about stopping treatment for panic disorder. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry. 1990 Dec. PubMed link
This article differentiates chemical
dependence from physical dependence and outlines a four-step tapering
strategy applicable for patients with both types: gradual
discontinuation, substitution of a different medication, use of
medication to suppress withdrawal symptoms, and inpatient treatment and a
12-step program.
37) Higgitt A, Fonagy P, Toone B, Shine P. The prolonged benzodiazepine withdrawal syndrome: anxiety or hysteria?. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica. 1990 Aug 1;82(2):165-8. PubMed link
The authors administered
psychophysiological tests to patients diagnosed with anxiety or
conversion disorder and normal controls and found no evidence that
withdrawal syndrome could be due to anxiety or conversion disorder and
is likely an iatrogenic condition resulting from treatment with
benzodiazepines.
38) Joughin N, Tata P, Collins M, Hooper C, Falkowski J. In‐patient withdrawal from long‐term benzodiazepine use. British Journal of Addiction. 1991 Apr 1;86(4):449-55. PubMed link
This study found that 38% of patients who
completed an inpatient followed by outpatient program to withdraw from
benzodiazepines achieved a good outcome, with younger patients faring
better than older patients and those diagnosed with anxiety faring
better than those with depressive disorder.
39) Neiman J, Persson H, Bergman H. Early benzodiazepine withdrawal in benzodiazepine-dependent subjects: a pilot study. Nordic Journal of Psychiatry. 1994 Jan 1;48(1):19-25. PubMed link
The authors compared six women
withdrawing from benzodiazepines and six healthy controls and found that
those withdrawing from benzodiazepines experienced higher anxiety,
depressivity, fatigue, and confusion and lower “vigor” than controls.
40) Petursson H. The benzodiazepine withdrawal syndrome. Addiction. 1994 Nov 1;89(11):1455-9. PubMed link
This author describes symptoms of the
benzodiazepine withdrawal syndrome including insomnia, panic attacks,
increases in anxiety, hand tremor, sweating, tension, difficulty
concentrating, dry heaving and nausea, weight loss, headache, muscle
tension and stiffness, perceptual changes, and seizures and psychosis at
high doses. The author differentiates symptom patterns and discusses
risk factors for withdrawal syndrome as well.
41) Martinez-Cano H, Vela-Bueno A, De Iceta M, Pomalima R,
Martinez-Gras I. Benzodiazepine withdrawal syndrome seizures.
Pharmacopsychiatry. 1995 Nov;28(06):257-62. PubMed link
This study is a case presentation of five
seizures occurring after withdrawal from benzodiazepines (3% of a
sample of 153 in a larger study) and found that sudden cessation and
high-dose use increased risk.
42) Cassano GB, Petracca A, Borghi C, Chiroli S, Didoni G, Garreau M.
A randomized, double-blind study of alpidem vs placebo in the
prevention and treatment of benzodiazepine withdrawal syndrome. European Psychiatry. 1996 Dec 31;11(2):93-9. PubMed link
The authors found that withdrawal
syndrome occurred in 31% of patients taking alpidem after abrupt
withdrawal of benzodiazepines compared to 44% of the placebo group;
severe withdrawal occurred in 11.1% of patients in the alpidem group and
31.6% of patients in the placebo group. Alpidem was withdrawn from the
market in France in 1993 due to suspected liver toxicity.
43) Vorma H, Naukkarinen H, Sarna S, Kuoppasalmi K. Symptom severity
and quality of life after benzodiazepine withdrawal treatment in
participants with complicated dependence. Addictive Behaviors. 2004 Aug 31;29(6):1059-65. PubMed link
This study examined self-rated quality of
life, as well as psychopathology as assessed by the Symptom Checklist
90 and Visual Analogue Scales after benzodiazepine withdrawal treatment
in people with complicated dependence, defined as those with
co-occurring harmful alcohol use or high doses of benzodiazepines. The
study found that for the whole sample, symptoms and quality of life
improved following withdrawal; for those with clinically significant
dose decreases, symptoms and self-rated quality of life improved more
than those who decreased doses less, though there were no statistically
significant differences between groups.
