Jump to content
Please Check, and if Necessary, Update Your BB Account Email Address as a Matter of Urgency ×
New Forum: Celebrating 20 Years of Support - Everyone is Invited! ×
  • Please Donate

    Donate with PayPal button

    For nearly 20 years, BenzoBuddies has assisted thousands of people through benzodiazepine withdrawal. Help us reach and support more people in need. More about donations here.

The switch from dry to solution clonazepam for tapering


Recommended Posts

Posted

I am planning to switch to a clonazepam solution now that I am at .5 mg. I will put .5 mg tablet into 50 ml solution (PG and water). My question is how the non-active ingredients in the tablet figure into the switch to a solution. They are obviously put in the tablet with the active clonazepam for some reason, but will they still work the same way once dissolved (or whatever word is correct!) in the solution? Like everyone else, just looking to avoid surprises. My tapering so far has gone really well at 5-5.5% weekly with dry cutting, staying on the same generic Par clonazepam. I've read many people experience a transition period when switching to solution, and I'm wondering if it's because of the inactive ingredients. Has anyone NOT had a period of transition when switching?

 

Thank you for all the words of wisdom and the many sharing of experiences. It has made all the difference for me.

 

Serenity

Posted

I am planning to switch to a clonazepam solution now that I am at .5 mg. I will put .5 mg tablet into 50 ml solution (PG and water). My question is how the non-active ingredients in the tablet figure into the switch to a solution. They are obviously put in the tablet with the active clonazepam for some reason, but will they still work the same way once dissolved (or whatever word is correct!) in the solution? Like everyone else, just looking to avoid surprises. My tapering so far has gone really well at 5-5.5% weekly with dry cutting, staying on the same generic Par clonazepam. I've read many people experience a transition period when switching to solution, and I'm wondering if it's because of the inactive ingredients. Has anyone NOT had a period of transition when switching?

 

Thank you for all the words of wisdom and the many sharing of experiences. It has made all the difference for me.

 

Serenity

 

Some of the non-meds will be soluble and dissolve; some will probably just settle out.

 

Remember, they are inactive; they have no medical or therapeutic effect.

Posted
Thanks for the reply. That's what I'm hoping - inactive = unimportant.  :)
  • Who's Online (See full list)

    • [...]
    • [Mi...]
    • [Gr...]
    • [Pi...]
    • [Ma...]
    • [bu...]
    • [Re...]
    • [...]
    • [Do...]
    • [ba...]
    • [Mr...]
    • [...]
    • [wi...]
    • [Si...]
    • [Li...]
    • [El...]
    • [jo...]
    • [Ga...]
    • [in...]
    • [...]
    • [Al...]
    • [ro...]
    • [Lo...]
    • [Ta...]
    • [kn...]
    • [Ro...]
    • [fl...]
    • [Ca...]
    • [...]
    • [fr...]
    • [jo...]
    • [Sw...]
    • [On...]
    • [TH...]
    • [Fi...]
×
×
  • Create New...