• N&PD Moderators: Skorpio | someguyontheinternet

Diphenoxylate - a non-analgesic opiate

I have taken high dosages of lomotil before and experienced definite opiate/analgesic effects. This is the first claim I know of that contends it is not an active narcotic.
Occasionally I get some of these, and they are AMAZING. I usually take about 30 of these little pills and an hour or so later I'm having the best nod in my life.

I. Love. These.
 
Be careful:

Long QT syndrome. Quite a few opioids do that (why acetylmethadol was withdrawn for treating opioid dependancy)
 
there was one study that implicated that loss of executive control and motoric issues are caused of alcohol metabolite
can't believe it is the whole truth but makes sense.
 
I think it's ethanol itself - or specifically GABA a1b1y2 receptor agonists. That's why people sometimes take Z-drugs and go crazy. Some benzos can do it, but the Z-drugs are the worst of all.
 
That's why people sometimes take Z-drugs and go crazy.


read of one case in the usa, someone sleeping on zolpidem began sleepwalking and in his sleep killed his neighbour i believe. no charges pressed because it seemed to be zolpidems fault.
 
read of one case in the usa, someone sleeping on zolpidem began sleepwalking and in his sleep killed his neighbour i believe. no charges pressed because it seemed to be zolpidems fault.

I don't know about US law, but UK law recognises the 'automaton' state people can enter. Of course, UK law is based on 'mens rea' i.e. 'guilty mind'.
 
Well neither levorphanol nor ketobemidone are logged for LongQT. Of course, they are quite rare.
 
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