I had been on Trazodone for a year (before that, it was Xyrem for years). For a long time, 50 MG of Traz helped, and then I needed to bump it up to 75 MG. It grew less and less helpful for my sleep. I've always had some next-day sedation with Traz.
Some of why it stopped working might have been the manufacturer. A couple of members helped me with that.
The last time I saw my sleep doctor, he said I could try Belsomra. I got the free pack of three 10 MG tablets. He also gave me a prescription for the free 10-day trial of Belsomra, 10 MG tablets also.
I've now gotten a regular 30-day prescription. My Blue Cross Anthem policy charges me $40 a month. If I choose to do mail order, it's $80 for a 3-month supply.
My sleep doctor told me to phase out Trazodone slowly while taking Belsomra. He told me to start out by reducing the Traz from 75 MG to 50 MG with 10 MG of Belsomra.
I found the 10 MG too low, as do most of the patients who have written about it. Only one reviewer I read about said that 10 MG worked for him. I think the manufacturers of Belsomra didn't even want a dose as low as 10 MG offered because that dose wasn't effective in clinical trials, but they lost on that count.
Anyway, I took it at that dose (50 MG Traz and 10 MG Belsomra) for 2 days before increasing to 15 MG.
What I found at the 10 MG is that it was too low to help, so I just had side effects. It didn't help sleep, but did make me extremely sedated the next day.
When I increased to 15 MG, though, it started helping. One thing I've noticed is that I'm having dreams now. When my sleep is really off, I don't dream. I don't know if the increased dream is a direct effect of Belsomra, maybe increasing REM, or if it's an indirect effect of better sleep.
Some people report nightmares and really disturbing dreams. I didn't have that effect.
Since starting the 15 MG, I've only had 1 night of bad sleep. All the other nights have been a lot better than before I started the drug. I feel like my sleep quality has improved.
At first the next-day sedation was intense, but that is getting better. I've been on it for a couple of weeks, I think.
When I first started the 15 MG and got better sleep, for several days I'd have times the next day when I felt great and energetic, but then got extremely sleepy before evening out.
I don't know if that was because of Belsomra or my body's reaction to getting better sleep after a long time of sleep disturbances. That has happened to me before when I suddenly started getting better sleep.
Some of the next-day sedation I'm feeling is probably because I'm still taking Traz. I'm going really slowly with tapering off it because I don't want to feel withdrawal symptoms. I'm down to 37 1/2 MG and will try cutting down to 25 MG soon. I haven't felt any withdrawal from it.
I'm continuing to take the bedtime and evening supplements I've been on for years, also. I'm going to start tapering off them, too, starting by taking less L-theanine. So I think the continued Traz with Belsomra as well as these supplements could make me feel more sedated than if I were on Belsomra alone.
However, even the next-day sedation I'm continuing to feel is better than the exhaustion from long-term sleep deprivation.
When I get down to less than 25 MG of Traz, I might try 20 MG of Belsomra.
So for anyone thinking of trying Belsomra, I'd suggest being patient and accepting you'll probably have more sedation the next day. In my case, that is getting better. If you do the free 3 tablets and the free 10-day trial, that will probably be long enough to see if it will help you.
Your doctor will probably have you taper off any current sleep medicines before or while you begin Belsomra, so you'd need to discuss how to do that.
So overall I'm pleased to be getting more and better sleep. However, I do feel a little uneasy that this is such a new drug. If I stay on it, I'm part of a big experiment to see if there are long-term effects.
In that respect, I'm a lot more comfortable with Traz. My PA said that Traz has side effects for some people, but it's been around for decades, so it's a known quantity. I do like that Belsomra doesn't affect Gaba the way that benzos do.
I read all the patient reviews of Belsomra I could find. Many people don't find it effective or can't put up with the side effects, but others benefit a lot. It seems to be hit or miss, but maybe worth trying.