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Benzodiazepines - Pills That Sedate but Don't Rehabilitate

Benzodiazepines - Pills That Sedate but Don't Rehabilitate

Update: 2025-09-01
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Dr. Casey Grover explores the challenging world of benzodiazepines, explaining why these commonly prescribed medications can create more problems than they solve for patients struggling with anxiety and other conditions.

• Benzodiazepines work like alcohol in pill form, enhancing the brain's natural "downer" chemical GABA
• Long-term use leads to tolerance, dependence, and potentially Benzodiazepine-Induced Neurological Dysfunction (BIND)
• The four most commonly prescribed benzos are diazepam (Valium), lorazepam (Ativan), clonazepam (Klonopin), and alprazolam (Xanax)
• Benzodiazepine withdrawal can cause seizures months after the last dose, making it particularly dangerous
• Unlike opioid addiction, there are no specialized medications to treat benzodiazepine addiction
• Tapering from benzodiazepines is extremely challenging, often taking months or years with patients experiencing severe rebound symptoms
• Modern medical understanding now recognizes benzos as inappropriate for long-term anxiety treatment
• Case studies demonstrate how patients prescribed benzos for anxiety often never learn proper coping skills and suffer increasingly worse symptoms

Thanks for listening and remember treating addiction saves lives.

To contact Dr. Grover: ammadeeasy@fastmail.com

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Benzodiazepines - Pills That Sedate but Don't Rehabilitate

Benzodiazepines - Pills That Sedate but Don't Rehabilitate

Casey Grover, MD, FACEP, FASAM