44) Mol AJ, Gorgels WJ, Voshaar RC, Breteler MH, van Balkom AJ, van
de Lisdonk EH, Kan CC, Zitman FG. Associations of benzodiazepine craving
with other clinical variables in a population of general practice
patients. Comprehensive Psychiatry. 2005 Oct 31;46(5):353-60. PubMed link
This study examined craving of
benzodiazepines in a sample of primary care patients attempting to
discontinue use and found that patients reporting craving were more
dependent on benzodiazepines, psychopathology, negative mood, and
personality factors such as negativism, somatization, and
psychopathology.
45) Authier N, Balayssac D, Sautereau M, Zangarelli A, Courty P,
Somogyi AA, Vennat B, Llorca PM, Eschalier A. Benzodiazepine dependence:
focus on withdrawal syndrome. In Annales Pharmaceutiques Francaises 2009 Nov 30 (Vol. 67, No. 6, pp. 408-413). Elsevier Masson. PubMed link
This article examines the literature to
determine patients most vulnerable to withdrawal symptoms (older adults,
pregnant women, children, people with comorbid mental health conditions
or alcohol/substance use disorder). It briefly discusses the lack of
understanding of biological mechanisms behind benzodiazepine withdrawal,
reviews how providers may have withdrawal conversations with clients,
and finally concludes that there is not currently evidence that when
tapering, substitutive pharmacotherapy improves outcomes compared to
gradual reduction in use.
46) Saxon L, Borg S, Hiltunen AJ. Reduction of aggression during benzodiazepine withdrawal: effects of flumazenil. Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior. 2010 Aug 31;96(2):148-51. PubMed link
This study found a decrease in hostility
and aggression among people withdrawing from benzodiazepines who were
treated with flumazenil, and the opposite effect among controls.
47) Dell’Osso B, Lader M. Do benzodiazepines still deserve a major
role in the treatment of psychiatric disorders? A critical reappraisal. European Psychiatry. 2013 Jan 31;28(1):7-20. PubMed link
The authors discuss the utility of
benzodiazepines as treatment for mental health conditions. In discussing
withdrawal, the authors note that medication substitution has little
evidence for efficacy when withdrawing, and that tapering rates are
recommended based on clinical experience and not empirical evidence.
48) Tolbert D, Harris SI, Bekersky I, Lee D, Isojarvi J.
Withdrawal-related adverse events from clinical trials of clobazam in
Lennox–Gastaut syndrome. Epilepsy & Behavior. 2014 Aug 31;37:11-5. PubMed link
This study examined adverse event data
from Phase I (abrupt stopping) and Phase III trials (gradual tapering)
after clobazam withdrawal among patients with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome.
No withdrawal-related AEs were noted after tapering, while after abrupt
stoppage 193 adverse events occurred in 68 patients including headache,
insomnia, tremor, and anxiety.
49) Yokoi Y, Misal M, Oh E, Bellantoni M, Rosenberg PB.
Benzodiazepine discontinuation and patient outcome in a chronic
geriatric medical/psychiatric unit: A retrospective chart review. Geriatrics & Gerontology International. 2014 Apr 1;14(2):388-94. PubMed link
This study found in a retrospective chart
review comparing older adults who discontinued benzodiazepines to older
adults who continued upon discharge that discontinuers had a shorter
length of stay and lower levels of depression. There was no evidence of
withdrawal syndrome, though there was a non-significant trend toward
increase in agitation among discontinuers.
50) Liebrenz M, Gehring MT, Buadze A, Caflisch C. High-dose
benzodiazepine dependence: a qualitative study of patients’ perception
on cessation and withdrawal. BMC Psychiatry. 2015 May 13;15(1):1. PubMed link
This was a qualitative study of 41
patients who were dependent on benzodiazepines or had engaged in
problematic use. They found that health concerns, feelings of being
addicted, and social factors were motivations to stop and withdrawal “is
difficult and unpredictable, with lots of complications.”
Protracted Withdrawal Symptoms
Studies focused on protracted withdrawal have focused on symptoms such as tinnitus, cognitive function, and life satisfaction.51) Busto U, Fornazzari L, Naranjo CA. Protracted tinnitus after discontinuation of long-term therapeutic use of benzodiazepines. Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology. 1988 Oct 1;8(5):359-62. PubMed link
This study describes persistent tinnitus
in three former benzodiazepine users after withdrawal, and evidence of
strong likelihood that the tinnitus was related to the benzodiazepine
withdrawal.
