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TREATMENT OF STRESS BREAKDOWN: BRAIN RESPONSE TO SEDATION CAUSING WITHDRAWAL AGITATION
Sedative drugs include alcohol, chloral hydrate, barbiturates, and the benzodiazepine drugs such as diazepam (Valium), oxazepam (Serepax), nitrazepam (Mogadon), and the increasing number of drugs on the market whose generic names end in ‘azepam’. The effect of any of these drugs is mainly on the cerebral cortex, interfering with the inhibitory cell groups and the mechanisms which trigger the alarm or anxiety response. Some of us like to feel slightly sedated, relieved of our fears by the Dutch courage of alcohol and other sedative drugs.
However, while sedative drugs may make us momentarily feel good, the brain does not happily accept the sedative drug’s slowing-down effect on the brain cells in the cerebral cortex. In response, the reticular activating system reacts to the sedation by sending increased stimulatory impulses to the cerebral cortex.
As the sedation from the last dose of drug wears off, the person begins to experience a hangover, a feeling of touchy hypersensitive agitation, due to the over-stimulation by the reticular activating system. This vague over-stimulation of the brain, as a reaction to the last sedative dose, usually lasts four times as long as the sedation did. After that time, the brain is able to reduce the stimulation and the cells get back to normal function.
Thus, a person feels more anxious after a sedative drug wears off than he would have if he hadn’t taken the drug.
After the sedation wears off the mild agitation from the brain’s response to the drug feels very uncomfortable and the person seeks another dose to relieve the agitation resulting from the previous drug dose. The problem is that this agitation is additive; after taking multiple doses of the drug, the person will experience such a high degree of agitation on ceasing the drug, he or she may become fearful of not being able to relieve the agitation with another dose and drug dependence may result. The risk of sedative dependence is so high where a person is being treated for stress-breakdown symptoms that sedative drugs should only ever be given when the anxiety symptoms themselves have become the major cause for concern. For example, a person who reacted to stress-breakdown symptoms with a phobic avoidance reaction (such as agoraphobia) and became unable to leave the house for fear of experiencing anxiety, might be more disabled from being unable to leave the house from fear of anxiety than by drug dependence.
Sedative drugs, in order to bring the situation under control, might be justified in those circumstances. However, I believe that in the vast majority of cases of anxiety symptoms caused by stress overload, the use of sedative drugs cannot be justified.
*48/129/5*



