Long-term use of benzodiazepines leaves permanent changes in the brain. It's no wonder one needs a higher dose to feel anything subjectively even after a break if there was physical dependence present in the past.
The half life is the amount of time taken for half the dose to be eliminated. So if you take 2mg then after 6 hours there will be 1mg left in your system, after a further 6 hours there will be 0.5mg left (then 0.25, 0.125etc etc). So whilst it doesn't technically make the half life longer there will be more left in your system.
It where the problem comes from with drugs like desoxypipadrol - the half life is so long that even after multiple days you've still got like 1/8 of you're original dose inside you keeping you awake.
May you please explain why these immutable alterations in the brain take place from past benzo abuse?Long-term use of benzodiazepines leaves permanent changes in the brain. It's no wonder one needs a higher dose to feel anything subjectively even after a break if there was physical dependence present in the past.
working as intended dude. don't pop 10 etizolams ;pand ended the night with 10 or so etizolam (over like an hour)..stupid i know,drugs prolly affected judgment.
now i woke up to my room being a complete mess,objects i dunno where came from and parents being pissed saying i was rambling nonsnse and couldnt walk for hours,them buying busy atm said we'll talk more about it l8rs...
worst of all i remember NOTHING
except that I was. and 3mg is most certainly not 'ridiculously low dose' -_- this ain't valium3mg of etizolam cannot cause a blackout, even with 0 tolerance that's a ridiculously low dose, and the half life is so short that you wouldn't be out for 15 hours either.
3mg of etizolam cannot cause a blackout, even with 0 tolerance that's a ridiculously low dose, and the half life is so short that you wouldn't be out for 15 hours either.