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Crazy-High Sleep Meds
Started by JerryPharmD
good lord
did you guys check with the doctor just in case?
thats nuts
did you guys check with the doctor just in case?
thats nuts
guy's been on it at least a year..crazier than the day is long
Had a patient today (30-something male) on 90 mg temazepam QHS and 600mg trazodone QHS
Yowza😱
There is a max dose on the restoril at 60mg. Not sure on the other.
Info at http://meds.queensu.ca/~clpsych/orientation/Benzodiazepine comparison chart.pdf
My wife slept until 3:30PM on 1mg clonazepam. (I actually just checked to make sure she wasn't dead and accidently woke her up...she probably would have slept longer...)
I know my father-in-law was on a serious dose of Requip for his RLS though they say most of the meds he takes are a lot less than what they dose for Parkinson's patients, just high for Restless leg syndrome patients. I don't know what his dose of Ambien was. The had to work him off Requip for an experimental study and then work his dose back up when he got kicked out. Totally sucks for him. He got 30 min sleep in 3 days when he was dosing down.
guy's been on it at least a year..crazier than the day is long
Who the hell lets a patient stay on sleep meds that long? Especially at that dose!
God help him if he attempts to stop cold turkey...that could be ugly...
I disagree with all of you - without the complete drug profile, pt hx, previous & concommitant medications, comorbid conditions....its hard to evaluate this regimen.
I have a pt who is on doses of somnotics, antipyschotics, atypicals which are far beyond recommended doses - but those are what is required.
Its difficult to take a pt out of context of his/her hx & previous exposure.
However, given the kinetics of temazepam & trazodone & how they work...I'd say perhaps an adjustment might be necessary.
I have a pt who is on doses of somnotics, antipyschotics, atypicals which are far beyond recommended doses - but those are what is required.
Its difficult to take a pt out of context of his/her hx & previous exposure.
However, given the kinetics of temazepam & trazodone & how they work...I'd say perhaps an adjustment might be necessary.
I disagree with all of you - without the complete drug profile, pt hx, previous & concommitant medications, comorbid conditions....its hard to evaluate this regimen.
True....is this guy 600 lbs? Does he have two livers?
For the average patient, I'd call that ridiculous, though.
But I agree that if it works, it works. I actually got into a brief argument with my primary care
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