Is not my first time taking drugs for parkinson. I was given akineton twice and it helped with my movement. Drugs can be used for other purposes and this is an emergency situation for me. I was given a powerful dopamine antagonist for nothing. That is very dangerous and I want to fix things before they get worse. I don't think those addicting side effects would even happen because I feel emotionless. It's been a long time since I felt excited. I want to take up apomorphine because it has a very high affinity level. I'm sure I can take something for the vomiting side effects. I'm sure that heart side effect of the Cabergoline is rare. Also waiting for 6 months is torture, I have stuff to do and this situation I'm going through make things very difficult. I don't deserve this,it's horrible. I need something that has a high chance of working and dopamine agonists do the opposite of what dopamine antagonists do. They activate dopamine receptors. Also someone posted that cabergoline helped with his sexual side effects. Indirect dopamine agonists don't sound like they would help. This clopixol effect is so serious that artane,a medicine that use to make feel very good doesn't make feel good anymore. This is urgent and I need to fix this. Also please do you know why the drug effects are taking so long to wear off? It's almost 3 months. What is going on in my brain? The terrible doctors says it's supposed to last 1 month. It's been more than 1 month and I still feel the effects? Please can explain what is going on? Are my dopamine receptors still blocked?I don’t think people typically enjoy dopamine agonists. They tend to mainly be prescribed for things like Parkinson’s, restless leg syndrome, or other niche conditions. None of them are scheduled, which indicates that people don’t enjoy them enough to abuse them commonly.
The dopamine receptors (D1 through D5) can be divided into two groups. Activating D1 like receptors in the “go” pathway (aka direct pathway) (D1 and D5) stimulates the production of cyclic AMP (a second messenger). The “no go” pathway (aka indirect pathway) consists of the D2 like receptors (D2s, D2L, D3, and D4). These inhibit the production of cyclic AMP.
These two pathways function together (as all dopamine receptors respond to dopamine), and dopamine agonists tend to be a bit selective (often for the D2 class). Apomorphine has a higher affinity for the D2 family over the D1 family. These drugs aren’t known to be euphoric based on the reports I have seen, but can cause some pretty profound compulsive/addictive behaviors such as addictions to gambling, sex, and shopping but also OCD like symptoms.
Apomorphine has a pretty big problem in that it is considered an emetic. We have dopamine receptors (among others) in this part of our brain called the chemoreceptor trigger zone (ctz). This is a little bit of brain that can sample blood away from the blood brain barrier and it acts as a probe to check if we are being poisoned by something. If it thinks that (via receptor activation ) we will vomit. This is why anti nausea medications often block dopamine (also other receptors).
Cabergoline is also something to avoid as it causes fibrosis of your heart valves over time (cardiac fibrosis) due to agonism of serotonin 2B receptors.
Finally, you have been getting over an injection of a long lasting antipsychotic. These things take quite a bit of time to reverse, and it’s only been since April. I know you are likely feeling bad, but this isn’t a way forward— you need to let time do its work, and think in a timescale of how you feel after every 6 month chunk rather than every month.
I know this might not be the answer you want to hear, but your plan to counteract the lingering antipsychotic malaise with dopamine agonists seems very risky for the low likelihood that it would succeed.
Indirect dopamine agonists (ie releasers or reuptake inhibitors) would certainly be a better option with regards to actually doing what you want, but those will be quite a bit more addictive, and you will likely still be disappointed in how little they work.
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