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File: 1619450542434.png (90 KB, 320x320)
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I took vyvanse once, my heartrate went very high (over 170) and now i have been feeling like i am walking on a boat for over a month
There is no way the meds stick in the system this long, so how tf am I still having issues?
any ideas here?
I am going insane from the way it feels to move around
>>
no refunds
>>
>>16790471
People think medical issues with a drug are because the drug is in their system. Like dude when you get stabbed you are still injured if you pull out the knife what the fuck are you people talking about detox or some drug not being in your system?
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>>16790487
What medical issues leading to these symptoms could one time use cause?
>>
>>16790492
dont know specifically but high blood pressure can lead to strokes which will affect you pretty much forever until the brain reconfigures itself if it ever does. Its just a common thing with cocaine or drugs of that sort. Noy saying its what you got.
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>>16790471
If you only took it once, then this is probably all in your head
Calm down a little anon
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>>16790499
I have tried to ignore it and play it off the past weeks, I tried running but after that I felt fully nauseous
I wasnt worried after a week, but now I am
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>>16790514
Also by the way Vyvanse takes around a week to fully clear out of your system, so I wouldn't be surprised if it took 6+ weeks for your brain to fully recalibrate
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>>16790471
How's your hearing?
Both ears clear?
>>
>>16790515
*3 days, oops, got the half life mixed up
>>
take progesterone
>>
I've had a similar experience with both caffeine and antidepressants.

It took 12 months for the issues to stop. Every time I went to the doctor and told them something's definitely not right, I was always told it was just anxiety, and they'd give me more antidepressants. No, I'm not memeing.

I will agree that it's true in a miniscule amount, but more specifically your body probably is "traumatized" from the bad experience. In other words, if your body starts to experience some of the feelings and circumstances surrounding your ingestion of Vyvanse, it starts to recoil involuntarily from the bad experience. That's how I'd explain what happened to me.

I don't know how to fix it unfortunately, but if I had to try again, I'd probably try exposure therapy.
>>
>>16790536
>12 months
jeez thats bad
what do you mean by exposure therapy?
>>
>>16790536
It shouldn't take 12 months to recover from caffeine unless you took grams of it at a time
As for the antidepressants, I'm very sorry anon, that shit fucks your brain up hard - prescribing them should actually be illegal since we have no idea how it works
>>
>>16790539

For example, I became very hypersensitive to caffeine after having a massive, severe panic attack from taking a caffeine pill on an empty stomach. I could definitely tell food or drinks had caffeine in them, even in small amounts, because I would suddenly start feeling dizzy, very short of breath, and detached from my surroundings.

Likewise, if I became low on blood sugar, I'd have a sudden rush of the bodily recoil because symptoms of low blood sugar felt like some of the side effects of caffeine.

Despite the hypersensitivity, if I had to do it all again, I would try exposing myself to the negative effects in very tiny amounts over time. Possibly even taking very tiny amounts of caffeine, like a crumb of a pill and increase the size slowly everyday until I can handle the side effects.

I know you can't really do that with Vyvanse if you don't have a prescription exactly, but if I were in that situation, I'd focus on what's causing me grief like the dizziness and actively try to induce it slowly until you can tolerate it more and more.
>>
>>16790547
this is an interesting approach
The mind does influence the body in a massive way after all
>>
>>16790639

After suffering for 12 months, there was a very clear cutoff one day where I started feeling my body beginning to recoil randomly again, but it was suddenly accompanied by a full-body burning sensation, like pouring lemon juice onto a wound, but without the overt sting. Once it subsided, I remember thinking, "What the absolute FUCK just happened?"
It was almost like that sensation blocked the oncoming recoil, and I went about my day again. I didn't realize it immediately, but after a few days, I noticed my body hadn't recoiled anymore.
I honestly can't begin to comprehend what happened. The prior week I was thinking I had nothing left to live for because my medication-induced recoil issue was still happening all these months later, and that the only way to escape the living hell I was in was to end it all. Nothing changed in my life that I can pinpoint that would explain the sudden miracle, but I'm honestly glad it's all over.
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>>16790654
they dont tell you these things about substances and when you find out its too late
if i could tell myself one thing it would be to stay away from everything
Because the temporary effects are never worth the price
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>>16790515
really think it could still be that after weeks?
odd to say the least
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>>16790471
Call your doctor babe
>>
I think you need to ask a doctor and not anons
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>>16790536
>I was always told it was just anxiety, and they'd give me more antidepressants
Doctors are fucking retarded
>>16790547
>>16790547
>if I became low on blood sugar, I'd have a sudden rush of the bodily recoil because symptoms of low blood sugar felt like some of the side effects of caffeine.
Caffiene can lower blood sugar, especially on an empty stomach.
Have you checked your liver health? That's often the cause of that kind of caffeine intolerance.
>>
>>16790986
>>16790990
Shalom
>>16790970
Yes, very possible, stimulants increase dopamine like crazy so I wouldn't be surprised if your brain was forced to desensitize very quickly and now it's taking a long time to recover
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>>16790471
All you're doing is freaking yourself out and when you get freaked out about freaking out it forms an infinite feedback loop. Just chill out and stop worrying it left your system within 72 hours of administration.
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>>16791573
I wholly wish this was true, but I very much doubt it is anxiety
I tried doing some training today and push through the feeling but now I feel really nauseous
Aslong as this shit stops sometime and I can go back to living normally ill be happy, no matter if the cause is mental or not
it is so annoying to not be able to do anything
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>>16791965
Tbh it sounds like you mught have ruptured a blood vessel in your inner ear or something. That would explain the loss of balance and nausea.

