Posted by jay2112 on November 16, 2020, at 17:49:53
In reply to 5HT2 antagonist without anticholinergic properties, posted by Skeletor on November 16, 2020, at 13:27:36
> Strong 5HT2 antagonist without anticholinergic properties. It also shouldn't be a strong antihistamine, so no Mirtazapine, Miansern etc.! Is there something like that on the market?
>
>Well, I found mirtazapine to have way, way too powerful norepinephrine agonist properties as well. Maybe, your closest bet would be an antipsychotic. Risperdal has very powerful 5ht2a antagonist properties. If you are in the US, the antidepressant Nefadazone (Generic Serzone) I found, is an amazing, very tolerable, 5ht2a antagonist. It *really* has a relaxing effect, without making you sleepy.
Jay
I was brought up to believe..
Belief that's failed me now
As Life goes from bad to worse
No philosophy consoles me
In a clockwork universe..........
~Neil Peart (1952-2020)
poster:jay2112
thread:1112581
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/20201025/msgs/1112587.html