BadBoy377
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2023
- Messages
- 1,810
I sense your standards are low but will respect and defend your right to do what makes you happy as long as it doesn't harm anyone else.it's quite heavenly
I sense your standards are low but will respect and defend your right to do what makes you happy as long as it doesn't harm anyone else.it's quite heavenly
Do you know they actually made datura cigs back in the day? Ive seen ads they used it for asthma. Maybe i need datura for my asthma?
Interestingly, the plasma level of serotonin is increased in symptomatic asthmatic patients and the use of anti-depressants, known to reduce serotonin levels, provokes a decrease in asthma symptoms and an increase in pulmonary function.
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2249.2007.03492.x
Did the dr discuss morphine-induced hyperalgesia? It sounds problematic and likely counterproductive. There's also opioid-induced demyelination, neuroinflammation, oxidative stress.Ya quitting morphine really isnt a option for me because i do need it for pain.
5-HT is a known causative factor in asthma:
Release of serotonin from mast cells contribute to airway hyperresposivness in asthma
Did the dr discuss morphine-induced hyperalgesia? It sounds problematic and likely counterproductive. There's also opioid-induced demyelination, neuroinflammation, oxidative stress.
Maybe i need datura for my asthma?
...morphine ... i do need it
...opioids are potent histamine releasers
— 10.1177/0310057X1204000204
Opioid receptor agonists non-stereoselectively activate the TLR4 signaling pathway
— 10.3389/fimmu.2020.01455
opioids [...] activate TLR4 signaling and subsequently induce proinflammatory responses
— 10.3389/fphar.2020.603445
...structurally diverse opioids (including the clinically relevant agonists morphine, fentanyl, methadone, oxycodone, buprenorphine and antagonists naloxone and naltrexone) interact with TLR4
— 10.1177/0310057X211063891
Aberrant activation of the TLR2/TLR4 signaling pathway can result in the excessive production of inflammatory factors [...] within the airway.
...
Collectively, these studies demonstrate that TLR4 [...] plays a multifaceted role in asthma pathophysiology
— 10.3389/fimmu.2025.1605185
Mast cells play a critical role in the pathogenesis of allergic asthma. Histamine is a central mediator released from mast cells through allergic reactions. Histamine plays a role in airway obstruction via smooth muscle contraction, bronchial secretion, and airway mucosal edema.
— 10.3390/ijms20071733
It's likely that morphine helps drive asthma too via histamine and TLR4.
TLR4 → asthma:
Histamine → asthma:
E → histamine:
Morphine seems to help my asthma though
Morphine treatment induced a 66.8% increase in aromatase activity
— 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2009.05.013
Morphine has also been reported to increase aromatase expression in the brain and impair testicular function
— 10.22270/jddt.v14i8.6643
Our data show that morphine induces estrogen release from local hippocampal neurons, possibly by increasing P450 aromatase activity.
— 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3915-11.2011
physiological concentrations of E2 has been shown to increase the subsequent histamine release
— 10.1016/j.molimm.2006.09.030
Mast cells play a critical role in the pathogenesis of allergic asthma. Histamine is a central mediator released from mast cells through allergic reactions. Histamine plays a role in airway obstruction via smooth muscle contraction, bronchial secretion, and airway mucosal edema.
— 10.3390/ijms20071733
This is quite common and leads to all sorts of funky conclusions.However (like with pretty much every psychoactive substance) I feel like it's really obvious that they have the causation backwards...
Tobacco is an incredibly popular choice for self-medication against cortisol/stress, on par with alcohol and cannabis...then benzos & other GABAergics.and that what the study(ies) ACTUALLY show is that people who have depression/anxiety are more likely to smoke.
why would tobacco help with stress barring one being addicted?This is quite common and leads to all sorts of funky conclusions.
Tobacco is an incredibly popular choice for self-medication against cortisol/stress, on par with alcohol and cannabis...then benzos & other GABAergics.
why would tobacco help with stress barring one being addicted?
never heard of a non-baccy addict seeking it to calm down tbh, so I highly doubt 'incredibly popular' tbh
well obviously nicotine to calm down is going to be very popular with nicotine addicts!I think they mean "incredibly popular" as in tobacco/nicotine being extremely widely use around the world.
It definitely does help with stress, though. The reason non-nicotine-addicts don't use it like that is because it's very, very addicted so most people who DO become addicted.
The tobacco plant has many direct and indirect anti-stress qualities. I assumed this was common knowledge.why would tobacco help with stress
Do you think that long-term smokers just happened to continue –after their 1st cigarette– for decades for no reason?The reason a non-nicotine addict does not reach for a cigarette to calm them down is because it would not work, simple as that. As they would quickly discover after trying!
would smoking tobacco help a stressed out non-addict?The tobacco plant has many direct and indirect anti-stress qualities. I assumed this was common knowledge.
It's called addiction? Shitty, nasty-ass almost useless and very destructive drugDo you think that long-term smokers just happened to continue for decades for no reason
you were likely self medicating the adhd, given that nicotine is a stimulant - extremely common thing to doI smoked because I have ADHD and everything that comes along with it, diagnosed or otherwise, which also includes ANXIETY AND DEPRESSION! I quit in 2015 but still chain vape. Lungs are optimal honestly. I miss a fresh pack of Luckys or Dunhill's massively though. Thank God they ruined Luckys or I might still buy them.
I still am, at 38. Lolyou were likely self medicating the adhd, given that nicotine is a stimulant - extremely common thing to do
ADHD, that's been a word of the day. This post about evolving the ADHD understanding was interesting.I smoked because I have ADHD and everything that comes along with it, diagnosed or otherwise