N&PD Moderators: Skorpio | someguyontheinternet
Most never made it to market as many, like flubromazolam, were found to be either too potent or toxic for safe & effective use.
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To indicate the potency of these molecules, diclazepam was said to be 10 times more potent than diazepam (Valium).
10 times as potent as diazepam isn't a big deal. So is lorazepam.
Alprazolam is 20 times the potency of diazepam and 40 times the potency of temazepam, yet doctors are less reserved about prescribing xanax than they are about restoril.
Heck, triazolam and brotizolam are pharm benzos that are considered twice as potent as alprazolam (and thus roughly as potent as clonazolam or flubromazolam).
Personally, I'd wager the main reason most of these designer benzos never saw the light of day was simply because getting a drug to market costs a lot of of money, and it didn't take too long for those markets to become saturated with benzos of different half-lives and effects profiles.
Don't get me wrong though: RC benzos, especially the strongly hypnotic ones, absolutely aren't something to fuck around with; I am just saying that the main issue here is people being able to easily acquire obscene quantities of these on the net, sometimes even as a pure powder.
There's a difference between some dude in Japan getting a script for 2x0.5 mg of etizolam per day from a legit psychiatrist for an anxiety disorder, and a guy in America ingesting 20 mg of etizolam solution, blacking out, and crashing their car in a stupor.
IMO none of the information in the literature supports the notion that triazolam is 8 or even 16 times as potent as alprazolam.
The standard dose of triazolam as a sleep aid is .125 to .25mg.
If it really was 16 times as potent as alprazolam, you'd think people using xanax as a sleep aid would be told to eat a whole bar or two at bedtime, which I'm pretty sure doesn't happen. At least not anymore.
People - especially in the US - used to be fairly careless about prescribing high doses of xanax because they thought it was more benign than some of the more sedating benzos... which it may very well be, just not to the point where it would be a good idea to script someone more than 2mg per day unless their anxiety is downright crippling and they already have a certain benzo tolerance. Of course triazolam, too, used to be overprescribed. The song "Halcyon" by the British trance duo Orbital and its music video are about the artists' mother and her addiction to triazolam (sold under the brand name "Halcion").
If a doctor were to prescribe xanax for insomnia today, they probably wouldn't start off their patient on more than .5 mg per day, just like they wouldn't start someone off on more than .25 mg of triazolam.
My original alprazolam scrip for was for panic attacks - 1 mg/day. A succession of doctors kept increasing it. I'm still amazed that there is no evidence of tolerance, I think most consider it to be fairly benign until you wind up in the hospital for mixing things like alcohol with it.
In my experience, 1 mg Xanax gives you 1 hour of deep sleep. Two mg = 2 hours.
By this i also include one that substituted diredtly onto the ring, eg. Pyridinyl instead of Phenyl.
No evidence of tolerance?
Have you ever tried going off all benzos c/t for a week?
The fact that you woke up during your midazolam anaesthesia points to a significant degree of benzo tolerance (the benzodiazepines are all cross-tolerant with each other).