Jin23
Member
Never SSRIs (I don't think I will ever agree to take these, I am used to depression and don't want to hide it).
This is a really uneducated opinion. Thing is, chronic anxiety is down to a dysregulated HPA axis. There is also a high (neuro) inflammatory state present along with fucked neurobiology which also means fucked neurochemistry. Put together, it's called depression and GAD. Treating GAD (and a depressed neurobiology) should be done with something that "heals" the brain. Something that causes hippocampal neurogenesis, creates new neuronal paths, leads to fear extinction, etc. This is achieved with a) modulating the HPA axis via serotonin HT1a and HT2c receptors and b) TRK-B receptor agonism via BDNF. All of it also leads to lowered inflammation.
Now, I don't know what story you told your psychiatrist, and what kind of a doctor he is, paid, public healthcare, etc., but gabapentin is definitely far from being the first choice and also the best choice to achieve this. If you don't want to take SSRI's, bc you are ideologically against them, you have other options. You can tackle just the BDNF route via cerebrolysine injections coupled with CBT and meditation. You can also add psychadelics. But "antidepressives", be it SSRI's or SNRI's DNRI's, MAOI's,TCA's, Buspirone, Trazadone, etc. etc. are all much much better options. Vortioxetine maybe, that just kills anxiety like nothing else, and in dosages bellow 10mg's, doesn't really work like an SSRI. Trust me, I've taken these drugs and I can say that the effects are eye opening and life changing.
Regarding adhd if left untreated can and often does lead to chronic anxiety. But anxiety also leads to adhd. If you truly have problems with executive functions, serotonin modulating drugs aren't a good option. It's the reason why I can't take them, I can't even read one sentence from a book when I'm on them, as my mind just keeps forget what I'm doing and wanders off. But, you might be different, especially if you don't have problems with thought inhibition in the first place.
Pregabalin, while it's effects are immediate, it doesn't heal the brain as above mentioned drugs do and will lead to dependency. Idk, maybe it will help regulate the hpa axis, haven't looked up studies on it, but again, dependency and bad withdrawal, lots of horror stories online, suggest you read them a bit before you commit to a long term solution.
