Cyproheptadine for PTSD and nightmares

Warning: this email contains triggers regarding mental health issues

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Cyproheptadine for PTSD and nightmares

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Serotonin is not the “happiness hormone,” as it is called.

It’s more likely the “misery hormone” – It increases stress immensely.

Big Pharma has literally convinced the whole of humanity that serotonin is a good thing.

Why?

They’re making a lot of money with SSRIs.

And they want people who are easy to control (serotonin does that to you)

Fortunately, there are still doctors and scientists who have not been bought off…

We can learn this kind of information from them.

95% of the serotonin in the body is produced in the intestines.

Do you know when the most serotonin is produced?

When the gut is not in good condition.

Gut irritation is one of the biggest causes of serotonin excess.

And serotonin excess is linked to many dreadful diseases.

  • Migraines
  • Sexual dysfunctions (Low T, ED, etc.)
  • Gastric lesions
  • PTSD
  • Decreased lifespan
  • Obesity
  • Alzheimer, chronic pain, cancer, tinnitus, and so on.

It is utter NONSENSE that a hormone that causes many problematic diseases is promoted as a “happy” hormone.

Now I’m going to ask you to think about something.

Think about the nights when you have nightmares…

I’m sure many of them were preceded by either going to bed with a full stomach or having digestive problems.

Whenever my gut is not in the best shape, I have nightmares.

And the reason for those nightmares is excess serotonin.

Today’s study will show how an old-school serotonin-blocker treatment can prevent nightmares.

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The human experiments were conducted at Veterans Administration Medical Center, TX. It was published in Military Medicine.

Researchers experimented with veterans who had seen war and suffered from PTSD.

These veterans woke up every night with nightmares.

As I wrote above, PTSD and serotonin excess go hand in hand.

So they were given Cyproheptadine – an old-school serotonin blocker treatment – before bed.

There were 3 veterans in this experiment.

Let’s examine them case by case.

Case 1:

This was a 38-year-old man who had attempted suicide before.

And he had tried a lot of antidepressants but could not stop waking up every night with nightmares.

In just 3 days, 6 mg of cyproheptadine before bedtime made all his nightmares go away.

After a while, he stopped the treatment, and the nightmares returned – he started again, and the nightmares disappeared.

“On cyproheptadine, 6 mg at night, the nightmares stopped completely within 3 days. In the following month, he complained of headaches and saw a neurologist. He was told he probably had tension headaches and advised to stop Periactin. He did so, and his nightmares returned in about 3 days. Approximately a year later, he dropped the antidepressant and took cyproheptadine alone.”

Case 2:

This was a 67-year-old man who had been through World War II.

Every night he had nightmares involving gunfires.

After daily 2 mg of cyproheptadine, he stopped having them.

“On cyproheptadine, 2 mg at night, he had complete suppression of his nightmares within several days. He felt significantly less distressed and immobilized.”

Case 3:

He was a veteran of Vietnam.

Every night he had combat nightmares.

After daily 4 mg of cyproheptadine, he stopped having them.

“His combat nightmares fully responded to cyproheptadine 4 mg at night. Treatment was begun during his third week of hospitalization, and he was on no other psychoactive medications.”

The leading researcher says he’s saved 80 more people from their nightmares.

“I have treated about 80 inpatients and outpatients with major depression and post-traumatic stress disorder where the symptom of nightmares appeared to respond to the addition of cyproheptadine to antidepressants as illustrated by the first case which follows.”

Cyproheptadine is an OTC serotonin antagonist.

If you suspect excess serotonin, it deserves personal experimentation.

But always do your due diligence before trying such treatments.

—-Important Message—-

Ever heard of oxytocin? It’s the hormone for happiness in the bedroom

There’s a hormone more powerful than serotonin or even testosterone…

It’s called oxytocin and it’s responsible for that addicting, pleasurable feeling you get when you’re intimate with a woman.

And studies show oxytocin is the true hormone that increases erections in men:

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So how do you boost oxytocin levels for better erections and even more pleasure?

Well here’s the thing — it has to be made naturally in the body…

So what I’ve done is come up with a simple protocol that gets your body to produce more oxytocin on its own.

Here’s how to try my oxytocin protocol tonight (with a partner or by yourself)

———-


Matt Cook is editor-in-chief of Daily Medical Discoveries. Matt has been a full time health researcher for 26 years. ABC News interviewed Matt on sexual health issues not long ago. Matt is widely quoted on over 1,000,000 websites. He has over 300,000 daily newsletter readers. Daily Medical Discoveries finds hidden, buried or ignored medical studies through the lens of 100 years of proven science. Matt heads up the editorial team of scientists and health researchers. Each discovery is based upon primary studies from peer reviewed science sources following the Daily Medical Discoveries 7 Step Process to ensure accuracy.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/1900585