ColoradoBoy90
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2015
- Messages
- 219
Note/edit: This is NOT to get high. These are meds for psychiatric disorders under the care of a doctor! They do NOT get you high, in fact they very likely will make you VERY ILL if you do not need them and are not prescribed them. Definitely a very dumb idea to try to take Psychiatric meds like these to get High, you?ll get VIOLENTLY sick and mess up your brain chemistry.
I see a doctor and she even KNOWS I am online asking these kind of questions, as I want to get off all other drugs and get stabilized on a anti-depresssnt combo VS being on drugs like Benzos forever, and the Benzos they do not even work. My doctor admits she does not know why the mixture works together, only that it came from a popular CA psychiatrist. She encouraged me to look into it more and find out why it works so special (those doctors are rare) as she admits she does not know why they are special together, and is actually open to learning new information. But that is after she fact checks everything of course. But still cool I have a doctor who is at least willing to look at my research I do.
QUESTION:
What is special about Effexor + mirtazapine? I know it is called California rocket fuel. I also remember once reading that it quote ? gives a Quad boost to serotonin, a triple boost to Noradrenaline, and a double boost to dopamine? - no idea if that is true or not, I forgot where I read that.
I know that in high does Effexor starts to reuptake dopamine or so. Cannot remember if it is at 150mg or 300mg before Effexor works on dopamine, somewhat. Is that the reason why Effexor is special? If so, what about the couple of other SNRIs out there, would they work as well as Effexor+mirtazapine, or no? I kept reading that Effexor + mirtazapine = California rocket fuel and they work together in special ways that no other 2 antidepressants do. Not sure if that is true or not.
Do they really have some type of synergy that no other 2 antidepressants can do? Or is it just named that because Effexor is the most common SNRI? It also seems like an SSRI + mirtazapine would be better for most depression, but I am not sure.
Edit: I do not know why commas or question marks show up as question marks. Tried to retype it without any of them.
I see a doctor and she even KNOWS I am online asking these kind of questions, as I want to get off all other drugs and get stabilized on a anti-depresssnt combo VS being on drugs like Benzos forever, and the Benzos they do not even work. My doctor admits she does not know why the mixture works together, only that it came from a popular CA psychiatrist. She encouraged me to look into it more and find out why it works so special (those doctors are rare) as she admits she does not know why they are special together, and is actually open to learning new information. But that is after she fact checks everything of course. But still cool I have a doctor who is at least willing to look at my research I do.
QUESTION:
What is special about Effexor + mirtazapine? I know it is called California rocket fuel. I also remember once reading that it quote ? gives a Quad boost to serotonin, a triple boost to Noradrenaline, and a double boost to dopamine? - no idea if that is true or not, I forgot where I read that.
I know that in high does Effexor starts to reuptake dopamine or so. Cannot remember if it is at 150mg or 300mg before Effexor works on dopamine, somewhat. Is that the reason why Effexor is special? If so, what about the couple of other SNRIs out there, would they work as well as Effexor+mirtazapine, or no? I kept reading that Effexor + mirtazapine = California rocket fuel and they work together in special ways that no other 2 antidepressants do. Not sure if that is true or not.
Do they really have some type of synergy that no other 2 antidepressants can do? Or is it just named that because Effexor is the most common SNRI? It also seems like an SSRI + mirtazapine would be better for most depression, but I am not sure.
Edit: I do not know why commas or question marks show up as question marks. Tried to retype it without any of them.
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