Anonymous the use of anti-epileptic medications for use in mental health disorders came about only because a doctor somewhere noticed that his epileptic patient appeared calmer whilst on his epileptic meds. Or maybe my memory serves me wrong and they noticed their mice were a bit more dopier that usual...I cannot recall and it doesn't matter. This led to a explosion of let's just call it
living human lab rats...and I was one of them, who were 'experimented' or 'trialed' on them to see what would happen.... Well they never asked me but hey if a drug company can make one drug serve two master's and sell more...they will give it a red hot go!
The 'electrical impulses' which is a bit of a crude description regarding Epilepsy anyway...only appeared to slow down. It hasn't actually been proven either. Hence you can get numerous Epileptic patients who do not respond to drugs made specifically for that condition and continue to suffer Epileptic fits and who do die.
Anyway, getting back to the use of those drugs in the mental health area again, those drugs have been also shown not to be effective in numerous patients and no consistent and proven results. So after absolutely intolerable adverse reactions I was weaned off them and that was just about worse than staying on them. I still cannot pick to this day which was actually worse...
So, there are no hard and fast drugs that work in all medical patients with the same diseases or illnesses. The same goes for drugs in the mental health areas. If there was then theoretically everyone would be absolutely fine because we would all just be re-wired by taking a pill or two.
It's not a happy place to be but that is the reality and be sure to read this,
that's my own personal experience I am speaking from. I can assure you there is not a one size fits all in anything....
it’s just that the electrical disregulation has manifested as different disorders. It’s a valid argument.
No it isn't.