>Marquis<
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2006
- Messages
- 138
Forgive my posting in this subforum if it's not considered advanced enough. It seemed like a better subforum to post in than any of the others.
I'm wondering to what extent cross tolerance exists between the different benzos. I've tried UTSE but for reasons I won't go into I'm having problems getting an answer to my query through that method.
I know a person who heavily abused diazepam for several months to the point where euphoria was no longer attainable at any dose. My friend has recently found that even after an 8 month break post taper, he still cannot obtain euphoria or other desirable effects from diazepam; just cognitive impairment, ataxia and sedation akin to that from diphenhydramine. In fact he found the effects remarkably similar to the effects that chlordiazepoxide had on him on the two occasions he took it most recently, once during a GBL detox and once during an alcohol detox: feeling tired and quite emotionally depressed.
This came as somewhat of a surprise to him as during a GBL detox some 6 months ago he found diazepam to be just as euphoric as it had ever been even from a starting dose of 10mg. Yet now it is back to the stage he was at during his dependence; euphoria is an unattainable goal.
Anyway my question is whether or not he will experience this same heavy, long term tolerance with other benzos, particularly with respect to the goal of inducing euphoria with the likes of clonazepam or alprazolam. As I understand it, different benzos are active at different subunit combinations of the benzo allosteric site. I have also gotten the impression (I cannot recall where from, but I believe it was in this forum) that when tolerance develops to a specific benzo, adaptation occurs and the subunit combo to which the benzo for which tolerance is developing becomes downregulated, while production of other subunit combinations is increased.
Does this mean that benzos with affinity for subunit combinations that differ from that to which tolerance has developed (diazepam in this case) will be more effective than before (due to the increased amount of these subunits) or will at least not exhibit the same tolerance as has occured with the diazepam? Will benzos that bind a similar subunit combo as diazepam exhibit an equivalent tolerance?
I would appreciate an answer hugely as this is bothering me quite a bit.
If my speculations regarding different benzos to diazepam still being effective are possible, could you recommend for me any benzos that are likely to be effective based on their subunit binding affinites?
Cheers guys.
I'm wondering to what extent cross tolerance exists between the different benzos. I've tried UTSE but for reasons I won't go into I'm having problems getting an answer to my query through that method.
I know a person who heavily abused diazepam for several months to the point where euphoria was no longer attainable at any dose. My friend has recently found that even after an 8 month break post taper, he still cannot obtain euphoria or other desirable effects from diazepam; just cognitive impairment, ataxia and sedation akin to that from diphenhydramine. In fact he found the effects remarkably similar to the effects that chlordiazepoxide had on him on the two occasions he took it most recently, once during a GBL detox and once during an alcohol detox: feeling tired and quite emotionally depressed.
This came as somewhat of a surprise to him as during a GBL detox some 6 months ago he found diazepam to be just as euphoric as it had ever been even from a starting dose of 10mg. Yet now it is back to the stage he was at during his dependence; euphoria is an unattainable goal.
Anyway my question is whether or not he will experience this same heavy, long term tolerance with other benzos, particularly with respect to the goal of inducing euphoria with the likes of clonazepam or alprazolam. As I understand it, different benzos are active at different subunit combinations of the benzo allosteric site. I have also gotten the impression (I cannot recall where from, but I believe it was in this forum) that when tolerance develops to a specific benzo, adaptation occurs and the subunit combo to which the benzo for which tolerance is developing becomes downregulated, while production of other subunit combinations is increased.
Does this mean that benzos with affinity for subunit combinations that differ from that to which tolerance has developed (diazepam in this case) will be more effective than before (due to the increased amount of these subunits) or will at least not exhibit the same tolerance as has occured with the diazepam? Will benzos that bind a similar subunit combo as diazepam exhibit an equivalent tolerance?
I would appreciate an answer hugely as this is bothering me quite a bit.
If my speculations regarding different benzos to diazepam still being effective are possible, could you recommend for me any benzos that are likely to be effective based on their subunit binding affinites?
Cheers guys.
