Psycho-Babble Neurotransmitters | advanced medication issues | Framed
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Re: Can serotonin reuptake inhibition be countered?

Posted by Brainbeard on June 30, 2009, at 9:54:54

In reply to Re: Can serotonin reuptake inhibition be countered?, posted by garnet71 on June 29, 2009, at 22:31:26

> I understand its complicated, beyond what I understand, but zoloft really does, imo, have an adverse effect on dopamine for me.

Of course Zoloft has adverse effects on dopamine: it's a strong SSRI, and any strong SRI has strong anti-dopaminergic effects, manifesting in loss of libido most prominently and possibly lethargy and apathy. Any strong SRI will raise prolactin levels, which is a sign of anti-dopaminergic action. Zoloft can raise prolactin levels wildly.

The dosage question is key, since the anti-dopaminergic effects of Zoloft are bound to be dose-related. That's why I'm hoping to avoid them myself with a low dose of Zoloft. Low definitely means <50mg, since at 50mg sertraline (Zoloft) already occupies 80% of serotonin transporters, which comes down to full SRI in a therapeutic sense.

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Current meds: imipramine 12.5mg + amitriptyline 6mg at bedtime; sertraline 12.5mg + ondansetron 2mg + modafinil 50mg in the morning

'Some of the Magic Syrup was Preserved'
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Psycho-Babble Neurotransmitters | Framed

poster:Brainbeard thread:901465
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/neuro/20090129/msgs/903966.html