N&PD Moderators: Skorpio | someguyontheinternet
Kindling effect ration? 2 days? I have never heard of any drug causing any issues with even around the clock use from just 2 days. What about 2 days, every 3 days, for drugs with a short half-life anyway?no dependence will not be developed so no withdrawal, if you did not exceeded kindling effect ration which is 2 days of continuous taking in some substances , but tolerance will
Yeah I am thinking there might be some possibility of establishing the brain of someone of "chronic opiate use" or alcohol or benzos etc or whatever, without actually getting acutely dependent though..i think with short half-life drugs its way more then 2 days but with pre-existing chronic opiate use, its 2 days for long acting opiatesKindling - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
From what I've experienced with even intermittent use over a long time span. I wouldn't dare take any addictive drugs every other day.its okay to take it every other day, just make sure your body is free from any clinically relevant dose of the drug in the day that you not take it
It's not that I need overly high doses of thingies to work, but I am just so fucking lethargic and somewhat out of it all the time [...] As the dissos increase glutamate levels, I suspect a permanently altered glutamate reuptake or somewhat alike
We have for example brorphine (not bromadol! which is pretty) that is said (can't link cause of vendor related but see cite below) to irreversibly destroy opioid receptors / neurons which firstly mimicks heavy tolerance but would never completely build down, thus lose endorphin functionality forever. Nasty. Made me reconsider said vendor, at least they warn off but still was a favorite in past, had hoped better.Is there any evidence of permanent receptor downregulation?
Brorphine also shows binding to other ORL-1 like targets ie the three canonical opioid receptors encouraging phosphorylation of the ORL-1 and desensitisation. Furthermore activation of Phospholipase A2 activity can be agonistic towards apoptotic pathways indicating a mechanism of neurotoxicity and degeneration mediated by A2 activity from ORL-1 activity. One can indeed lose MOR expressing neurons, not something that will grow back once use of the drug has ceased, this can be highly worrying as it can induce a tolerance to opioid drugs that cannot be reversed by abstinence as the neuroplasticity of repair will not always produce new neurons that express the MOR and in some cases will result in net loss of neurons, neurotoxic brain damage, one may not lose function due to neuroplasticity but one can lose MOR sensitivity in the parts of the brain that matter for opioid induced sedation and euphoria and analgesia, a goal we all share. Also continued activation of ORL-1 not only causes it’s own downregualtion but also downregualtion of the MOR and KOR, a partially unwanted effect if euphoria is the goal."
Wouldn't permatolerance at least be anecdotal evidence?Is there any evidence of permanent receptor downregulation?
Here. I have acquired semi permatolerance to dissociatives.Wouldn't permatolerance at least be anecdotal evidence?
Same. I don't think I've gone over a year, but did at least a year break with no noticeable difference. I wouldn't expect 3 to be very different. And my use is nothing compared to a few people I've met.Here. I have acquired semi permatolerance to dissociatives.
Yeah but what about someone who doesn't abuse daily or regularly but regular enough over 10 or 15 years? That's the big questionKindling is very real.
Chronic gabaergic abuse really does screw up your brain. I can certainly attest to that.
Even if I take 1 benzo pill 12 hours later my anxiety is significantly increased. 15 years ago I could abuse the shit out of alcohol with very little consequences other than a hangover.
After so many years of benzo and alcohol abuse my brain is ultra sensitive.
Now, instead of a hangover it is accompanied by rather bad anxiety and what feels like an acute alcohol withdrawal.
"Brain damage" may be the wrong word... But it long term use really does change your brain for the worse.
That's me 100%Yeah but what about someone who doesn't abuse daily or regularly but regular enough over 10 or 15 years? That's the big question
Yeah never been able to do that but did get to the point of cravings at 12-1pm. Anytime I drink earlier, its because I missed a night or two of sleep.That's me 100%
I mean alcohol daily for 9 years but on benzos maybe 3 months out of each year
But even daily alcohol I mostly was not the type of guy to wake up and immediately hit the bottle
Wouldn't permatolerance at least be anecdotal evidence?
Here. I have acquired semi permatolerance to dissociatives.
Not sure about this. It was a theory but shouldn't then anesthetic doses be even more toxic (afaik they are not). These lesions in K users scared the shit out of me but one year later I am nothing but fucking lethargic and overweight due to my eternal mistake of switching from dissos to opioids to both to opioids (hint: former are easier to handle even if they are mentally more powerful and you're able to skip most of opioid w/d) but of course would be interesting to do further testing. You can't use an irreversibly toxic compound for years and get away with it.That's not receptor downregulation, that's just glutamate excitotoxicity (I believe).
Antagonists (like dissos) don't even cause temporary downregulation.
No since it's a one-time experience, as opposed to something that's used regularily.It was a theory but shouldn't then anesthetic doses be even more toxic (afaik they are not).