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Re: Foreign Medications » SLS

Posted by Elizabeth on September 8, 2001, at 21:52:02

In reply to Re: Foreign Medications, posted by SLS on August 31, 2001, at 19:26:57

> You might be right about the DA, although I believe it is thought that reuptake inhibition is negligible at therapeutic dosages.

That could be a marketing claim. (They also said that Xanax wouldn't cause dependence, you know. < g >)

> Who knows? I often wonder how it is determined the amount of anything that can be neglected.

Trial and error?

> I was sure I was on my way to Jamaica.

I hope you don't mean this literally. :-)

> It was like Dorothy opening up the door of her black-and-white house to the rush of technicolor that was Oz.

Heh -- I've made that analogy (I'm sure many others have too).

> I desparately and recklessly self-medicated in a frantic effort to get it back, and ended up in the hospital from a Nardil overdose. It wasn't so bad, although I was a bit upset that they didn't serve me sorbé to clear my palette before regaling me with charcoal.

Stuff's gross, isn't it?

> To my surprise, I felt terribly worse after discontinuing it - worse than I had before starting it.

It's called "withdrawal." :-) (Ever quit MAOIs abruptly? Same idea.)

> I still like the idea of selectively inhibiting MAO-A. I really don't care if it's reversible or not. With respect to inhibition of MAO-A, if comparing moclobemide to clorgyline represents a comparison between reversiblity and irreversibility, reversibility would equate to reduced efficacy.

Yup.

> Elizabeth, do you know where adinazolam is being sold? I tried it in 1984 or thereabouts. It was extaordinarily clean.

Interesting. How so ("clean," that is)? (I mentioned in a previous post that they have it in France and Germany, Switzerland too I imagine.)

> Unfortunately, I didn't respond to it. It was completely neutral, having none of the sedating or hypnotic effects of other benzodiazepines.

I've found many ineffective drugs to be "neutral" (Zoloft, Serzone, Lamictal, ...).

> Ultimately, he was surprised to see how many of his patients responded to it. I think it is interesting that both adinazolam and alprazolam are triazolobenzodiazepines and that both have demonstrated antidepressant properties. However, where does that leave Halcion?

Too much amnesia!

-e


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poster:Elizabeth thread:76877
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