From: Aratzio on
On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 22:14:46 -0400, in the land of
alt.alien.vampire.flonk.flonk.flonk, Hachiroku ???? <Trueno(a)e86.GTS>
got double secret probation for writing:

>On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 18:45:27 -0700, Aratzio wrote:
>
>> On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 12:08:30 -0400, in the land of
>> alt.alien.vampire.flonk.flonk.flonk, Hachiroku ???? <Trueno(a)e86.GTS> got
>> double secret probation for writing:
>>
>>>On Sat, 03 Apr 2010 22:51:50 -0700, Aratzio wrote:
>>>
>>>> On Sat, 03 Apr 2010 23:06:01 -0400, in the land of
>>>> alt.alien.vampire.flonk.flonk.flonk, Hachiroku ???? <Trueno(a)e86.GTS>
>>>> got double secret probation for writing:
>>>>
>>>>>On Sat, 03 Apr 2010 14:39:20 -0700, Aratzio wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> On Sat, 03 Apr 2010 13:21:19 -0400, in the land of
>>>>>> alt.alien.vampire.flonk.flonk.flonk, Hachiroku ???? <Trueno(a)e86.GTS>
>>>>>> got double secret probation for writing:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>On Thu, 01 Apr 2010 20:16:20 -0700, Aratzio wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> "OK, so you are not typing in your sleep. I guess that's nice to
>>>>>>>> know."
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>And he calls me pathetic. Keep going! It's somehow painfully amuzing.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>> Being laughed at is the norm for you ,isn't it?
>>>>>You're a fool, and you think it's funny. Man, you're dumber than I had
>>>>>ever imagined.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> I think it hilarious, you have to back pedal everytime.
>>>
>>>Who's backpedalling? You're a troll, and a stupid one at that.
>>
>> Hrmm,
>> getting you entangled
>> Thorazine.
>> Definitions of words.
>>
>>>You may be good with quips and mostly one liners, but you've proved once
>>>and for all you have all the brain activity of a box of rocks
>>
>> "You stoopid, heh"
>>
>>
>>>
>>>> How is that thorazine working out? Raising your *cognizant level*?
>>>
>>>Point proved.
>>>
>>>
>> Yeah, I thought the Thorazine thing was hilarious. The way you tried to
>> show eveyone how smart you were by agreeing that there were memory issues
>> with Thorazine.
>
>And?
>

Hachoo, cuts and pastes as evidence he knows something.

>Mechanism Of Action: Thorazine Spansule acts as an antagonist (blocking
>agent) on different postsysnaptic receptors -on dopaminergic-receptors
>(subtypes D1, D2, D3 and D4 - different antipsychotic properties on
>productive and unproductive symptoms), on serotonergic-receptors (5-HT1
>and 5-HT2, with anxiolytic, antidepressive and antiaggressive properties
>as well as an attenuation of extrapypramidal side-effects, but also
>leading to weight gain, fall in blood pressure, sedation and ejaculation
>difficulties), on histaminergic-receptors (H1-receptors, sedation,
>antiemesis, vertigo, fall in blood pressure and weight gain),
>alpha1/alpha2-receptors (antisympathomimetic properties, lowering of blood
>pressure, reflex tachycardia, vertigo, sedation, hypersalivation and
>incontinence as well as sexual dysfunction, but may also attenuate
>pseudoparkinsonism - controversial) and finally on muscarinic
>(cholinergic) M1/M2-receptors (causing anticholinergic symptoms like dry
>mouth, blurred vision, obstipation, difficulty/inability to urinate, sinus
>tachycardia, ECG-changes and loss of memory, but the anticholinergic
>action may attenuate extrapyramidal side-effects).

You were trolled, hooked, landed, gutted, battered and fried.
>
>
>
>I guess you forgot that.
>
>This counterindication seems to fit you to a "T":
>
>Central symptoms may include memory
>loss, disorientation, incoherence, hallucinations, psychosis, delirium,
>hyperactivity, twitching or jerking movements, stereotypy, and seizures.
>
>
>Caught again. Now YOU backpedal out of it.
>
>
don't have to, you ran like a scalded chicken when I told you.

--

Hachiroku explaining his *daddy* issues:

Message-ID: <homalb$usi$2(a)news.eternal-september.org>

I just keep seeing a pudgy 50 year old with his nethers rattling against
his knees...
From: Aratzio on
On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 22:15:35 -0400, in the land of
alt.alien.vampire.flonk.flonk.flonk, Hachiroku ???? <Trueno(a)e86.GTS>
got double secret probation for writing:

>On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 18:57:43 -0700, Aratzio wrote:
>
>> On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 21:00:54 -0400, in the land of
>> alt.alien.vampire.flonk.flonk.flonk, Hachiroku ???? <Trueno(a)e86.GTS> got
>> double secret probation for writing:
>>
>>>A smart person would have shut up a long time ago.
>>
>> I doubt you even get the irony.
>
>You certainly don't, that's for sure.

