How does Wellbutrin affect smoking? I'm interested.
It acts as an aphrodisiac for many, so I'm guessing it'd increase smoking.
'Shindig'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
How does Wellbutrin affect smoking? I'm interested.
It acts as an aphrodisiac for many, so I'm guessing it'd increase smoking.
I may need a bit more of a carrot than that, thanks.
Every time you go to light up, picture yourself in a threesome with Chevy Chase.
signed,
watching Community S1 DVDs
Wellbutrin helped me!
It caused me to have a psychotic episode. Which is not an unknown side-effect for people with depression. Kristen was about to call my mother. Now it's one of those red-flags that come up as an "allergy" on my medical record.
How does Wellbutrin affect smoking? I'm interested.
IIRC, something to do with dopamine receptors, but I can't remember for sure. (Dopamine being the "pleasure, yay!" receptors. Wellbutrin fools them into thinking they're already in flavor country.)
Wellbutrin helped me!
It caused me to have a psychotic episode. Which is not an unknown side-effect for people with depression.
It gave me crazy rage, Howard Hughes-like social anxiety, and almost a year of insomnia. I am clearly not its target patient. Too much norepinephrine already running around in my brain.
My dad smoked three packs a day for 40 years, up until his first heart attack. At that point he pretended to quit, but actually smoked about two packs a day. He tried everything: hypnosis, patches, gum, suport groups, cold turkey, and nothing worked. Until he used Wellbutrin. He quit after three weeks and never smoked again. It helped us have another few years with him, so I am a Wellbutrin supporter all the way.
ETA: but not, of course, if it damages you.
Wellbutrin fools them into thinking they're already in flavor country.
Now I'm picturing a commercial where a cowboy puts a Wellbutrin in his mouth and says, "Welcome to Flavor Country."
I don't have a particularly inspirational model -- I got sick enough that I didn't feel like smoking one day, and the next day I just decided to see how many days I could go, and it's been almost three months. I've lapsed a couple times with a cigarette here and there, but mostly been OK. It's not the social situations that I have found most daunting, it's the alone time.
If I were to do it again, I'd use patches, because I think the physical withdrawal of the nicotine affected my emotions or whatever in ways I did not anticipate or recognize right away.
It caused me to have a psychotic episode.
It gave me crazy rage, Howard Hughes-like social anxiety, and almost a year of insomnia.
It completely destroyed my short-term memory. I would take the meds, and then have absolutely no idea if I just took my meds or not.
I can't fully explain what happened to me without breaking down. It was terrifying. And my doctor prescribed them and said, "see you in six months."
By then, I was absolutely certain that everyone around me was involved in a conspiracy to drive me to suicide.