Ativan (Lorazepam) addiction: Signs, symptoms and side effects

Lorazepam, sold as Ativan, is prescribed for anxiety attacks, pre-surgery nerves, and alcohol withdrawal symptoms. It acts within an hour and lasts 10-20 hours, which is longer than Xanax but shorter than Valium. This middle-ground duration means Ativan is often seen as one of the safer benzos, but it is still often misused and can be highly addictive. Ativan addiction can cause enormous harm to health, and withdrawal can produce deadly symptoms. Understanding how lorazepam addiction traps people, the potential dangers, and what effective treatment looks like can be life-saving.

Lorazepam pills on hand

What is Ativan addiction?

Addiction to Ativan is when you can’t get through a day without it, no matter what it’s destroying. Ativan use usually starts with anxiety disorders, panic attacks or sometimes during alcohol detox, and it can bring the first relief you have had in months. Within 30-60 minutes, symptoms calm down, and you can feel more stable and able to function normally.

Ativan abuse means taking more than prescribed, using someone else’s tablets, or taking it for reasons that lorazepam is not approved for. Problems usually arise in a few weeks, when the dose that worked before barely touches your symptoms anymore. An extra half pill during a crisis then follows, but before long, you are taking double your prescription daily.

You can then form an Ativan dependence frighteningly quickly. Lorazepam forces massive GABA release, the chemical your brain uses to turn down anxiety and stress. However, constant Ativan abuse stops your brain’s natural GABA production, as it expects the drug to handle the job. If you skip your Ativan dose, there is no release of GABA from the brain to calm you, so you get slammed with rebound anxiety, panic attacks and other brutal withdrawal symptoms.

While dependent, any situation that makes you nervous becomes a reason to dose. All your time, money and energy become tied up getting and using Ativan, and even an increasing awareness of the damage can’t make you stop.

How can I spot Ativan addiction signs?

Prescription medication often feels inherently safe, making it easy to ignore how bad things have really become. If someone you know is in addiction denial or you’re worried about how much lorazepam you’re using, watch out for these Ativan addiction signs:

  • Taking Ativan multiple times daily when prescribed for as-needed use
  • Seeing your GP for refills weeks early or “doctor shopping” to get Ativan from more than one source
  • Doubling or tripling doses when anxiety spikes
  • Mixing Ativan with drugs and alcohol because your tolerance has built up so much
  • Horrible withdrawal symptoms override your intentions to quit
  • Lying to your loved ones about how much Ativan you take or the effects it is having
  • Knowing deep down you have lost control, but still not being able to stop

Why is Ativan addictive?

Ativan’s GABA effects, the brain ceasing its own GABA production, and withdrawal-triggered relapse are the driving factors behind Ativan dependence. But several other factors determine who slides from Ativan dependence into a psychological benzodiazepine addiction:

The anxiety-relief-anxiety cycle
Lorazepam works brilliantly at first, but the relief only lasts 10-12 hours before anxiety or panic returns with a vengeance. This creates a vicious loop of distress, taking Ativan, feeling better, feeling worse, and taking more.
Prescriptions with no exit plan
Ativan should be used for only two to four weeks maximum, according to most prescribing guidelines. But panic and anxiety disorders don’t resolve in a month, so some doctors may keep writing prescriptions, or you may buy Ativan illegally if your doctor won’t prescribe more.
The link between Ativan addiction and mental health
Some people use Ativan to manage depression, anxiety rooted in unresolved trauma, or for undiagnosed panic attacks, social anxiety, or conditions like bipolar disorder. Every time you take Ativan without addressing the actual underlying issue, it becomes a bandage over a wound that keeps getting worse underneath.
Your family history and genetics
Everyone’s body is different, and some people are just genetically more predisposed to drug addiction. This means that even if you take lorazepam as prescribed, you are more likely to develop an Ativan dependence.

Lorazepam addiction suffring

Ativan side effects and addiction dangers

Long-term Ativan misuse causes damage that spreads to every part of your physical and mental health. These are just some of the major dangers:

Ativan overdose
Taking too much lorazepam can stop your heart and breathing. This can happen with one big dose, or even regular doses, which flood your system because of how long lorazepam stays active. Mixing lorazepam with alcohol or other drugs, like sleeping pills, can increase the risk of respiratory or cardiac failure. If someone has taken Ativan and isn’t breathing normally or won’t wake up, call 999 immediately.
Propylene glycol intoxication
Ativan injections contain propylene glycol as a solvent, which can build up in the body with high or prolonged doses. This buildup can poison the blood and organs, causing confusion, seizures, low blood pressure, irregular heartbeat, and kidney failure. People receiving lorazepam through IV drips or repeated injections in hospitals are most at risk, especially if treatment goes on for several days.
Ativan withdrawal dangers
Ativan withdrawal can be tough and deadly. Symptoms include nights of insomnia, constant panic attacks, violent tremors, hallucinations and fatal seizures. You should never try a home detox, because the chances of Ativan relapse and a serious medical emergency are very high.
Emotional numbness and depression
Ativan addiction can dull all your emotions and make it hard to find happiness in anything. Many users develop severe depression that worsens the longer they take lorazepam, and some experience suicidal thoughts. This is a medical emergency, and you should seek professional help as soon as possible.
Paradoxical effects
Some people actually experience a worsening of their anxiety or panic symptoms when they use lorazepam. They may think that they just need to up their dose to stop the symptoms, and this greatly increases the risk of addiction, harm to health, and chances of an Ativan overdose.
Pregnancy and breastfeeding dangers
Lorazepam crosses the placenta and enters breast milk. Newborns can arrive underweight, struggling to breathe properly, refusing to feed, or already in Ativan withdrawal. Extreme care and medical supervision are needed if you are taking lorazepam when pregnant or nursing.

Finding help for Ativan addiction

Quitting Ativan safely starts with inpatient prescription drug detox, which will be tapered and may also require switching you to an alternative benzo that clears your system at a slower rate. This prevents the most uncomfortable and dangerous withdrawal symptoms, which your drug detox team will monitor.

Rehab programmes should begin right after detox, and examine everything in your life that made Ativan seem like the only solution. Co-occurring mental health conditions can also benefit from benzodiazepine rehab therapy, and you will receive help with relapse prevention planning, and hopefully a solid aftercare and alumni programme.

Recovery is a lifelong process, so after rehab, it is always advised to see what local support you can access. This may include SMART recovery groups, 12-step and NA meetings, and local therapy for ongoing anxiety and panic disorders.

We know all of this can feel daunting, but we can help you get started. Contact us today, and we can discuss everything else you need to know about Ativan addiction treatment.

Frequently Asked Questions

How quickly can Ativan addiction develop?
Physical Ativan dependence forms within two to three weeks of daily use. Psychological addiction can develop just as quickly because the anxiety relief is so powerful. Even when prescribed, users following the correct dosage can feel unable to stop within a month.
Can Ativan abuse cause accidents?
Yes, the combination of impaired memory, poor coordination, and slowed reactions creates a constant accident risk. Users are in danger of car accidents, workplace injuries, accidents at home, and risky behaviour when over-sedated. Older Ativan users, in particular, may experience severe confusion and have potentially life-threatening falls and accidents.
Can you die from Ativan withdrawal?
Yes. Stopping lorazepam suddenly can cause fatal seizures, severe dehydration, dangerous blood pressure spikes, and heart problems. Professional medical detox with gradual tapering and monitoring is essential.

(Click here to see works cited)