SpunkySkunk347
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2006
- Messages
- 1,717
A few years ago, one of my psychiatrists and I were discussing the side effects of quetiapine, and when I mentioned the drowsiness caused by the H1 antagonism, he said something along the lines of "the histamine receptors could be thought of as being intertwined with the cholinergic system". How true is this?
Then several months later, after I had taken my psychiatrist's statement as absolute truth (he had a PHD after all), I got into an argument with another psychiatrist while I was being a resident at a psychiatric hospital -- because I said that quetiapine doubles as an anti-histamine due to its anti-cholinergic effects, and with that smug "I'm a doctor, you're not" look on his face told me "you mean anti-histamine effects". So I name-dropped the H1 receptopr, and said that the histamine receptors were part of the cholinergic system. Although I was sort of just being a lorazepam-induced douche bag, how right/wrong was I?
Then several months later, after I had taken my psychiatrist's statement as absolute truth (he had a PHD after all), I got into an argument with another psychiatrist while I was being a resident at a psychiatric hospital -- because I said that quetiapine doubles as an anti-histamine due to its anti-cholinergic effects, and with that smug "I'm a doctor, you're not" look on his face told me "you mean anti-histamine effects". So I name-dropped the H1 receptopr, and said that the histamine receptors were part of the cholinergic system. Although I was sort of just being a lorazepam-induced douche bag, how right/wrong was I?

