pharmakos
Bluelighter
i've heard (and i think i have personally experienced, but its hard to say for sure) that the primary cognitive impairment from chronic DXM use comes in the weeks after cessation.
N&PD Moderators: Skorpio | someguyontheinternet
Essentially every computer will malfunction at some point in its lifetime due to random disruptions in its circuitry. Problems created in this manner can sometimes be corrected by simply restarting the system. If the system is not given a chance to restart, these malfunctions will eventually build up resulting in a highly inoperable computer. From this analogy, I am led to hypothesize that a human might reap the same benefits of a restart that a computer does.
I perceive this theory to be fairly logical and rational. I am not an expert neurologist and I’m sure there are flaws with the explanation of my theory, but hope that it is in the general vicinity of something realistic.
This is very interesting stuff!
... And yeah, I guess everyone I know who did a lot of dxm is kinda stupid.
There is a free fulltext of a case study of cognitive deterioration induced by chronic DXM administration. Old, but indicative of clinical attitudes toward the effects of the more potent NMDA antagonists on humans
all it takes is one idiot to screw things up for everybody.
I really see much more in NMDA antagonism but DXM doesn't seem to be the perfect drug with this effect as it has a spectrum of other effects.
Is terms of effects how could you compare DXM to Opiates (or to benzo because I tried almost all benzo ) ?
Do you feel euphoria with DXM, do you feel speed or relaxed ???...
Needs basic info (even we are in we are in "advanced drug discission" (sorry), I don't want to create a thread for that point)
Is it good to mix DXM with an opiate or with a Benzo (valium = my favorite) or in an other way is it dangerous to do it ?
THANKS OF ANY ADVICES AND HAPPY 2011
DXM is nothing like opiates/opioids or benzos. Effects are *very* dose-dependant, more so than most drugs. I find 100 - 200 mg *can* be euphoric. It's a sort of speedy and lightly psychedelic feeling at those doses. Past 200 mg and DXM becomes a lot more "stoning," and the euphoria - for me at least, starts to disappear. My personal comparison for DXM isn't any other drug though... its THE FLU. I'm not a fan of the stuff except at low doses, and even then I'm not sure the nausea is worth it. That's just me though.
Mixing DXM with an opiate sounds particularly nauseating. As for benzos... a small dose of a benzo might be fine to "take the edge off" so to speak. I don't know this for a fact, but I assume that larger doses of benzos + DXM (or opiates + DXM for that matter) could lead to respiratory depression issues.
Read the William White's DXM FAQ (try google) if you haven't before. It has a wealth of information.
HEY, I want to try DXM (I can have easily)
I'm light opiates regular user (not too hard opiates like heroin, morphine...) just codeine (400mg) , tramadol (300g), sometimes hydrocodone ; medium dosage (40mg)
Is terms of effects how could you compare DXM to Opiates (or to benzo because I tried almost all benzo ) ?
Do you feel euphoria with DXM, do you feel speed or relaxed ???...
Needs basic info (even we are in we are in "advanced drug discission" (sorry), I don't want to create a thread for that point)
Is it good to mix DXM with an opiate or with a Benzo (valium = my favorite) or in an other way is it dangerous to do it ?
THANKS OF ANY ADVICES AND HAPPY 2011
If i remember correctly memantine improves some markers of cognition and causes decline in some in healthy human subjects, overall there was cognitive decline tough at 20mg /day.
I understand what you are getting at. I admit that I can't make any scientific claims about this, just anectodal ones. I feel that an individuals definition of IQ is very subjective and that it could generally encompass many similar qualities. I really wish that studies could be done in regards to this though, because I definitely feel a lasting benefit from it. Its almost as if the constant nmda antagonism stimulated nerve growth that carries over even when you dont take it. I know that is a ridiculous claim and i have no proof, but just a hunch.
IQ is a well-defined metric. People dispute whether it measures anything worthwhile (mainly, people who score poorly on IQ tests), but they do not dispute the "definition" of it. The Intelligence Quotient, insofar as I understand it, measures a mind's ability to identify patterns: specifically, the most most complex and -- for lack of a better word -- worthwhile patterns.
Schizophrenia often takes the form of a preoccupation with intricately-conceived, (apparently) internally consistent patterns which differ so radically from consensus reality as to be intolerable to society. I am not equating schizophrenia with IQ. Many stupid people become schizophrenic; the patterns they perceive are as false as the ones which intelligent schizophrenics perceive, but the stupid schizophrenic is lazy in his observations and clumsy in his stringing-together of these observations into patterns.
Why do I bring up schizophrenia? Because dual use of amphetamines and dissociatives may easily cripple your mind to the point of schizophrenia -- and stupid schizophrenia, at that! The brilliance you feel, the thought-patterns woven within your mind while you trip ... habitual drug abuse will scuff your mind so that it shines with little brilliance, even as it tangles those thought-patterns, ripping out great, indiscriminate hunks of thread and fabric along the way.
Do you want to be left a lurching relic, with nothing to show for your destruction aside from incoherent, faded memories of a couple of blissful hours here and there, hours imbued with an illusory feeling of "noticeably improved intelligence"? Your actions indicate that you do!
Lyme borreliosis and other tick-borne infections are associated with a combination of inflammatory reactions and autoimmune symptoms. The proinflammatory cytokines associated with these infections increase indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase, which decreases serotonin and kynurenic acid, a neuroprotective glutamate antagonist. In addition, the cytokines increase the level ofquinolinic acid, an N-methyl d-aspartic acid (NMDA) agonist and neurotoxin, which contributes to the neurological and cognitive deficits seen in patients with tick-borne infections.21-23 This change may produce over-stimulation of hippocampal (NMDA) receptors leading to apoptosis and hippocampal atrophy. Hippocampal atrophy in the temporal lobes caused by NMDA overstimulation has been associated with depression and dementia.24 -