Lagnaoui R, Bégaud B, Moore N, Chaslerie A, Fourrier A, Letenneur L,
Dartigues JF, Moride Y. Benzodiazepine use and risk of dementia: A
nested case–control study. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology. 2002 Mar 31;55(3):314-8. PubMed link
This study found that former and ever-use
of benzodiazepines was associated with a significantly higher risk of
developing dementia in adults aged 65 and older. There was no elevated
risk associated with current use of benzodiazepines.
52) Vorma H, Naukkarinen H, Sarna S, Kuoppasalmi K. Long-term outcome
after benzodiazepine withdrawal treatment in subjects with complicated
dependence. Drug and Alcohol Dependence. 2003 Jun 5;70(3):309-14. PubMed link
This study compared treatment outcomes in
people withdrawing from benzodiazepines. One group had a
cognitive-behavioral intervention and the other group was treatment as
usual. There were no between-group differences in outcomes, but lower
initial benzodiazepine dose, zero previous attempts to withdraw, and
life satisfaction predicted success in avoiding relapse.
53) Barker MJ, Greenwood KM, Jackson M, Crowe SF. Persistence of
cognitive effects after withdrawal from long-term benzodiazepine use: a
meta-analysis. Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology. 2004 Apr 30;19(3):437-54. PubMed link
This meta-analysis found that many
benzodiazepine users show improvements in cognitive functioning after
withdrawal, but that impairments compared to controls or normative data
remain in most areas of cognitive functioning. There was not full
restoration of cognitive functioning within the first 6 months after
discontinuation and there may be aspects of cognitive functioning that
are permanently impaired or take longer than 6 months to recover.
54) O’Connor KP, Marchand A, Bélanger L, Mainguy N, Landry P, Savard
P, Turcotte J, Dupuis G, Harel F, Lachance L. Psychological distress and
adaptational problems associated with benzodiazepine withdrawal and
outcome: a replication. Addictive Behaviors. 2004 May 31;29(3):583-93. PubMed link
This study assessed psychosocial factors
associated with relapse of benzodiazepine use after a 20-week withdrawal
program. Higher dose was associated with greater numbers of withdrawal
symptoms, as well as poorer outcomes. Successful withdrawal was
associated with low neuroticism, low behavioral inhibition, higher
numbers of positive events, and higher levels of satisfaction with
social support.
54) Morin CM, Bélanger L, Bastien C, Vallières A. Long-term outcome
after discontinuation of benzodiazepines for insomnia: a survival
analysis of relapse. Behaviour Research and Therapy. 2005 Jan 31;43(1):1-4. PubMed link
The authors examined time to relapse and
relapse rate among benzodiazepine users who were in a supervised taper
group (Taper), a cognitive-behavioral therapy group (CBT), and a
Combined group receiving both interventions. Participants in the
Combined and Taper groups relapsed significantly less than those in the
CBT group. Medication-free time was significantly longer for both the
Taper and Combined groups than the CBT group.
55) Mura T, Proust-Lima C, Akbaraly T, Amieva H, Tzourio C, Chevassus
H, Picot MC, Jacqumin-Gadda H, Berr C. Chronic use of benzodiazepines
and latent cognitive decline in the elderly: results from the Three-city
study. European Neuropsychopharmacology. 2013 Mar 31;23(3):212-23. PubMed link
This study assessed whether
benzodiazepine use is associated with an acceleration in cognitive
decline in adults age 65 years and older. Researchers found that chronic
benzodiazepine use was associated with poorer cognitive performance,
but was not associated with acceleration in cognitive decline.
Withdrawal Tapering Protocols
Different approaches to tapering benzodiazepines have been attempted: tapering (with dose equivalents for each benzodiazepine and the tapering speed provided in a table), phenobarbital substitution when more rapid detoxification is required, sedative tolerance testing in situations where estimating the dose of phenobarbital or tapering is not recommended such as an unclear history of taking sedatives, and benzodiazepine substitution. Many different medications have been tested as an assist to tapering benzodiazepines. The latest evidence, however, suggests an 8-12 week tapering schedule with the aim of complete cessation in under 6 months; schedules should be slowed if withdrawal symptoms become overly distressing, and switching to diazepam may help in some cases where the process is more difficult.56) Lader MH, Morton SV. A pilot study of the effects of flumazenil on symptoms persisting after benzodiazepine withdrawal. Journal of Psychopharmacology. 1992 May 1;6(3):357-63. PubMed link
This was a study of flumazenil in the
treatment of acute symptoms of benzodiazepine withdrawal. The authors
found evidence of effectiveness with many symptoms, but that symptoms
did return in most cases with a range of severity, indicating that
follow-up doses would be needed.
