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Discussion

Question about Seroquel

Is it true that the less mg you recieve of seroquel, the more drowsy you get? I remember a psychiatrist once telling this to a patient but I couldn't find any objective data on the internet or in the PDR.

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For some reason, I'm wondering if the psychiatrist wasn't telling the patient this to try and discourage them from taking a lower dose of the med. Not necessarily ethical, but just a thought.

50 mg of Seroquel at bed time-rational sleep, I see it everyday. This use is mostly used for the more agitated clients. Everyone else usually gets Trazodone, or benadryl for sleep.

Actually Seroquel is being used more and more for things other than mania, schitzophrenia, and psychosis, we're seeing it used for patients with nocturnal anxiety at a low dosage 25-50mg. Also between 200-400mg Seroquel can work really well for depression episodes in Bipolar Disorder.

Dear friends,

This is my first post, excuse me if it's a bit wordy.

Anti-psychotic meds are used for their effects on the dopamine system, but they also have strong anticholinergic side effects. Along with dry mouth and constipation, they can cause quite a lot of drowsiness.

Now, dopamine is usually activating, so there is a tug of war with these meds between activating effects and sedating effects. When a med like Seroquel is given in low doses, the anticholinergic effects win. In higher doses, the dopimanergic effects win.

Seroquel is frequently used off label in low doses as a sleeping agent, so not every patient who takes this med for sleep has psychotic problems. A person can develop tolerance to the drowsiness, just like tolerance to Benadryl when it's used for insomnia. However, many take this medicine for long periods and find it very helpful for sleep.

And now, I'm going to catch some zzz's myself!

I work as a psych nurse in an adolescent facility and I distinctly remember our medical director, who has been a psychiatrist for over 29 years, telling a patients family that very same thing...the lower the dose the more drowsiness the patient experiences. I myself also looked for the data on this and came up empty. Makes no sense logically, but it might just be true. I'll keep searching and if I come up with something I'll let you know.

I take 600 mg of seroquel at bedtime. MD started it when I told them I hadnt slept in 3 days. I am bipolar and have depression. The dose started low and increased until I could fall asleep shortly after taking it. I kept stopping it cause I was too sleepy for work. Finally I was told I need to stick it out for 3 weeks. Now I can fall asleep but I am not sleepy in the morning.

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