@Anon I am not sure what formula you are using to calculate your daily levels, but that is not accurate. As the days leading up to equilibrium/steady state go on, you will see the level of Zyprexa in your system is increasing less and less until you hit equalibrium and there is no longer any increase from the day before. Naon's numbers are a perfect example (if you are assuming a 24 hour half-life). Keep in mind the half-life is something like 20-50 hours which depends on factors some of which are specific to the individual. These numbers are by no means a spitting image of what will be in your body but it's a good reference point and great way to illustrate what is going on as a result of a long half-life.
These are naons numbers, which he got by assuming a 24 hr halflife .
To determine the number for the next day, you take half of the previous day and add 10 to that number. The reason you do that is after 24 hours half of the previous day's dose still remains and you are adding another 10mg in when you take your daily dose.
For example let's look at day #4 and see how he arrived there.
I am going to multiply .5 * (the previous day which is 17.5mg) then add 10mg.
So half of 17.5mg is 8.75mg, plus 10mg brings us to 18.75mg.
10mg daily would be:
Day1: 10mg
Day2: 15mg
Day3: 17.5mg
Day4: 18.75mg
Day5: 19.37mg
Day6: 19.68mg
See how small the increase was from day 5 to 6 compared to days 1-2?
If you were to chart it on paper with days on the bottom and mg's on the left the curve would look something like this one below.. eventually smoothing out to a straight line (steady state mofuggaaaa).
If half-life worked the way you were calculating it, and we looked at a drug like methadone which has no ceiling & a comparible half life to Zyprexa. What would that mean for day number 300? According to your calculations if one was taking 10mg daily on day 300 we should now have 1,505mg of methadone accumulated in your body.
Zyprexa does not have a ceiling does like buprenorphine does for instance. With bupe, once you hit 32mg there is no additional effects if you take more bupe. Meaning if you take an extra 16mg on top of the 32mg it will not make any difference what so ever.
If you lower your dose, you are going to lower the overall levels of zyprexa in your body. So yes, it will be less sedating. The long halflife means that it will take about 3 days to reach equilibrium as naon put it, or a steady state of zyprexa in your body at all times assuming you dose on schedule every day.
This depicts the accumulation of drugs in your system as you reach a steady state:
This depicts the 'steady-state' meaning you have the same amount of Zyprexa entering your body and exiting your body every day assuming you dose accordingly and on time.
It seems like the maximum recommended dose is 20mg daily. I just thought I would mention that.. but it has nothing to do with a ceiling dose. I can not find a shred of evidence that Zyprexa has a ceiling dose..which is not surpising. It's pretty rare for a drug to have a ceiling. The only one I know off the top of my head is bupe.. but I am sure there are more.
Equilibrium/steady state does not mean the body is saturated with as much of the drug as it can take. It means that the levels of it in your blood are now steady.. meaning if you have x amount of zyprexa in your blood at 2pm today, you will have that same amount tomorrow at 2pm, and so on, assuming there is no interruption in your dosing schedule.