The brain will be getting less oxygen which makes you pass out and unconscious like with hanging. So you don't need to worry about mirtazapine keeping you asleep
Mirtazapin has a strong antihistaminic effect, thus it can serve not only as sedative but also as a weak antiemetic. But, as I know from my personal experience with m., sedative effect is long but not so powerful. It is also interesting to know, that m. can loose a part of sedative effect with high dosage (even after 30 mg).
Quite interested in this. I was prescribed this before and it always made me too drowsy/sleep for hours so I stopped taking it (oops)
Does anyone know if you can actually overdose on it if you take more than your prescribed dose? Or would it be ineffective / just cause issues?
No you can not overdose on the chemical. I checked that out straight away when I got them prescribed to me. 15mg is not enough and 45 mg you just have nightmares on the stuff. 30 mg has always been the best dose for me.
I wish we had more information on sn and mirtazopine.
Quite interested in this. I was prescribed this before and it always made me too drowsy/sleep for hours so I stopped taking it (oops)
Does anyone know if you can actually overdose on it if you take more than your prescribed dose? Or would it be ineffective / just cause issues?
Nah, it is possible to overdose with everything, even with salt and water. And it is always the dosis question. But it is kinda uncertain. You still can receive serotonin syndrome, which can be very unpleasant but still in some cases lead to death. Not the best method I think
Thanks, there's tonnes of conflicting information online when I've looked into it previously so I thought someone on here might actually know! @Ashpac yes 30mg is what I was prescribed too
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