Thank all the people who have been trying to help me. I understand you are sincere, but at this time I would like to receive only replies from s0rsha. If any other member who hasn't participated in this thread would like to reply - please read carefully all of my posts here before replying, including clicking on a link I have posted and reading it for at least one minute. While this issue is not an emergency - it is very important to me and my health.
I won't reply anymore since you don't seem interested, but I think it is appropriate to comment on the link you posted (
http://www.patient.co.uk/doctor/serotonin-syndrome) since you seem to be implying that no one read it. That is actually an excellent page and I recommend that you read it again. If you scroll down you will see the Hunter criteria for serotonin syndrome. According to the Hunter criteria, a diagnosis of serotonin syndrome (SS) requires that you fall into one of the following five categories:
(1) You are experiencing spontaneous clonus
(2) You are experiencing inducible clonus/spontaneous ocular clonus AND agitation
(3) You are experiencing inducible clonus/spontaneous ocular clonus AND diaphoresis
(4) You are experiencing inducible clonus/spontaneous ocular clonus, hypertonia, AND hyperthermia
(5) You are experiencing tremor AND hyperreflexia
Please note that you do not fall into any of those categories.
It is true that people may experience more mild symptoms induced by serotonergic drugs, but that is not serotonin syndrome. Those are really just drug side-effects. Drug effects exist in a continuum ranging from subthreshold to overdose, and often there are overlaps between the normal effects of a drug and the symptoms of overdose. Benzodiazepines cause sedation and anxiolytic effects, and the same effects also occur in overdose. But just because you feel relaxed after taking 10 mg of diazepam doesn't mean that you are experiencing a mild benzodiazepine overdose. Along the same lines, experiencing headache after taking a few mg of 5-HTP does not mean that you are experiencing a mild overdose of serotonin, even if headache can occur during serotonin overdose.
One issue is that there are many other syndromes that can produce effects that overlap with SS. That is one reason why you can't say that you have SS unless you meet the criteria for it -- you are experiencing minor symptoms that could be caused by a variety of things, and you are just guessing they are related to serotonin.