PAMS are both addictive and have long term side effects from cold turkey withdrawal
@lookatdesktop (27156)
Dallas, Texas
March 19, 2017 10:05am CST
PAM is the nickname given to benzodiazapine class C controlled substance drugs.
These come by the names of:
1. Ativan, aka Lorazepam
2. Diazepam, aka Valium
3. Alprazolam, aka Xanex
and others.
There are variations from each of these drugs and their differences are from variants in milligram dosage, effectiveness and duration and addiction, both psychological and physiologic.
Most doctors give these as prescribed only in cases of extreme patient anxiety and panic attack syndrome but many buy these drugs on the street without being diagnosed by a doctor, as a get high or feel good drug and often users who are using them to get a lift often take much more than is ever recommended by a doctor of medicine and/or psychiatry. These drugs can become addictive very quickly and they often do prove bad for short term memory that may become permanent, depending on how much of this drug is taken and for how long a duration of days, months, or even decades of continual use or abuse, even if they are only taken as prescribed by a physician to treat a patient with anxiety or panic issues.
Even worse, these type drugs, when taken along with alcoholic beverages, can prove life threatening.
PAMS are even being sold on the black market in large volumes, for instance, my sources inform me that some individuals can obtain upwards of 1000 diazapines aka Valium using a credit card. This is a clear indication that the black market is running rampant with the illegal sales of drugs. You can find out more about this from:
READ THE BOOK - SPAM NATION - WRITTEN BY Brian Krebs - available online from that website link.
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1 response
@FourWalls (86575)
• United States
19 Mar 17
I had lorazepam for panic attacks. They never "did anything" for me in terms of a "high" or a "feel-good" feeling. I would take one about once every six-eight weeks when I'd wake up in the middle of the night with a panic attack (given that's what they're for...of course, that may have been my "mistake," actually taking them for what they were prescribed for!).
I don't know what makes them addictive, but I'm thankful I didn't get addicted.
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@lookatdesktop (27156)
• Dallas, Texas
19 Mar 17
Withdrawal within a week or two of taking as little as .5 mg or 1.0 mg once a day can be done with relative ease, but for me, it has been over 2 decades of daily use from as little as .5 mg once a day to times in the past when I took 1.0 mg once, twice or 3 times a day while also taking Lithium and Prozac. The combination created more ups and downs than was of good help to me. I was taken off Prozac, an anti-depressant, and after 20 years or more I was taken off Lithium due to it's bad effect to my Kidney function. Now I only take Ativan .5 mg once a day for anxiety, nothing else but blood pressure medicine, once a day.
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