DeathIndustrial88
Bluelighter
What are your thoughts on tramadol & neurotoxicity?
I've always wondered, since not only is tramadol a weak SNRI-type drug, but it also releases serotonin.
Drugs that release neurotransmitters have the potential to be neurotoxic.
This abstract says it has the potential to be & can cause things like Parkinson's Disease.
Can some one who's a little more knowledgeable read it & break it down a little in laymens terms?
Other than the SNRI effect, what would make tramadol neurotoxic?
Should some one like me who used 400mg doses daily every month (with 1-2 week breaks in between) for 10 years & went through tramadol withdrawal every single one of those months) be concerned with possible long term consequences?
What should some one who has experienced "Extensive tramadol intake alters redox balance through elevating lipid peroxidation and free radical leading to neurotoxicity and produces neurobehavioral deficits." monthly for years look out for?
I have had myoclonic jerks for the past 6-7 years with an unknown origin. They come & go in varying degrees every so often. Although they started after I accidentally gave myself convulsions & serotonin syndrome from mixing dextromethorphan & effexor, so it could very well be completely unrelated to my long term tramadol use.
I've also been a user of meth & amphetamines after different points in my life. So I can't really pinpoint any of my issues to tramadol.
Regardless of all that,
I'm curious if anyone has had any neuro-issues after using tramadol for a years & people's thoughts on what all this pathway signalling and it's different mechanisms have on the body, brain & how it can make a tramadol experience unique compared to other opioids.
Tramadol use to have an amazing high when I was opioid naive. Some times it matched the intensity of heroin for me, but with a more stimulated feeling.
I have tried effexor to see if it felt similar, but they really don't. And I find it hard to believe that some of the qualities tramadol has are either strictly it's opioid metabolite (which it may be) or just some weak silly SNRI effect. This drug seems to hit a lot more places than just those systems.
I also find this very interesting, as I use to binge drink coffee whenever I would dose tramadol. I felt like it potentiated it a great deal. And some how I never managed to have a seizure from it.
I've always wondered, since not only is tramadol a weak SNRI-type drug, but it also releases serotonin.
Drugs that release neurotransmitters have the potential to be neurotoxic.
This abstract says it has the potential to be & can cause things like Parkinson's Disease.
Can some one who's a little more knowledgeable read it & break it down a little in laymens terms?
Other than the SNRI effect, what would make tramadol neurotoxic?
Should some one like me who used 400mg doses daily every month (with 1-2 week breaks in between) for 10 years & went through tramadol withdrawal every single one of those months) be concerned with possible long term consequences?
What should some one who has experienced "Extensive tramadol intake alters redox balance through elevating lipid peroxidation and free radical leading to neurotoxicity and produces neurobehavioral deficits." monthly for years look out for?
I have had myoclonic jerks for the past 6-7 years with an unknown origin. They come & go in varying degrees every so often. Although they started after I accidentally gave myself convulsions & serotonin syndrome from mixing dextromethorphan & effexor, so it could very well be completely unrelated to my long term tramadol use.
I've also been a user of meth & amphetamines after different points in my life. So I can't really pinpoint any of my issues to tramadol.
Regardless of all that,
I'm curious if anyone has had any neuro-issues after using tramadol for a years & people's thoughts on what all this pathway signalling and it's different mechanisms have on the body, brain & how it can make a tramadol experience unique compared to other opioids.
Tramadol use to have an amazing high when I was opioid naive. Some times it matched the intensity of heroin for me, but with a more stimulated feeling.
I have tried effexor to see if it felt similar, but they really don't. And I find it hard to believe that some of the qualities tramadol has are either strictly it's opioid metabolite (which it may be) or just some weak silly SNRI effect. This drug seems to hit a lot more places than just those systems.
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pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
I also find this very interesting, as I use to binge drink coffee whenever I would dose tramadol. I felt like it potentiated it a great deal. And some how I never managed to have a seizure from it.
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pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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