it was s precancerous (benign) adenoma. I've had a 1 year and three year clean follow-up!
The check engine light comes on one more time I may have a meltdown...![]()
What I experience is a hair trigger fight or flight response to unpleasant experiences (information, situations, etc). I then project negative outcomes, physical and material (consider my OP) based on passed experiences of things turning negative. This sets off a cycle that can last for days.!
mr.cooper69
Do you know the therapeutic dose for l-Theanine and it safe limit?
An aside note - although GABA does not cross the BBB, when acutely dosed, it is very effective at rapidly reducing and sustaining symptoms of anxiety that I experience such as reduced BP and HR and tremor like feelings. It's pretty amazing actually. It breaks the downward cycle of thoughts that come with episodes.
Have you ever looked into getting a prescription for propranolol? It can be taken as those situations occur or daily.
Picamilon wakes me up in the middle of the night something horrible. Like rebound insomnia.Have you tried picamilon?
I've noticed that when people opt for either beta or alpha blockers for acute anxiety it can sometimes make the anxiety worse. The physical symptoms diminish but the anxiety is still present.
my GP is all I've seen and she gets uptight when I propose meds.Have you ever looked into getting a prescription for propranolol? It can be taken as those situations occur or daily.
no not yetHave you tried picamilon?
I've noticed that when people opt for either beta or alpha blockers for acute anxiety it can sometimes make the anxiety worse. The physical symptoms diminish but the anxiety is still present.
My old faithful cup or to many has become and detriment to my sense of wellbeing. Heart pounds and that sets of the cycle.I've been using theanine at 200mg to 600mg daily for a few years without tolerance developing. I love it. I've even used it up to a gram at a time just a couple of times to counteract excessive caffeine stimulation.
Thanks for this as I have had many colonoscopies starting as far back as early thirties. im confident it will not get meMany polyps are technically pre-cancerous, but colon cancer is super slow. Progression to carcinoma takes well over a decade. People who keep up with their scopes rarely if ever get colon cancer. Again, it's less of an issue than it was in the past. Even if polyps show up on your next scope, still no need to worry
Vigilance for your health is....healthy. Worrying isn't!
Thanks for this as I have had many colonoscopies starting as far back as early thirties. im confident it will not get meMany polyps are technically pre-cancerous, but colon cancer is super slow. Progression to carcinoma takes well over a decade. People who keep up with their scopes rarely if ever get colon cancer. Again, it's less of an issue than it was in the past. Even if polyps show up on your next scope, still no need to worry
Vigilance for your health is....healthy. Worrying isn't!
my GP is all I've seen and she gets uptight when I propose meds.
I wouldn't use picamilon as a sleep aid personally anywaysPicamilon wakes me up in the middle of the night something horrible. Like rebound insomnia.
Yeah dude, anxiety is a real bitchYeah, I should clarify. It's not a cure, but it is a way to deal with that flight or fight response when it occurs. You still need to address the underlying issue, but that really goes for any pharmaceutical treatment of anxiety.
I have gotten a prescription for it from my GP. I only suggested it because it will help with the racing heart that can trigger a panic attack, or at least it has helped myself.
So does it slow your heart rate down? Seems most people tend to get anxiety from the anticipation of an event and then the heart goes. I'm curious how stopping a racing heart helps out.
So does it slow your heart rate down? Seems most people tend to get anxiety from the anticipation of an event and then the heart goes. I'm curious how stopping a racing heart helps out.
It's a beta blocker, so it blocks epinephrine and norepinephrine at beta 1 and 2 andrenergic receptors. It's indicated for hypertension, angina, and tremors, but people often take it for stage fright. So anxiety might typically get your heart racing, but by helping keep it at a calm, normal pace, you're not going to focus on it and make yourself more anxious. It helps break that cycle.
how do you measure neurotransmitters in the brain of a living human being? genuinely curious. if it was easily done one could know exactly which medication the Patient requires.