So, by pointing out the irony of your angry little foot stomping, I
dont get the irony.

Seriously, how stupid are you.


--

Hachiroku explaining his *daddy* issues:

Message-ID: <homalb$usi$2(a)news.eternal-september.org>

I just keep seeing a pudgy 50 year old with his nethers rattling against
his knees...
From: Hachiroku ハチロク on
On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 19:25:43 -0700, Aratzio wrote:

> On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 22:08:36 -0400, in the land of
> alt.alien.vampire.flonk.flonk.flonk, Hachiroku ???? <Trueno(a)e86.GTS> got
> double secret probation for writing:
>
>>On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 18:43:30 -0700, Aratzio wrote:
>>
>>> On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 12:06:56 -0400, in the land of
>>> alt.alien.vampire.flonk.flonk.flonk, Hachiroku ???? <Trueno(a)e86.GTS>
>>> got double secret probation for writing:
>>>
>>>>On Sat, 03 Apr 2010 22:50:17 -0700, Aratzio wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> On Sat, 03 Apr 2010 23:05:12 -0400, in the land of
>>>>> alt.alien.vampire.flonk.flonk.flonk, Hachiroku ???? <Trueno(a)e86.GTS>
>>>>> got double secret probation for writing:
>>>>>
>>>>>>On Sat, 03 Apr 2010 14:38:44 -0700, Aratzio wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Sat, 03 Apr 2010 13:17:05 -0400, in the land of
>>>>>>> alt.alien.vampire.flonk.flonk.flonk, Hachiroku ????
>>>>>>> <Trueno(a)e86.GTS> got double secret probation for writing:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>On Thu, 01 Apr 2010 20:03:06 -0700, Aratzio wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> On Thu, 01 Apr 2010 22:24:58 -0400, in the land of
>>>>>>>>> alt.alien.vampire.flonk.flonk.flonk, Hachiroku ????
>>>>>>>>> <Trueno(a)e86.GTS> got double secret probation for writing:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>On Thu, 01 Apr 2010 19:06:33 -0700, Aratzio wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>In the hopes that you'll get educated.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> So, you didn't understand what I wrote. Hint: "I know you and
>>>>>>>>>>> Obungler are elitist snobs"
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> You have no intellectual curiosity and have the
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> intellectual depth of saran wrap.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>And I don't need to be spoonfed, either. Tell me, what do you
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>use for sources, O Wise One?
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> I already gave you several.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> So why not tell us who spoonfed you your ignorance:
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> Unless, you are a selfmade ignoramous?
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>Coming from one who doesn't know the uses of the word
>>>>>>>>>>>>"cognizant" and has to have a Swede explain it to him.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> BWAHAAAAHAAAAAAA
>>>>>>>>>>> She was laughing at you
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>Um, at *ME*? Have another look.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> "OK, so you are not typing in your sleep. I guess that's nice to
>>>>>>>>> know."
>>>>>>>>So, the only difinition of 'cognizant' is 'awake'? After all this
>>>>>>>>this is all you got from it?
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> No, you idiot, that was Veronica pointing out your stupidity. The
>>>>>>> synonym she spanked you with was "conscious".
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> That she had to go to a synonym points out your stupidity. That you
>>>>>>> figured out your only defense was a synonym, that does not fit, is
>>>>>>> just how stupid you are.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>God, are you ignorant.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>> That's it? Your going with that one? No tirade about how you don't
>>>>> care and that it doesn't mean anything to you?
>>>>
>>>>No one can handle someone who is just plain ignorant.
>>>
>>> Maybe if you ignore the fact you were wrong every step of the way,
>>> stamp feetsies and whine no one will notice you were an idiot.
>>
>>But, I'm not. I know how to use the word. You didn't even know what it
>>was until a Swede gave you a definition. Then you try and tell me how to
>>use a word you never heard before. Nice try...not.
>
> She has told you she was laughing AT you for your usage. You are one of
> those people immune to facts.
>
> Define the word.

I'm done playing with you, you ignorant troll.
If you can't figure it out from the references I gave you, then you're
dumber than a box of rocks. I used a clinical definition, and it's
obviously over your head. Go play somewhere else now. And am I worried
that a Swede laughed at me? I wouldn't count on it.