Ofc, anxiety over the situation is exacerbating the symptoms but explore the ear thing as a possibility.
>>
>>16790471
Congrats, you fell for the big pharma meme and got scammed by the doctors for your health.
They’ll probably tell you it’s all in your head and recommend keep taking the pill.
You also shouldn't have listened the reddit troons about muh ADHD.
In my case, stupid myself took an SSRI for three days for muh anxiety and depression and developed tinnitus that still goes on for three years. It destroyed my concentration, ended my STEM career, and caused me to abandon my PhD.
>>
>>16790471
>>16792570
No refunds. For them you are just a statistic in the leaflet under "less than 1 in 10,000 people" in section "side effects".
>>
Could the stuff maybe upset the stomach enough to make you dizzy for so long?
>>16792570
are you still affected?
>>
>>16790471
>I took vyvanse once, my heartrate went very high
same thing happened to me. Shit was cray cray I thought I was gonna have a heart attack
>>
>>16790986
>>16790990
I am afraid the doctors wont even take me seriously
I know how it goes, they send you to "specialist" and that guy then says "there is nothing wrong with you" because you arent actually bleeding out of your ears
>>
i am not a doctor.

170 is quite high but it honestly isn't out of the scope of even normal human wear if you're being super active. i had gotten my heart rate up to the 170s from sprinting alone, if youre <20 you can actually probably have a heart rate nearing 200 and be fine (if you are active, obviously you shouldn't be sitting down and having like heart rate 170).

more than likely you simply experienced a panic attack from the stimulant (happens if you take too much unprepared; i induced a panic attack once using only caffeine and nicotine, an anxiety spike was the match). vyvanse has to be processed by the liver before it becomes anything active iirc, so unless you took an ungodly amount at once you probably didn't even flood your system with it

there's no reason on its own afaik that vyvanse would cause residual nausea or dizziness. in all likelihood, this is either placebo or an unrelated issue that you are nevertheless connecting to the vyvanse because it was a negative experience that stood out when trying to think of causes (known human logic error). you should go to a doctor and seek their advice, rather than a cambodian indian genocide propoganda forum as it is certainly something worth looking into
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>>16790471
>vyvanse
What you are experiencing is some form of (mild) psychosis which can happen from lots of psycotropes (any chemical that actually enters the brain and does something there).
Which is psychiatric bable to say a neurotransmitter chain reaction that last in time following a curve.
The trigger chemical is not there long ago.
You will probably return to baseline level in T time.
If you don't have a any paranoid thoughts, you are fine. Just don't take that again.
>>
>>16790471
Was diagnosed with ADHD at 27. Took normal Ritalin for a while but I had similar symptoms, plus dizziness.

Vyvanse on the other hand works like a charm. Focus, reevaluating impulses, thinking further ahead and less mood swings than all my life previously. 30mg in the morning for 10 months now, very happy with the results. Also got checked out by a cardiologist just to be sure and it all looks totally healthy.
>>
>>16793451
what did the cardiologist do?
>>
>>16790497
Anon, OP is quite clearly anxious
Dont suggest the poor bastard had a stroke when it could be any number of things lmao
>>
>>16793277
Can dizziness really be a sign of psychosis?
Seems odd
>>
>>16790471
take a vaso dilator anon and take something to counter act it like a benzo or melatonin or warm glass of milk
>>
Simillarly on the topic, I took stimulants, sometimes higher then recommended doses, and even though I have stopped I often get palpatations
Should I be worried about that?
>>
>>16790497
a stroke can manifest like that?
Never heard of that
>>
>>16790492
Vyvanse damages an area of the brain called Shatners Bassoon, the part of the brain that deals with time perception. You’re feeling off balance because you’re having trouble regulating the speed at which you perceive time
>>
I could never have imagined i would regret taking a therapeutic dose of something so much
this cant last forever
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>>16798155
Sea legs do tend to wear off. The problem you might have long term is that you’re a massive cocksucker
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>>16790657
do they not because that's all I ever hear about them
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>>16798329
what are you yapping bout
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>>16790497
I had a moderate ischemic stroke, a 9 on the stroke scale of I recall, and was completely back to normal in half an hour. I had lost all movement in my left side, my face was drooping, and my speech was slurred. The doctor stepped out to talk to OR staff and when he came back in I was totally normal. He was surprised. I still had to go to the OR to have the blood clot busted up though.
>>
>>16800106
that sounds scary
how old are you?
it seems like more and more young people even unvaxxed are hit with blood and heart issues



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