I looked up a few papers and tables and found different perspectives. Generally, citalopram is allowed in the range of 20-40 mg, and zoloft 50-200. In one table, it was stated that the starting dose of citalopram is 20 and zoloft is 50, which is quite logical. From that, I can infer that 100 zoloft is 20+20 = 40 mg of citalopram, but it looks quite doubtful because 40 is the max dosage.

Furthermore, I found one study in which citalopram and zoloft were compared in the ranges of 20-40 and 50-100 respectively. In another study, they were 20-40 and 50-150. I’m still a bit confused. I took 40 mg for a couple of days and it didn’t strike me with a surge of apathy, but I felt it definitely more potent than just 100 mg of zoloft.

  • sunshine@slrpnk.net
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    Hi! First off, I am not a medical doctor nor am I a licensed psychiatrist, so please supercede any of my information with what your personal doctor/care team says.

    Second, when considering the therapeutic range of medication you cannot just look at increasing the mgs. The way you’ve calculated these trial dosages are following a raw formula (base starting dose multiplied by some number) and that isn’t taking in account the efficacy curve. That’s a really wordy way to put it, sorry. Consider that 100mg is around a 33% increase from the 50-200 range. You’d be looking for a similar 33% increase in the 20-40 range (27ish mg).

    Basically, just because 100mg Zoloft was your starting dosage, you’d more realistically be looking at a dosage of 25-35mg Citalopram.

    And depending on what the medication you’re looking at is made of, dosages can get wild and may not compare using the efficacy curve or my i-just-woke-up math. If you’re already looking at papers to determine personal dosages, try following along with the lowest dosage, see if it has effect, then take the next dosage up. Starting right at the 40mg may be too intense for your system overall, and could make your body intolerant of Citalopram if you go too hard. It’s much, much better to start lower than you think you need and work up. Best of luck!

    Source: I have experience in drug research and development. Pictured below is my scratch math. +50 for each 33% increase on Zoloft, +7ish for each 33% increase on Citalopram. If anyone catches a mathematical error please lmk! :)

    • Epistome@lemmy.mlOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      1 year ago

      I thought about using ratios, but it looks counterintuitive to me. If I take two pills of 50mg, the effect doubles as if I take one 50mg pill, doesn’t it? Hopefully, the Zoloft supply chain’s restored in my country, so I’m back to it

      • sunshine@slrpnk.net
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        3
        ·
        1 year ago

        Two pills of 50mg will double compared to the one 50mg…of that active drug. That number doesn’t translate over the same to a different active drug. Just look at LD50s for that concept.

  • Lumidaub@feddit.de
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    I’m not aware that you can even do that kind of comparison. Those are two different active ingredients, there is a very good chance they’ll do very different things in your brain.