57) Gabe J. Promoting benzodiazepine withdrawal. Addiction. 1994 Nov 1;89(11):1497-504. PubMed link
This author uses a prevention framework
to discuss promotion of benzodiazepine withdrawal and outlines four
strategies that could be used: health persuasion, personal counselling,
state action, and community development. He advocates for greater
involvement of state action in enacting policies.
58) Benzer DG, Smith DE, Miller NS. Detoxification from benzodiazepine use: Strategies and schedules for clinical practice. Psychiatric Annals. 1995 Mar 1;25(3):180-5. PubMed link
This article outlines four different
strategies to stop benzodiazepine use and when each is appropriate:
tapering (with dose equivalents for each benzodiazepine and the tapering
speed provided in a table), phenobarbital substitution when more rapid
detoxification is required, sedative tolerance testing in situations
where estimating the dose of phenobarbital or tapering is not
recommended such as an unclear history of taking sedatives, and
benzodiazepine substitution, in which patients taking short- to
medium-acting benzodiazepines are switched to a long-acting
benzodiazepine.
59) Morton S, Lader M. Buspirone treatment as an aid to benzodiazepine withdrawal. Journal of Psychopharmacology. 1995 Jul 1;9(4):331-5. PubMed link
This study evaluated the use of buspirone
in benzodiazepine withdrawal compared to placebo. Six of 12 patients in
each group successfully withdrew, but anxiety levels were lower in
those in the buspirone group. Higher benzodiazepine usage as measured by
lifetime mean dose by duration was related to poorer outcome.
60) Schweizer E, Case WG, Garcia-Espana F, Rickels K, Greenblatt DJ.
Progesterone co-administration in patients discontinuing long-term
benzodiazepine therapy: effects on withdrawal severity and taper
outcome. Psychopharmacology. 1995 Feb 1;117(4):424-9. PubMed link
Researchers found no difference between
progesterone treatment and placebo in severity of benzodiazepine
withdrawal symptoms, and no difference in cessation between the two
groups at 12 weeks after tapering.
61) Elsesser K, Sartory G, Maurer J. The efficacy of complaints management training in facilitating benzodiazepine withdrawal. Behaviour Research and Therapy. 1996 Feb 29;34(2):149-56. PubMed link
This study compared two different
interventions to manage benzodiazepine tapering over a 4-week gradual
withdrawal period: complaints management training (CMT) and anxiety
management training (AMT). Though CMT was initially more successful than
AMT in terms of depression, anxiety, number of severe withdrawal
symptoms reported, and abstinence, at 6 months there was no significant
difference between the two interventions.
62) Saxon L, Hjemdahl P, Hiltunen AJ, Borg S. Effects of flumazenil
in the treatment of benzodiazepine withdrawal–a double-blind pilot
study. Psychopharmacology. 1997 May 1;131(2):153-60. PubMed link
This study found that flumazenil reduced
withdrawal symptoms in patients withdrawing from benzodiazepines and
increased negative experiences in controls who were not taking
benzodiazepines.
63) Connor KM, Davidson JR, Potts NL, Tupler LA, Miner CM, Malik ML,
Book SW, Colket JT, Ferrell F. Discontinuation of clonazepam in the
treatment of social phobia. Journal of clinical psychopharmacology. 1998
Oct 1;18(5):373-8. PubMed link
This was a study of clonazepam for social
phobia where after an initial 6-month period on the medication,
patients were assigned to continuation therapy for 5 months or
discontinuation taper of .25 mg per week every two weeks with
double-blind placebo substitution. 21.1% of patients in the
discontinuation group relapsed; 12.5% of patients in the continuation
group and 27.7% of patients in the discontinuation group had withdrawal
symptoms. At the end of the 11-month study, continuation therapy
patients tapered for 3 weeks (considered “rapid”) and patients who
underwent this rapid tapering showed more withdrawal symptoms than the
clients who had gradually tapered.
