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Life_and_Death
Do what's best for you 🕯️ Sometimes I'm stressed
- Jul 1, 2020
- 6,746
For my next attempt i plan on getting Olanzapine. It's a medication ive taken before. I think it was 10mg and it left me sleeping all day.
im hopeful that i can talk to the pharmacist into giving me it, doubt it, but i can be hopeful and try. failing that go to the docs and get it re-prescribed for insomnia. this will hopefully be easy where its a different doc then who originally prescribed it, and a different pharmacist.
my question(s) would be how much should i take? 1 pill left me sleeping for 15-20hrs. do i only need a min of 2 (although taking at least 5)? but then i also have to worry about what the possible consequences are of taking too much. or not enough as even though i was asleep for so long, i woke up occasionally to use the bathroom. but i was really really groggy and out of it.
and should i bother with one of these??
im hopeful that i can talk to the pharmacist into giving me it, doubt it, but i can be hopeful and try. failing that go to the docs and get it re-prescribed for insomnia. this will hopefully be easy where its a different doc then who originally prescribed it, and a different pharmacist.
my question(s) would be how much should i take? 1 pill left me sleeping for 15-20hrs. do i only need a min of 2 (although taking at least 5)? but then i also have to worry about what the possible consequences are of taking too much. or not enough as even though i was asleep for so long, i woke up occasionally to use the bathroom. but i was really really groggy and out of it.
and should i bother with one of these??
Antipyretic (temperature reducing) medications are a safe and easy way to lower your body temperature in case of a fever. These medications work by inhibiting your body's production of cyclooxygenase and lowering your body's levels of prostaglandin E2. Without the help of an antipyretic, these substances cause the cells in the hypothalamus (the part of the brain that regulates temperature) to fire at a rapid rate, increasing the body's temperature. Examples of these medications include acetaminophen, aspirin, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) such as ibuprofen and naproxen
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