It will give you a much higher chance of developing dementia if it’s used for more than 3 years at regular doses indicated for sleep. There was a Harvard study on it that I will forever PSA about:
It will give you a much higher chance of developing dementia if it’s used for more than 3 years at regular doses indicated for sleep. There was a Harvard study on it that I will forever PSA about:
Chiming in to say I that I understood “ptui” for what it was more clearly than “tuah.”
You’ve cracked the code, brother. You received 9 up votes and no down votes.
Man, reading the title I thought quantum entanglement had finally arrived and I clicked that shit so fast 😂
LOL, the tattoo on his right forearm says “Freude am Fahren.”
My appetite has too been whet for this black magic you describe. I’ll dig around!
Amazing, I can still smell the glue cooling!
You made me remember PULSAR - Lost Colony which is a decent iteration of co-op space bridge sim!
Discovering Amon Tobin on Subterranean.
For anyone considering regular recreational benadryl use, please read this link:
This study examines OTC anticholinergics use in a group of 3500 people 65 and older in Seattle, Washington at two points in time, an average of 7 years apart.
In that time, 800 individuals developed dementia and they found that anticholinergic use resulted in an increased risk of dementia. There is a dose-dependent relationship as well, the higher the cumulative dose meant a greater risk of developing dementia.
From the article:
“Taking an anticholinergic for the equivalent of three years or more was associated with a 54% higher dementia risk than taking the same dose for three months or less.”
Granted, this study is looking at persons 65 and older, which do have an altered drug metabolism compared to younger persons, but even so it’s not looking good generally for humans to have chronic exposure to drugs like Benadryl.
two Nat 1s?
Snake Eyes?
I am a simple man: I see a post about recreational anticholinergics, I copypasta my own words again -
https://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/common-anticholinergic-drugs-like-benadryl-linked-increased-dementia-risk-201501287667