64) Rickels K, DeMartinis N, Rynn M, Mandos L. Pharmacologic strategies for discontinuing benzodiazepine treatment. Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology. 1999 Dec 1;19(6):12S-6S. PubMed link
This study found that a variety of
medications were useful for improving the rate of tapering
benzodiazepine use, but not in mitigating severity of withdrawal
symptoms. This study also suggests a 4-step approach to tapering
including establishing a patient-physician relationship, treat any
anxiety and depression while patient is still on benzodiazepines, taper
patients who are taking more than 10 mg of diazepam or equivalent only
after sufficient treatment and to 10 mg per day, and then maintain this
level of use for several months before final taper.
65) Saxon L, Hiltunen AJ, Hjemdahl P, Borg S. Gender-related
differences in response to placebo in benzodiazepine withdrawal: a
single-blind pilot study. Psychopharmacology. 2001 Jan 1;153(2):231-7. PubMed link
This was a study of gender-specific
differences in response to placebo injections among the participants in a
study of flumazenil for benzodiazepine withdrawal (people who had
previously taken benzodiazepines and controls.) The study showed that
females were more affected by placebo injections.
66) Zitman FG, Couvee JE. Chronic benzodiazepine use in general
practice patients with depression: an evaluation of controlled treatment
and taper-off. The British Journal of Psychiatry. 2001 Apr 1;178(4):317-24. PubMed link
This study had chronic benzodiazepine
users switch to diazepam and found that after treatment for depression
with paroxetine vs. placebo, approximately 2/3 were successful in
tapering from benzodiazepines and 13% of all patients in the study
remained benzodiazepine-free three years later.
67) Oude Voshaar RC, Gorgels WJ, Mol AJ, Van Balkom AJ, Van de
Lisdonk EH, Breteler MH, Van Den Hoogen HJ, Zitman FG. Tapering off
long-term benzodiazepine use with or without group cognitive–behavioural
therapy: three-condition, randomised controlled trial. The British Journal of Psychiatry. 2003 Jun 1;182(6):498-504. PubMed link
This study examined benzodiazepine taper
in two groups: taper only and CBT group plus taper, and compared this to
usual care. The findings were that tapering was more successful than
usual care and that CBT had no added benefit and that success and
intervention type had no association with measures of psychological
functioning.
68) Morin CM, Bastien C, Guay B, Radouco-Thomas M, Leblanc J,
Vallières A. Randomized clinical trial of supervised tapering and
cognitive behavior therapy to facilitate benzodiazepine discontinuation
in older adults with chronic insomnia. American Journal of Psychiatry. 2004 Feb 1;161(2):332-42. PubMed link
This study consisted of three
interventions in older adults: a supervised withdrawal taper,
cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia, or taper plus CBT. More
patients who received taper plus CBT were benzodiazepine-free at the end
of the initial intervention than patients with either tapering or CBT
alone, though all three groups reduced the quantity and frequency of
benzodiazepine use.
69) Mol AJ, Voshaar RO, Gorgels WJ, Breteler MH, Van Balkom AJ, Van
de Lisdonk EH, Kan CC, Mulder J, Zitman FG. The absence of
benzodiazepine craving in a general practice benzodiazepine
discontinuation trial. Addictive Behaviors. 2006 Feb 28;31(2):211-22. PubMed link
The authors conducted a 21-month study of
benzodiazepine craving in benzodiazepine users undergoing three
interventions: a letter from their primary care provider, a supervised
discontinuation involving the primary care provider combined with CBT
groups, and usual care. They ound that the craving severity had
decreased for all groups, patients still using benzodiazepines reported
more craving than patients who had successfully quit during the study,
and that the way in which patients quit benzodiazepines did not affect
craving severity, though patients who received an additional
tapering-off intervention reported more severe craving. This suggests
that people attempting to quit benzodiazepines who are reporting a more
severe craving may need more intense interventions.
70) Nakao M, Takeuchi T, Nomura K, Teramoto T, Yano E. Clinical
application of paroxetine for tapering benzodiazepine use in
non‐major‐depressive outpatients visiting an internal medicine clinic. Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences. 2006 Oct 1;60(5):605-10. PubMed link
This study found that, among three groups
of non-depressed clients (one using SSRIs during benzodiazepine taper,
one doing benzodiazepine taper without SSRIs, and one not reducing use
of benzodiazepines) that the use of SSRI predicted becoming
benzodiazepine-free after adjusting for age, gender, length of
benzodiazepine use, and baseline HAM-A and HAM-D scores.
