Pegasus
Ex-Bluelighter
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2006
- Messages
- 8,073
Okay, so I know all the half lives of all the drugs I use and in some cases, it makes sense. Oxycodone's half life: 3 - 4.5 hours. That seems pretty much in line with what the effects I receive tell me.
But now onto the drugs with very long half lives that I do not understand. For example, clonazepam has a minimum half-life of 18 hours, but it certainly does not take 18 hours for the majority of the effects to go away. However, if I took a dose halfway through the 18 hours (9 hours) of half of the amount I originally took, I would not be at the same level of effects that I originally was when I took the full dose.
So, here is the issue. What exactly is the relationship between half life and the effects a person receives? I am on a drug with a pretty long supposed half life (phenazepam) and the effects certainly do not take any number of days to diminish by one half. However, I am warned that this long half-life would help build addiction more easily because unlike a short-acting benzo like alprazolam which half would excrete in 4-6 hours or so, the drug will accumulate in my system. However, if I take the same dose of phenazepam every day, I would get the exact same effects every single day, exactly like if I was taking the same dose of alprazolam once a day. This doesn't seem to add up. Can someone please explain this?
Similarly, with these longer acting drugs, why doesn't the amount of drug in the system accumulate to extremely high levels after only a few dosages? It would seem that after taking three days worth of a drug that has a half life of three days, on the third day you would have like 216% of the amount of the original dose in your system, but would only be receiving effects as if you were taking it on the first day. Please, someone help me understand this!
But now onto the drugs with very long half lives that I do not understand. For example, clonazepam has a minimum half-life of 18 hours, but it certainly does not take 18 hours for the majority of the effects to go away. However, if I took a dose halfway through the 18 hours (9 hours) of half of the amount I originally took, I would not be at the same level of effects that I originally was when I took the full dose.
So, here is the issue. What exactly is the relationship between half life and the effects a person receives? I am on a drug with a pretty long supposed half life (phenazepam) and the effects certainly do not take any number of days to diminish by one half. However, I am warned that this long half-life would help build addiction more easily because unlike a short-acting benzo like alprazolam which half would excrete in 4-6 hours or so, the drug will accumulate in my system. However, if I take the same dose of phenazepam every day, I would get the exact same effects every single day, exactly like if I was taking the same dose of alprazolam once a day. This doesn't seem to add up. Can someone please explain this?
Similarly, with these longer acting drugs, why doesn't the amount of drug in the system accumulate to extremely high levels after only a few dosages? It would seem that after taking three days worth of a drug that has a half life of three days, on the third day you would have like 216% of the amount of the original dose in your system, but would only be receiving effects as if you were taking it on the first day. Please, someone help me understand this!
