Xanax (Alprazolam) Tapering with Mark Leeds, D.O.
Xanax (alprazolam) is one of the most widely prescribed benzodiazepines in the United States — and one of the most difficult to discontinue safely. Patients who have taken alprazolam as prescribed by their physicians often develop significant physical dependence, sometimes within weeks of regular use. This is not addiction. It is a predictable physiological response to a medication that alters GABA-A receptor function in the brain.
The distinction matters: a person who takes Xanax exactly as directed by their doctor and develops physical dependence is not exhibiting addictive behavior. They are experiencing iatrogenic dependence — a medical condition caused by a prescribed treatment. The appropriate response is a carefully supervised medical taper, not an addiction recovery program.
Why Xanax Is Especially Difficult to Taper
Alprazolam presents unique challenges among benzodiazepines. It has a short half-life (approximately 6-12 hours), high potency, and significant interdose withdrawal — meaning patients can experience withdrawal symptoms between scheduled doses even while still taking the medication. This makes abrupt discontinuation or rapid dose reduction particularly dangerous.
Many patients have been told by their prescribing physician to simply stop taking it or have been given a 7-14 day taper schedule. These approaches are medically inappropriate for most patients with established Xanax dependence. Abrupt discontinuation of alprazolam can cause seizures and other serious medical complications.
The Ashton Manual Crossover Protocol
Dr. Leeds follows the principles established by the late Professor C. Heather Ashton of Newcastle University in The Ashton Manual — the foundational reference for benzodiazepine tapering. The preferred approach for Xanax tapering is a crossover to diazepam (Valium).
Why crossover? Diazepam has a much longer half-life (20-100 hours, with active metabolites extending further), which provides more stable blood levels and smoother dose reductions. In Dr. Leeds’ clinical experience, patients who are able to crossover to diazepam have a more comfortable taper, heal faster, and maintain better overall functioning with respect to activities of daily living.
If diazepam cannot be used — due to allergy, adverse reaction, or metabolic differences — the preferred alternative for alprazolam specifically is a crossover to clonazepam (Klonopin), which also has a longer half-life than Xanax.
Hyperbolic Tapering and Compound Pharmacy Formulations
Dr. Leeds uses hyperbolic tapering — a method where dose reductions become progressively smaller as the total dose decreases. This approach reflects the non-linear relationship between dose and GABA-A receptor occupancy. A 1mg reduction from 4mg is very different neurologically than a 1mg reduction from 2mg.
To achieve the precision required for safe tapering, Dr. Leeds works with compound pharmacies that prepare custom liquid formulations. These allow dose reductions as small as fractions of a milligram — far more precise than what is possible by cutting tablets. Compound pharmacies can also prepare precisely dosed capsules when appropriate.
The Maudsley Deprescribing Guidelines, published by psychiatrists at King’s College London, provide additional evidence-based protocols that inform Dr. Leeds’ tapering approach.
What to Expect: Timeline and Process
There is no single correct timeline for tapering Xanax. The pace is determined by how the patient’s nervous system responds — never forced into a predetermined schedule.
- Minimum: Approximately 6 months at the absolute shortest
- Typical: One year is reasonable for many patients
- Extended: 18 months or longer is often appropriate
- Some tapers may take several years
Dr. Leeds provides weekly one-on-one video appointments, often up to an hour in length, to monitor progress and adjust the taper plan. Patients also have 24/7 text access for urgent questions between appointments. The taper adapts continuously based on patient feedback and physiological response.
Tolerance Withdrawal and Kindling
Tolerance withdrawal is a phenomenon where withdrawal symptoms emerge while still taking Xanax at the same dose, as the body develops tolerance. Many patients are already symptomatic before any taper begins — this is not unusual and does not mean the taper will be impossible.
Kindling is the phenomenon where repeated withdrawal episodes — from rapid tapers, cold turkey attempts, or forced detox programs — worsen the severity of subsequent withdrawal. This is why failed rapid tapers make future tapering harder, and why getting it right with proper medical supervision matters.
BIND: Benzodiazepine-Induced Neurological Dysfunction
During and after Xanax tapering, patients may experience a range of neurological symptoms collectively known as BIND (Benzodiazepine-Induced Neurological Dysfunction). These can include adrenaline surges, insomnia, burning sensations, cognitive difficulties, sensory sensitivity, gastrointestinal disturbances, and many other symptoms spanning multiple body systems.
These symptoms are not signs of a new illness. They are manifestations of a destabilized nervous system — specifically, the stress regulation systems that GABA normally helps control. The nervous system is not broken. It is responding to the loss of a chemical it was forced to depend on, and with time, safety, and proper medical supervision, it can recalibrate.
Dr. Leeds treats BIND-related conditions directly — including MCAS-like symptoms, POTS, air hunger, and autonomic instability — as part of the tapering process. He does not simply refer out.
Recovery: Windows and Waves
Recovery from Xanax dependence typically follows a pattern known as windows and waves. Windows are periods of significant improvement where the patient feels substantially better. Waves are periods where symptoms return or intensify. This is normal and expected — not a sign of failure or regression.
Over time, windows tend to become longer and more frequent, while waves become shorter and less intense. Understanding this pattern reduces fear, which itself is therapeutic — because fear amplifies symptoms by keeping the stress system activated.
Why Choose Dr. Leeds for Xanax Tapering
Dr. Leeds is a member of the medical advisory board of the Benzodiazepine Information Coalition (BIC) and host of The Rehab Podcast on the Mental Health News Radio Network. His concierge telemedicine practice provides:
- Weekly video appointments, often up to an hour — not a 15-minute med check
- Direct physician care at every appointment — no handoff to coaches or non-physician staff
- Truly individualized treatment plans that adapt to the patient’s response
- 24/7 text access between appointments
- Ashton Manual crossover protocols with compound pharmacy formulations
- Respect for patient agency — patients retain control over taper pace and direction
Medical management is available to patients residing in Florida. To schedule an initial consultation, please use the contact form.