71) Vicens C, Fiol F, Llobera J, Campoamor F, Mateu C, Alegret S,
Socías I. Withdrawal from long-term benzodiazepine use: randomised trial
in family practice. Br J Gen Pract. 2006 Dec 1;56(533):958-63. PubMed link
This study found that an intervention
consisting of standardized advice given by a primary care doctor
combined with a tapering schedule and biweekly follow-up visits were
five times as likely as patients receiving usual care to discontinue
their use of benzodiazepines.
72) O’Connor K, Marchand A, Brousseau L, Aardema F, Mainguy N, Landry
P, Savard P, Leveille C, Lafrance V, Boivin S, Pitre D.
Cognitive–behavioural, pharmacological and psychosocial predictors of
outcome during tapered discontinuation of benzodiazepine. Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy. 2008 Jan 1;15(1):1-4. PubMed link
This study examined benzodiazepine
withdrawal in three groups (CBT plus taper, group support plus taper, or
taper only) and found that outcomes in the CBT and group support groups
were equivalent.
73) Lader M, Tylee A, Donoghue J. Withdrawing benzodiazepines in primary care. CNS Drugs. 2009 Jan 1;23(1):19-34. PubMed link
This study reviews different withdrawal
strategies for benzodiazepines in a primary care setting. They suggest
that most clients can be withdrawn on a schedule 8-12 weeks in length,
but for clients who have tried previously and unsuccessfully to stop a
schedule as long as 26 weeks could be necessary.
74) Otto MW, McHugh RK, Simon NM, Farach FJ, Worthington JJ, Pollack
MH. Efficacy of CBT for benzodiazepine discontinuation in patients with
panic disorder: further evaluation. Behaviour Research and Therapy. 2010 Aug 31;48(8):720-7. PubMed link
This study examined benzodiazepine taper
in three groups: taper only, CBT plus taper, and relaxation plus taper
and found that CBT had a significantly larger effect size than either of
the other two groups at a six-month follow-up.
75) Parr JM, Kavanagh DJ, Young R, Mitchell G. Acceptability of
cognitive‐behaviour therapy via the Internet for cessation of
benzodiazepine use. Drug and Alcohol Review. 2011 May 1;30(3):306-14. PubMed link
This was a study of the acceptability of
CBT delivered over the Internet (consisting of completing online
assessments and reading newsletters, with therapist contact via email)
for cessation of benzodiazepines and found that 8 of 14 reduced intake
by half according to self-report, and five stopped use entirely.
76) Bobes J, Rubio G, Teran A, Cervera G, López-Gómez V, Vilardaga I,
Pérez M. Pregabalin for the discontinuation of long-term
benzodiazepines use: an assessment of its effectiveness in daily
clinical practice. European Psychiatry. 2012 May 31;27(4):301-7. PubMed link
This was a prospective, uncontrolled,
observational study of the use of pregabalin for benzodiazepine
withdrawal in people age 18 and older. Success was being free of
benzodiazepines according to a urine screen at 12 weeks. Though
pregablin showed promise in alleviating anxiety and other withdrawal
symptoms, the authors state that a placebo-controlled study should be
conducted and that long-term maintenance of these results, withdrawal
from pregabalin, and appropriate withdrawal schedules have yet to be
investigated.
77) Furuya M, Miyaoka T, Wake R, Nagahama M, Kawano K, Yamashita S,
Ieda M, Ezoe S, Horiguchi J. Possibility of early withdrawal of
benzodiazepine hypnotics by combination with ramelteon for the treatment
of insomnia: A pilot study. Sleep and Biological Rhythms. 2013 Jan 1;11(1):55-61. PubMed link
This prospective observational study
examined the effectiveness of ramelteon, a melatonin receptor agonist,
on insomnia related to benzodiazepine withdrawal. They found that
sleep-related scores improved after beginning ramelteon and that there
were no adverse-related sleep effects such as rebound insomnia that
occurred with tapering of benzodiazepine hypnotics as ramelteon was
used.
78) Gould RL, Coulson MC, Patel N, Highton-Williamson E, Howard RJ.
Interventions for reducing benzodiazepine use in older people:
meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. The British Journal of Psychiatry. 2014 Feb 1;204(2):98-107. PubMed link
This study was a systematic review and
meta-analysis of 10 studies of benzodiazepine withdrawal strategies in
older adults. The most successful intervention was supervised withdrawal
with psychotherapy and withdrawal with prescribing interventions
compared to treatment as usual, education placebo, withdrawal with or
without drug placebo, and psychotherapy alone. Multifaceted prescribing
interventions were also significant compared to control consisting of
treatment as usual or placebo.
