
Sleeping Pills And The Truth Behind Them
Author: Freddy Roy
Papaver rhoeus L., known as corn or field poppy, is an annual herb native to Europe and Asia. Extracts of the plant are used in medicine and beverages. Also known as opium poppy, the species is cultivated extensively in many countries, including Iran, Turkey, Holland, Poland, Yugoslavia, India, Canada, and many Asian and Central and South American countries. The poppy seeds and fixed oil that cab be extracted from the seed are not narcotic, because they develop after the capsule has lost the opium-yielding potential. Poppy seeds are used as a condiment with baked goods and pastries for their nutty odor and flavor. Poppy oil is widely used as an edible cooking oil. The oil is also used in the manufacture of paints, varnishes, and soaps. Opium is used in the production of morphine, codeine, other alkaloids, and deodorized forms of opium.
Moreover, Poppy is one of the most important medicinal plants. Traditionally, the dry opium was considered an astringent, antispasmodic, aphrodisiac, diaphoretic, expectorant, narcotic, sedative and hypnotic. The juice of the poppy contains chemicals known as opiates, from which morphine and heroin are distilled.
From the ancient medicinal herbs such as the opium poppy, emerged other sleep-inducers. Sleeping pills are nothing new. The bark of mandrake, or mandragora, was used as a sleep aid, as were the seeds of an herb called henbane. The juice of lettuce was also used to induce sleep. As early as 300 B.C., Greek doctors were known to prescribe concoctions of these different plant derivatives. Similar prescriptions were also apparently known throughout the Arab world. By the early 1900s, barbiturates were introduced. In the 1960s, benzodiazepines arrived on the scene. In the 1990s, consumers welcomed a safer class of insomnia drugs known as nonbenzodiazepine hypnotics.
Sleeping pill, also commonly referred to as a sleep aid, is a drug that helps a person fall asleep or remain sleeping. Disorders such as insomnia (inability to sleep) are widespread and has been a "nocturnal plague" that has been afflicting people for such a long time. In fact, herbs and chemical concoctions have been used to induce sleep since the ancient times.
Two distinct categories of sleeping pills are sold in the United States; these are prescription and over-the-counter drugs. Most prescription sleeping pills are made of active ingredients known as benzodiazepines, a central nervous system depressant. Benzodiazepines include the commonly prescribed drugs called contain chlordiazepoxide (Librium) and diazepam (Valium). Pharmacists developed non-benzodiazepine hypnotics in the 1990s such as zopiclone and zaleplon. Over-the-counter sleeping pill, which can be bought without a prescription, contain antihistamines which induce drowsiness by working against the central nervous system chemical called histamine.
However, most sleeping pill users, such as insomniacs, do not know that sleeping pills do the same things to them during the day than what they want them to do at night, that is, they impair the consciousness, judgment, memory and intelligence. Ironically, insomniacs think sleeping pills make them sleep better, when they actually make them feel worse. Many people believe the misconception that sleeping pills are supposed to help them sleep better. In truth, the effectiveness of sleeping drugs wear off over time. The more often you take them, the less effective they become.
Both prescription and over-the-counter sleep aids can cause side effects, such as next-day drowsiness and, of course, sleeping pill overdose can be fatal. Given the potential hazards, the manufacture of sleeping pills is highly regulated and overseen by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Pharmaceutical companies concentrate are now also reducing the side effects of sleeping pills.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/health-articles/sleeping-pills-and-the-truth-behind-them-2440257.html
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How many valium pills are safe to take before sleeping?
I have insomnia and I was given some valium from a friend, he said to take 30 milligrams before sleeping, but that seems like a lot anybody know?
30mg no way
take 1 blue 10mg & U WILL faLL asleep
Whats wrong with taking some sleeping pills and valium?
I’m a recovering alcoholic. I’m also in a pretty bad way at the moment, and I want to drink and self-harm.
Is there any harm in taking a couple of sleeping pills (twice normal dosage as normal dosage doesn’t work) and a valium so that I can sleep?
I’ve never been dependant on medication, and have only occasionally misused prescription drugs. Very rarely. Probably not even misused, just taken a few too many.
Surely taking a few sleeping pills as a one off so I don’t drink is okay?
Any ideas? I’m in AA, but its too late to call anyone. I can’t contact a doctor either, they’ll just shout at me.
Here’s my profile to my answer in Dylan V’s.
DIDN’T RELISE DYLAN WAS STILL SIGNED IN FROM BEFORE. So answered in his profile.
THE ABOVE ANSWER IS MINE.
THIS GUY IS IN WITHDRAWLS.
OBVIOUSLY NON OF YOU NON MEDICAL PEOPLE HAVE EVER been through withdrawls.
Taking a sleeping tablet for a few days is the answer.
Getting into a sleeping pattern is not as there is no sleeping pattern as you hurt so much in withdrawls that it’s impossible to sleep at all. Even during the day.
God he is not going to become addicted by a Valium and sleeping pill for a few days only.
AS LONG AS IT’S NOT MIXED WITH ALCOHOL.
I have also offered alternatives to the meds.
I did learn something in Nursing School studying drug and alcohol addiction.
READ THE QUESTION PROPERLY.
THEN READ MINE.
i have 4 sleeping pills Valium but i think its not effecting me .. should i take more ?
if i take 10 pills will it help?
I think you should see a doctor and discus this with him/her. We are not privy to your full history and even if we were we are not doctors. I think it would be safer for you to seek medical advice and perhaps you can be given something that is more suitable to assist sleeping. I think that to take more than the prescribed dose of any medication is not a good idea. I have the same problem with sleep so know the hell it can be, but it is better to change medication than struggle with one that does not work. I hope you hit on the right thing for you and I wish you luck.
I take 4 sleeping pills Valium a day but its not helping should i take more?
If i take 10 pills will i get a gud sleep? i booze beer does it effect the pills in any ways?
OKAY…WE ARE TALKING ABOUT YOUR HEALTH AND LIFE. VALIUM ARE ADDICTIVE AND YOU DO BUILD UP A TOLERANCE TO THEM. DO NOT TAKE TEN. DO NOT TAKE MORE THAN FOUR WITHOUT YOUR DOCTORS APPROVAL. BE SURE YOUR DOCTOR KNOWS YOU ARE COMBINING ALCOHOL WITH THE VALIUM. NOT A GOOD IDEA. MAYBE THE DOCTOR COULD PRESCRIBE A MORE APPROPRIATE SLEEPING MEDICATION FOR YOU. YOU CAN DIE FROM TOO MUCH VALIUM.
Putting a rat down at home with Valium or sleeping pill?
I do not have the money to put my rat down at the vet, and her tumors have grown so big she can no longer move properly and is very hungry. She is always gnawing on her cage and looks very haggard. I was thinking about crushing up two tablets of valium and putting them in some jam.
Ive read that giving a rat a sleeping pill can either put it to sleep or it can have reserve effects.
Any ideas?
http://www.ratfanclub.org/euth.html