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No sleep or sleep meds

Sleep Health | Last Active: Aug 9 10:04am | Replies (115)

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@lisaschultz327

But the CDC and doctors never tire of trying to get you off of them and pushing newer drugs that sometimes do one more harm than good. For years, I couldn’t get an anxiety drug that worked and didn’t even know about the benzo drugs. I took what I was prescribed; sometimes the side effects were so bad I couldn’t take them and other times I didn’t know what they were doing to me physically, only knew they weren’t effective for my anxiety. In time I found a doctor who prescribed 1 mg clonazepam for me 3 times a day which actually worked and he tried different sleeping medication on me until the ambien worked. Come to find out that a lot of these newer drugs can damage your heart and after I repeatedly flatlined first in the doctor’s office who sent me to the E.R. where I continued to flatline, each time restarting and then flatlining again which caused me to be airlifted to the nearest cardiac hospital where I was taken off all my medication and placed in cardiac intensive care for 3 days while they slowly started me on my medications again but not the psychiatric drugs. Then after I was implanted with a pacemaker and was scheduled for a watchman implantation, the cardiac hospital told me that I should never take that type of drug again and said I could take the clonazepam and opioids I was prescribed because they didn’t have that effect on the heart. I am probably one of those uncommon cases but if you read the warning labels on most of the newer psychiatric drugs, the side effects listed will usually include tachycardia (rapidly beating heart) and bradycardia (heart hardly beating) that can damage your heart if the medication causing it is continued. And that’s my story.

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Replies to "But the CDC and doctors never tire of trying to get you off of them and..."

Lisa, which drug specifically? The Ambien or the clonazapam caused the bradycardia? I started having fainting spells 5 years ago. Had cardiac workup and no reason can be found for it. I was taking 5 mg of Ambien every night. If the Ambien causes cardiac problems, maybe it was causing the bradycardia for me and fainting was the result, especially since the fainting always began while I was sleeping in the early morning hours. I have stopped taking Ambien and though I have had two fainting spells since in the last 6 months, they are no where near as frequent as they were (every 6 weeks).