79) Baandrup L, Fagerlund B, Jennum P, Lublin H, Hansen JL, Winkel P,
Gluud C, Oranje B, Glenthoj BY. Prolonged-release melatonin versus
placebo for benzodiazepine discontinuation in patients with
schizophrenia: a randomized clinical trial-the SMART trial protocol. BMC psychiatry. 2011 Oct 5;11(1):160. PubMed link
This study found that after 24 weeks of
tapering, the melatonin group had similar rates of benzodiazepine dosage
and similar rates of cessation to controls, and thus that melatonin
does not appear to assist with cessation of benzodiazepine use.
80) Baandrup L, Glenthøj BY, Jennum PJ. Objective and subjective
sleep quality: Melatonin versus placebo add-on treatment in patients
with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder withdrawing from long-term
benzodiazepine use. Psychiatry Research. 2016 Jun 30;240:163-9. PubMed link
This study found that after 24 weeks of
tapering, melatonin had no added effect on sleep quality, and that
decreased benzodiazepine use at 24 weeks was associated with decreased
stage 2 sleep.
81) Lader M, Kyriacou A. Withdrawing Benzodiazepines in Patients With Anxiety Disorders. Current Psychiatry Reports. 2016 Jan 1;18(1):1-8. PubMed link
This article states that available
evidence suggests an 8-12 week tapering schedule with the aim of
complete cessation in under 6 months; schedules should be slowed if
withdrawal symptoms become overly distressing.
Brain Changes
The GABAA receptors have been investigated as playing a key role in benzodiazepine dependence. Cognitive impairment compared with normative data was still present after benzodiazepine tapering among some clients, though cognitive performance improved after withdrawal.82) Wafford KA. GABA A receptor subtypes: any clues to the mechanism of benzodiazepine dependence? Current Opinion in Pharmacology. 2005 Feb 28;5(1):47-52. PubMed link
This article concludes that future
research with subtype-insensitive mice may play a role in further
research about how GABA A receptor subtypes contribute to benzodiazepine
dependence, as well as the use of subtype-selective drugs.
83) Licata SC, Rowlett JK. Abuse and dependence liability of benzodiazepine-type drugs: GABA A receptor modulation and beyond. Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior. 2008 Jul 31;90(1):74-89. PubMed link
The authors examine the literature
concerning neurobiological mechanisms of physical dependence on and
withdrawal from benzodiazepines, and call for more research into this
issue to inform development of safer and more effective medications.
84) Heberlein A, Lenz B, Muschler M, Frieling H, Buechl R, Gröschl M,
Kornhuber J, Bleich S, Hillemacher T. BDNF plasma levels decrease
during benzodiazepine withdrawal in patients suffering from comorbidity
of depressive disorder and benzodiazepine dependence. Psychopharmacology. 2010 Apr 1;209(2):213-5. PubMed link
This study found that brain-derived
neuronal factor plasma levels were significantly increased in
benzodiazepine-dependent patients compared to age- and sex-matched
controls and decreased significantly due to benzodiazepine withdrawal,
which indicates that benzodiazepines may work according to a similar
neurological mechanism to antidepressant medications.
85) Vinkers CH, Olivier B. Mechanisms underlying tolerance after
long-term benzodiazepine use: a future for subtype-selective GABAA
receptor modulators?. Advances in pharmacological sciences. 2012 Mar
29;2012. PubMed link
The authors review the different
neurobiological processes by which people may develop tolerance to
benzodiazepines and recommend that a potential solution to developing
tolerance may be a varied dosing schedule including placebos, as
development of tolerance is a process that differs across individuals
and drugs.
86) Baandrup L, Fagerlund B, Glenthoj B. Neurocognitive performance,
subjective well-being, and psychosocial functioning after benzodiazepine
withdrawal in patients with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder: a
randomized clinical trial of add-on melatonin versus placebo. European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience. 2016 Jul 11:1-9. PubMed link
This study found that, among 80 patients
with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, cognitive impairment compared
with normative data was still present after benzodiazepine tapering,
though cognitive performance improved after tapering. The addition of
melatonin did not affect cognition, well-being, or psychosocial
functioning.
Thank You Ms Andrews and MIA.
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