I'd also question whether or not a mixed salt amphetamine is going to leave the channel partially open. Ratio's not being equal I guess it is like two steps forward and one step back.
It seems unfortunate that dexedrine is a CNS stimulant. But is usually a worn out drug after a few days. The agitation that arises may be due to there being enough stimulation to illicit the rejection response rather than the sleep response. You can work that out on your own time.
Fully blocking the mechanism would result in a very undisturbed peaceful world. Very much different from the fabled amphetamine overdose. The adverse effect only occurs when a fault arises in the chemical blockage of the pathway.
When sleeping, ultimately delta waves take over. This occurs when the sleep mechanism seduces the medial septal and it's pathway (it should be a quick and potent release to fall asleep quickly). The medication should have no effect on sleep whatsoever. REMEMBER this isn't supposed to be turned on by theta waves. The theta waves are mimicking delta wave. This distinction is not important -- the system is broken is what is important. There is a dualism in this function of the brain. In needs to stay that way.
Last edited by NoId; Nov 10, 2015 at 10:32 PM.
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