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PTSD And Prazosin

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I currently take 3 2mg of prazosin before I go to bed starting about 2 months ago. I have to take it right before I go to bed because if I walk around after I pass out. Even if its just to get up to go to the next room to go the bathroom. (which isn't very far.) I have passed out in the bathroom several times. The only thing it helps with for me is decreasing the nightmares.(which has helped a lot) I still will have them but not as many and not as often.

During the day I am basically on my own. Day-mare is also how I would describe what I deal with during the day. It's horrible. Haven't spoken with doc yet about taking it during the day though. Didn't know that it was an option but something I will talk to him about because day time is horrible for me right now.
 
My doctor didn't like the idea of me taking it during the day when I asked about it actually. 6mg seems like a lot you know KvE, 1mg is enough for a lot of people but I take a 2mg pill now though. Did you work up to that dose or is that what they first decided to put you on? Maybe they think your resting heart rate is a little higher than mine though. You should try taking a smaller dose, you can avoid the undesirable side effects if you cut down probably. For me even at 2mg pill it kicks in so fast that it does the trick getting me to sleep. I know I dream but never recall what the dreams are about.

Being honest though it does help to take some Prazosin if you are home and not planning to do anything, preferably if somebody is around too. I think it helps with the angina from prolonged anxiety/palpitations, ect. Not quite as good as a Xanax or something but it is some relief, it tends to be more noticeable and calming as long as you are resting. As soon as you start moving around again the palpitations may return though. It seems to have an effect that helps your heart rate slow down while at rest so that is when it is most effective. I don't know why they do not think that I should take any of them during the day... I don't think there is a tolerance issue with them, but it is possible that they aren't very effective while you are actively moving around. I don't believe this drug has toxicity and it is gone from your body after 9 hours.
 
I started with 2-4mg a night. Doc said to take 2mg wait an hour if still awake take another one. Then because of the nightmares getting really bad he upped it to 6mg at the same time. My resting blood pressure was very low before prazosin so I am suppose to take my blood pressure and record it for him. I don't have a blood pressure monitor though so I haven't been. I still get the palpitations even if I am laying completely still. I have a heart rate monitor on my phone and I know it isn't completely accurate but it jumps up to 160-ish which is why doc wanted blood pressure monitor. He said my heart rate increases when my blood pressure decreases. I also told him though that I won't stop taking it unless he can come up with something else that helps the nightmares. I can't keep reliving every traumatic event every night over and over again. Even the nightmares I still have now even with the prazosin are enough to drive me crazy but not as bad as they were before.
 
Hmm perhaps there lies the problem. There are flashback like nightmares that are related to the trauma itself and then there are the 'ptsd nightmares' that are not so much related to the trauma. It could be that you need to lower your anxieties so that you can sleep better. It can be done with anti anxiety medication of course but you can also try to strive for the things in everyday life that boost your self esteem. The coping skills taught in therapy can also help us find meaning in our lives where everything seems chaotic. So reading, hobby related stuff, pushing yourself to do things when you would rather avoid out of fear, chores, a lax job and a schedule to go by along with a journal or diary, even keeping up with a planner.

If there are missing chunks of time from the events of your trauma try something I did. Go through the events leading up or as far as you can go, if you can go all the way. I should warn you that this exercise will cause you anxiety. You must try to remember how you felt not just what you were doing as you go, the events written out in linear fashion, example ("I didn't want to face what was happening to me because" or "I felt that if I went to ask for help, it would mean that this really is health related and I could be facing death soon".) The idea is that you think about the events as they unfold while remembering anything you were feeling or thinking. As long as you go slow and think about it, you will begin to write down the missing moments, feelings and details. If it works right, you will be shocked to find that you are writing down memories that were displaced by your own emotions, hidden under a cloud of nervous system responses designed to keep you alive on the most basic and fundamental levels.

It is of course very triggering but the release that is felt should be ... well it could very likely lead to a breakthrough. I couldn't say that it would be a guarantee to work but if you put the effort into it, I do not see why it wouldn't help. Afterwards you will probably feel both weak but also bold in your afterthoughts. It is a good idea to have somebody who understands you to talk to and get encouragement from and comfort soon after you have written down your story, felt it and then internalized it.

You might have already told your story in therapy and been emotional about it even but it is not the same as writing it, because you have to really remember and feel the things that your own mind locked away. At some point, soon after or after some thought, can we understand what happened? I don't know but on some level, things will start to be 'filed' in your memories the way they should be, a memory..yes a bad one and bad feelings that might challenge your fears. Fears that were faced though, and no longer a monster locked away within the dark recesses of your mind. We have to tell ourselves that we are okay now and understand in some way that we are still alive and can grow now after facing it in this way I guess.

There are other dreams that are seemingly unrelated to our traumas and more an effect of having ptsd. Many of us have had cycles of insomnia followed by bizarre and very vivid dream like nightmares. They don't always scare us like we would expect. If you could imagine seeing grotesque wounds on yourself after falling off a cliff. The dreams are real enough that you are actually surprised that you are still alive yet there is never a lot of fear or emotion behind it, you just get up and walk away on your crippled limbs. In my case the dreams are seldom violent in any way but more twisted and morbid, involving accidents and witnessing things that should terrify due to its vividness but it doesn't for some reason. It does however effect you in your awakened state, anxiety might start to build as you wake up and remember the dream and can become and intrusive thought that gnaws at you for a few hours. These phases can last months or weeks and come back again as your sleep habits change. One thing most of us that have experienced this that I talk to; "Prazosin is the only thing that keeps these dreams from happening".

I honestly don't know how effective the Prazosin is for nightmares related to the trauma, it could be that the trauma hasn't been dealt with in your mind as well as it should be yet. I do know that the drug works by blocking signals that pump adrenaline into your body or something to that effect. If the trauma still poisons you so, I don't think that the Prazosin is going to be your answer. It is just like you said, "I am still having these nightmares even while on Prazosin". Granted, it probably is helping a little by blocking the adrenaline but I just think that it wouldn't prevent the memories from surfacing in your sleep. It does however have a profound effect on these unexplained ptsd nightmares that make no sense and seem to be centered around nothing. I hope doctors don't think that this is some kind of miracle drug they can just give to anybody who has ptsd as some sort of miracle treatment, we all still need therapy and need to make the steps to unravel the issues that made us the way we are.
 
I've been taking 5mg per day at bed time. It doesnt stop the boogieman from coming ... but it does make it easier to go back to sleep after the boogieman has been and gone.
 
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