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While he may not get the full dose benefit, depending on his transit time, the XR formulation is more of a continuous release, as opposed to the burst of medication you get with the standard formula. This gives you a more steady blood level, instead of the peaks and valleys of the standard Effexor dosing.

So, even if there might be some waste, it might be a better option and better over-all result. That said, the proof is in the pudding. If he exhibits symptoms of withdrawal or under dosing, he will need to return to the split dosing with different formulas, increase the daily dose, or take smaller doses of the XR, but twice a day.

Good questions to discuss with his doctor. Each patient needs to be treated individually. Even discounting the shorter length of gut, he may metabolize the drug differently. Hope this helps give you some perspective. I am sure you already know it is never as simple as it seems it should be!

Jan Smiler
Jan Dollar
Hi Connie,
I have had some wonderful 'Wooppss!' events with LP drugs or slow release etc. As an epileptic they put me on a 24hr slow release pill that was supposed to keep me sezure free...I had absolutely no results and was sezuring out like crazy until one day I fell asleep and woke up 5 days later.
Darn pills were accumulating in the bottom of my pouch until something that I ate apparently disolved the protective layer and boom! I got it all at once.
Now I am very careful about anything that does not disolve properly in the 1st half of the gut. I also have a pill cutter or crusher that works very well on some difficult vitamins...
You need to be frank with your pharmacist and ask what you can do to make sure that you get the optimum dose with the minimum of waste or nasty side effects.
Sharon
skn69

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