KnightOfEnceladus
Lost child in time
- May 20, 2019
- 231
This is a hypothetical since I don't have access to clonazepam or metoprolol (though I do have propranolol, which is the same class of drug, the beta-adrenergic antagonist).
Would this combination work? Say a stat dose of 40-60mg metoclopramide, followed an hour later by a month's supply of clonazepam, a month's worth of metoprolol, and one king hell mountain of a lot of ethanol, like an entire fifth of vodka? The meto is key to prevent the body from bringing the rest of that up.
I would think the mutually-potentiating GABAergic action of the clonazepam and alcohol, combined with the beta-antagonism of the metoprolol, would be enough to do the job, all kept safely down by the metoclopramide. But I'd really appreciate someone with more knowledge/experience than me weighing in on this. In particular, would the meto really keep all that down properly? And, would that be enough clonazepam to be lethal by itself?
Would this combination work? Say a stat dose of 40-60mg metoclopramide, followed an hour later by a month's supply of clonazepam, a month's worth of metoprolol, and one king hell mountain of a lot of ethanol, like an entire fifth of vodka? The meto is key to prevent the body from bringing the rest of that up.
I would think the mutually-potentiating GABAergic action of the clonazepam and alcohol, combined with the beta-antagonism of the metoprolol, would be enough to do the job, all kept safely down by the metoclopramide. But I'd really appreciate someone with more knowledge/experience than me weighing in on this. In particular, would the meto really keep all that down properly? And, would that be enough clonazepam to be lethal by itself?