Psychedelic Jay
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jun 23, 2009
- Messages
- 5,432
Duh, I'll do anything to pass by time in jail. That didn't mean it was comfortable.
... if a doc puts you on em you are out of control in most cases a lot of stupid docs will put u on them for sleep, why when there is shit just for sleep...
If you don't have a tolerance to Seroquel it'll most likely knock you out if you can't sleep from Adderall if you take like 100mgs of Seroquel.
Of course, it's impossible to give you a definite answer about what it will do, though (although I can say with much certainty that it won't kill you or anything). It does tend to be much more sedating than Xanax though, especially if you're taking more than 25mg [of Seroquel] & you don't have a tolerance to it.
Depending on a number of different factors, you might find that the Seroquel only puts you to sleep for a couple hours, & that it's a "light" & "restless" sort of sleep... or you might not be able to get out of bed the next morning. Seroquel does tend to be sedating for a long period of time -- longer than most people wish to or are able to sleep for. However, the Adderall in your system might prevent it from having that effect, & might not.
& it's also of course possible that you could take the Seroquel & just find yourself stuck being awake but feeling incredibly, incredibly tired.
You'll have to try it, really.
Yea thorazine will knock you the fuck out, but beware of the thorazine shuffle lol.......And if that does not work, then haloperidol is the next one up (it is roughly 50x as potent as thorazine)......If that doesn't help, then you are shit out of luck. Both are typical anti-psychotics.
The atypicals can cause the same abnormal gait as thorazine, it's just less common.
And if you've got a doctor who's willing to prescribe typical anti-psychotics as a sleep aid then they're probably willing to prescribe barbiturates, old school hypnotics, and perhaps even anaesthetic agents.
Has anyone actually been prescribed a typical anti-psychotic before like Thorazine? I was under the assumption that doctors mostly always prescribe the atypical anti-psychotics now due to their less side effects.
It's still used in psych wards and as a depot injection in non-compliant patients under compulsory treatment orders.
I've known Haldol to be used in pain management cocktails in people with terminal illness.
Yeah, I know that they are still given in psych wards but I was wondering if anybody has actually been prescribed them? Not interested in "friends" but if anyone on here has ever been prescribed it. I'm just curious.
How are anti-psychotics good for pain? Most likely the side effects would make the pain worse. I don't see how, in anyway, they would be useful for pain.
I was prescribed Thorazine for sleep. You would literally wake up numb due to the lowering of blood pressure and anticholinergic effects of it. That's the pain relieving parts of it.
I would gladly use Thorazine in adjunct to any narcotic pain med. It would make you lose most of the feeling in your body at that point. You would most definitely rest easy then.
I know of the off-label uses of atypical anti-psychotics, but Thorazine for SLEEP? You don't have any other disorder that may cause racing thoughts?