What are the risks of a combination of alcohol and fluoxetine?
The risks of a combination of provac® or fluoxetine and alcohol are not fully understood. Most doctors recommend mixing these two substances for two different reasons. Alcohol and fluoxetine can increase the soothing, cognitively affected properties and act in the opposite way, which can make ProTAC® less effective. Many people who take ProVac® are also at higher risk because they take other medicines that negatively in violation of alcohol consistently. Stiring research suggests that fluoxetine can help in alcohol delay. Some studies have concluded that people using both more often encounter higher levels of sedation, greater cognitive damage, and reducing motor skills such as those used to drive a car. Ungivocal studies do not show any specific effect. It is possible that people with higher side effects will see these side Effects rising when they combine alcohol and fluoxetine. Many doctors recommend that drugs do not be used together for this reasonAnd others suggest that the occasional minimal use of alcohol is not dangerous for fluoxetine users.
The problem is escalating when alcohol and fluoxetine combine with other behavioral drugs. Alcohol use is severely discouraged in trance, antipsychotic drugs and many mood stabilizers and anti-convulsions. The likelihood that ProVAC®, alcohol and other medicines will cause problems with each new substance and many people taking drugs for depression or anxiety disorders are on more than one drug.
Another convincing reason to avoid the use of alcohol and fluoxetine is that these substances achieve the opposite effects. Fluoxetine is an antidepressant that affects serotonin receptors to prevent them from using circulating serotonin in the brain, creating a higher supply of free serotonin, which can increase mood or reduce anxiety. Alcohol is a depressive substanceKa, which disrupts the production of serotonin and which, over time and with higher use, can increase anxiety by disturbing the processes of the body that help regulate it.
drugs used to reduce anxiety or depression are less effective when combined with alcohol. Sometimes this effect is not immediately recorded, and initially, alcohol use seems to improve the problem. Over time, the problem usually deteriorates and people can try to solve this problem by drinking more. The conditions of depression and anxiety correlate with high levels of alcoholism, which tend to deepen these conditions rather than help them, and any antidepressant may be ineffective if combined with frequent alcohol use. In other words, alcohol use can prevent people from improving drugs like ProVAC®.
It is interesting that many studies of alcohol and fluoxetine suggest that the first may be useful in not using the second. Fluoxetin and several other antidepressants can be used to support comfort when recovery from PIts and sometimes from drug use. The fact that fluoxetine can inhibit the desire for drinking and get people to feel better without it suggests that people who use it may be easier to combine fluoxetine and alcohol, and in this choice they can experience better control of symptoms.