>
>
>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>> You were so happy when you thought you were *winning*, now you seem
>>>>> out of sorts and kinda sad.
>>>>
>>>>Of course.
>>>
>>> Childish little git.
>>
>>OOOOH! What a scathing comeback!
>
> Well stop having temper tantrums.


Yet another mindless response. You suck at this.

From: Aratzio on
On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 22:15:35 -0400, in the land of
alt.alien.vampire.flonk.flonk.flonk, Hachiroku ???? <Trueno(a)e86.GTS>
got double secret probation for writing:

>On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 18:57:43 -0700, Aratzio wrote:
>
>> On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 21:00:54 -0400, in the land of
>> alt.alien.vampire.flonk.flonk.flonk, Hachiroku ???? <Trueno(a)e86.GTS> got
>> double secret probation for writing:
>>
>>>A smart person would have shut up a long time ago.
>>
>> I doubt you even get the irony.
>
>You certainly don't, that's for sure.

Side effects may include:
Abnormal secretion of milk, abnormalities in movement and posture,
agitation, anemia, asthma, blood disorders, breast development in
males, chewing movements, constipation, difficulty breathing,
difficulty swallowing, dizziness, drooling, drowsiness, dry mouth,
ejaculation problems, eye problems causing fixed gaze, fainting,
fever, flu-like symptoms, fluid accumulation and swelling, headache,
heart attack, high or low blood sugar, hives, impotence, inability to
urinate, inability to move or talk, increase of appetite, infections,
insomnia, intestinal blockage, involuntary movements of arms and legs,
tongue, face, mouth, or jaw, irregular blood pressure, pulse, and
heartbeat, irregular or no menstrual periods, jitteriness,
light-headedness (on standing up), lockjaw, mask-like face, muscle
stiffness and rigidity, narrow or dilated pupils, nasal congestion,
nausea, pain and stiffness in the neck, persistent, painful erections,
pill-rolling motion, protruding tongue, puckering of the mouth,
puffing of the cheeks, rapid heartbeat, red or purple spots on the
skin, rigid arms, feet, head, and muscles (including the back),
seizures, sensitivity to light, severe allergic reactions, shuffling
walk, skin inflammation and peeling, sore throat, spasms in jaw, face,
tongue, neck, mouth, and feet, sweating, swelling of breasts in women,
swelling of the throat, tremors, twitching in the body, neck,
shoulders and face, twisted neck, visual problems, weight gain,
yellowed skin and whites of eyes

--

Hachiroku explaining his *daddy* issues:

Message-ID: <homalb$usi$2(a)news.eternal-september.org>

I just keep seeing a pudgy 50 year old with his nethers rattling against
his knees...
From: Aratzio on
On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 22:14:46 -0400, in the land of
alt.alien.vampire.flonk.flonk.flonk, Hachiroku ???? <Trueno(a)e86.GTS>
got double secret probation for writing:

>I guess you forgot that.
Adverse effects

The main side effects of chlorpromazine are due to its anticholinergic
properties; these effects overshadow and counteract, to some extent,
the extrapyramidal side effects typical of many early generation
antipsychotics. These include sedation, slurred speech, dry mouth,
constipation, urinary retention and possible lowering of seizure
threshold. Appetite may be increased with resultant weight gain,
Glucose tolerance may be impaired.[20] Dermatological reactions are
frequently observed. In fact three types of skin disorders are
observed: hypersensitivity reaction, contact dermatitis, and
photosensitivity. During long-term therapy in schizophrenic patients
chlorpromazine can induce abnormal pigmentation of the skin. This can
be manifested as gray-blue pigmentation in regions exposed to
sunlight.

Chlorpromazine, which has sedating effects, will increase sleep time
when given at high doses or when first administered. Sleep cycles or
REM sleep is not altered by antipsychotics.[17]

There are striking adverse effects on the reproductive system.
Phenothiazines are known to cause hyperprolactinaemia leading to
amenorrhea, cessation of normal cyclic ovarian function, loss of
libido, occasional hirsutism, false positive pregnancy tests, and
long-term risk of osteoporosis in women. The effects of
hyperprolactinemia in men are impotence, loss of libido, and
hypospermatogenesis. These antipsychotics have significant effects on
gonadal hormones including significantly lower levels of estradiol and
progesterone in women whereas men display significantly lower levels
of testosterone and DHEA when undergoing antipsychotic drug treatment
compared to controls.[21]

