I don’t think Adderall affects serotonin receptors, just dopamine and some norepinephrine.
However, that tiny ass dose of Zoloft could be a huge ass dose if your body doesn’t break it down.
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catbum@lemmy.world 3 months ago
On the flip side, too much of that sweet, sweet serotonin will fuck you up. At the very least, it’ll make you sweat like a stuck pig while you (unknowingly) begin tiptoeing toward the precipice of full-blown serotonin syndrome.
Source: Was on Adderall 30mg plus tiny 25mg Zoloft dose “for anxiety maintenance” for two years. Well, at some point this past fall and spring, I must have started making more serotonin naturally or magically idk, not a doctor or witch doctor. So anyway, I only recently reread the serotonin syndrome symptom shortlist and finally put two and two together. One’s face should not literally drip sweat walking around a 74° house to grab laundry and one’s heart rate should not be spiking to 160bpm merely attempting to put gotdamn makeup on that very same face full of fuckin sweat fountains.
I don’t think Adderall affects serotonin receptors, just dopamine and some norepinephrine.
However, that tiny ass dose of Zoloft could be a huge ass dose if your body doesn’t break it down.
I had definitely thought that as well! But then I googled it and found there can be “major interactions” between Adderall and Zoloft, and that Adderall can actually affect serotonin (not sure if it promotes more serotonin or inhibits reuptake). It must be some kind of compounding effect?
But great point on the Zoloft! It seems it was definitely an OD factor, especially if there is more serotonin floating up there “naturally” and the re-uptake inhibition becomes way more effective. 😬
(I’m still actually dealing with tapering off Zoloft, but oh my gods I am so much less physically anxious already.)
I just did a quick search, and found this:
Concurrent use of stimulants with antidepressants is a high-risk behavior and is medically contraindicated9 due to potential cytochrome P450 2D6 (CYP2D6) enzyme inhibition and a resulting increase in serotonin levels.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4309786/
While it doesn’t specifically name Zoloft (Sertraline), it seems to boil down to how the body uses its own enzymes needed to metabolize drugs. You can end up getting pronounced effects from both drugs because they use/affect the same enzymes.
74 is pretty warm to me unless you are in a really dry climate.
IkarusHagen2@feddit.org 3 months ago
Well yes, too much seratonin is bad but how about at least a little bit?
catbum@lemmy.world 3 months ago
So I am still tapering off Zoloft since this “aha” realization only happened this week… Everyone please take my extra serotonin, please!!! (/s)
For real though, being depressed was it’s own animal. I’m glad I could work through it with meds, but it’s crazy the delicate balance needing to be struck!