CSF is cerebrospinal fluid and physicians can perform a lumbar puncture to get a sample for testing. As for your other question, that's way more advanced than what you're going to get in a visit to your doctor's office. Some fMRI techniques can follow neurotransmitters, but this is mostly used in the research world still.can you only measure amounts or also Location, as in which receptor type it has bound to? i would guess not, because that could lead to such extreme advancement in Treatment, actually knowing, lets say, which dopamine receptor is the main Problem in a specific patients case and then finding a way to specifically block that exact receptor. that way one would really know what they are targetting for example in case of a psychosis instead of simply blocking a bunch of different Transmitters and receptor types, of which some may actually be beneficial.
what does csf mean? the other two are scans i assume (not my first language), but can one actually recognize neurotransmitters on Imaging? that's why i am curious what the csf sampling is.
although anecdotally they may relieve symptoms short term the long term issues regarding tolerance, dependence and withdrawal far out way the short term benefit IMHOstrangely i found that Opioids have the broadest spectrum of positive effects on mental Problems, maybe because they affect other neurotransmitters along with them and Balance out any potential negative effects due to their euphoria, but this is pure speculation.
is the Technology too expensive or not accurate enough yet? if one could determine not only concentrations of neurotransmitters but also their specific binding behaviour to their respective receptors, that would lead to an incredible advance in Terms of how to decide which medication to prescribe instead of just guessing and hoping that if we try to cover lots of, for example, Serotonin receptors, we may get the right one. (which of course neglects the Problem of the ones that may cause the Patient issues)
because just because someone has a Serotonin or Dopamine or noradrenaline or Endorphin deficiency, doesn't mean he requires the same med as someone who is also deficient in one of those. then even when it is almsot certain that Serotonin is the culprit, People fo through 5 different ssris and None of them actually Ends up being helpful or has too many sides etc. not to mention the possible other subtle imbalances that are very hard to Diagnose by looking at someone and asking them how they feel...
strangely i found that Opioids have the broadest spectrum of positive effects on mental Problems, maybe because they affect other neurotransmitters along with them and Balance out any potential negative effects due to their euphoria, but this is pure speculation.
my dr. told me the genetic testing is a subject that many People are against and that is why Research in this field is being limited from what it could be.somehow they are afraid of the subject, Kind of like: "leave my genes alone" he thinks it is silly and says it would really help knowing what to prescribe, not to mention other fields off medicine where one would probably know well in advance what somebody is predisposed of or not. but neurochemistry is the only Thing i have some knowledge about so i will not try to speculate on that.
as for the Opioids, in the short term, they can save lives. of course you can't take them for life, but i have seen psychosis and suicidality end within minutes after Administration of oxycodone, i think the only other Thing that is capable of that would be narcosis.
haloperidol doesn't stop psychosis necessarily, i have seen guys walk with their bed they were tied to on their backs around the room they were locked in while they still had the strength. later they would be unable to walk. certainly incapable of comitting suicide and i never said that my dr. prescribes Opioids in cases of acute suicidality, just that he agrees they are underused in psychiatry and other medications are overused.
he Comes from a time where they actually injected themselves with haloperidol to see what it is like so they would know what they give to their Patient.
ativan from what i witnessed has an incredible Long time to actually take effect and despite being the Standard Benzodiazepine takes much more than the usually prescribed dosages. and i do realize it has a short half-life. yet diazepam works faster and i have witnessed cases where 5mg of subingual lorazepam would do barely anythign while 20mg diazepam worked much better.
and i don't speak from working in hospitals but from direct experience of friends, People they met in the Hospital and my own experiements with These substances. i Need at least 5 mg lorazepam to feel anything and can easily take ten. also 8mg clonazepam, not much happens. 20mg diazepam seems mot reliable, it always works and works the same, instead of sometimes knocking you out and sometimes doing nothing for hours.
so why are your patients on opiates? do you get mostly suicidal cancer patients? it is not like People with a neurochemical disorder have chronic pain as well most of the time. and opiates implies morphine basically. why not Opioids? why no oxycodone?
well maybe i am a weird case. 300mg of oral morphine doesn't even touch a toothache for me.
the rest i wrote i have seen and experienced in actuality though.
you are a medical Student right, not a psychiatrist? or an assistant dr.? what field do you or will you specialize in?
Even if opioids have some anti-psychotic effects, they have the potential to induce their own psychosis and are simply a horrible option to put in the hands of somebody that is suicidal.