According to one study of the effects on the reproductive system in
rats treated with chlorpromazine there were significant decreases in
the weight of the testis, epididymis, seminal vesicles, and prostate
gland. This was accompanied by a decline in sperm motility, sperm
counts, viability, and serum levels of testosterone in chlorpromazine
rats compared to control rats. It has been reported that a change in
either the absolute or relative weight of an organ after a chemical is
administered is an indication of the toxic effect of the chemical.
Therefore, the observed change in the relative weight of the testis
and other accessory reproductive organs in rats treated with
chlorpromazine indicates that the drug might be toxic to these organs
at least during the period of treatments. Furthermore, the weights of
the kidney, heart, liver, and adrenal glands of these treated rats
were not affected both during administration of the drug and recovery
periods, suggesting that the drug is not toxic to these organs.[21]

Antipsychotic drugs may cause priapism, a pathologically prolonged and
painful penile erection, which is usually unassociated with sexual
desire or intercourse. Although this effect is rare it is a
potentially serious complication that can lead to permanent impotence
and other serious complications.[22]

Doses of antipsychotics that are considered therapeutically low are
sufficient to trigger an epileptic seizure in particularly vulnerable
patients for example those with an abnormally low genetically
determined seizure threshold. The drug dose ability to provoke
seizures is presumably due to a reduced seizure threshold. The
incidence of the first unprovoked seizure in the general population is
0.07 to 0.09%, whereas the incidence rates have been reported to range
from 0.1 to 1.5% in patients treated with therapeutic doses of the
most commonly used antipsychotic drugs. Furthermore, the seizure risk
rises markedly to a range of 4 to 30% in patients who have taken an
overdose. This most notable variability among studies may possibly be
due to methodological differences which makes the research data that
much harder to interpret. The risk of a seizure being provoked during
antipsychotic drug medication is greatly influenced by the individuals
inherited seizure threshold and particularly by the presence of a
history of epilepsy, brain damage or other conditions. There is an
agreement however that seizures triggered by drugs are a
dose-dependent adverse effect.[23]

Tardive dyskinesia and akathisia are less commonly seen with
chlorpromazine than they are with high potency typical antipsychotics
such as haloperidol or trifluoperazine, and some evidence suggests
that, in conservative dosing, the incidence of such effects with
chlorpromazine may be comparable with that of newer agents such as
risperidone or olanzapine.[24]

A particularly severe side effect is neuroleptic malignant
syndrome[25]. NMS can be fatal.

Other reported side effects are rare, though severe; these include a
reduction in the number of white blood cells�referred to as
leukopenia�or, in extreme cases, even agranulocytosis, which may occur
in 0.01% of patients and lead to death via uncontrollable infections
and/or sepsis. Chlorpromazine is also known to accumulate in the
eye�in the posterior corneal stroma, lens, and uveal tract. Because it
is a phototoxic compound, the potential exists for it to cause
cellular damage after light exposure. Research confirms a significant
risk of blindness from continued use of chlorpromazine, as well as
other optological defects such as color blindness and benign
pigmentation of the cornea.[26][27]

Chlorpromazine is the antipsychotic drug with the highest rates (0.5%
to 1%) of liver toxicity of the cholestatic type.

The sedation effect combined with indifference to physical stimuli,
more commonly called the "Thorazine shuffle," has long been associated
with the drug. The image of psychiatric patients staggering mute
around a padded cell has earned those particular side effects a place
in mainstream pop culture. However, heavy sedation is usually due to
excessive doses of Chlorpromazine aimed at pacifying difficult
patients in institutional settings. The dose required to treat
psychotic symptoms is smaller and therefore less sedative than is
commonly depicted.

In some rare cases psychosis or death can result from the paradoxical
lowering of blood pressure, or death due to cardiac arrest attributed
to dysrhythmia.[28]

Cardiotoxic effects of phenothiazines in overdose are similar to that
of the tricyclic antidepressants. Cardiac arrhythmia and apparent
sudden death have been associated with therapeutic doses of
chlorpromazine, however they are rare cases. The sudden cardiovascular
collapse being attributable to ventricular dysrhythmia.
Supraventricular tachycardia may also develop. Patients on
chlorpromazine therapy exhibit abnormalities on the
electrocardiographic T and U waves. These major cardiac arrhythmias
that are lethal are a potential hazard even in patients without heart
disease who are receiving therapeutic doses of antipsychotic drugs. In
order to quantify the risk of cardiac complications to patients
receiving therapeutic doses of phenothiazines a prospective clinical
trial is suggested.[29]

--

Hachiroku explaining his *daddy* issues:

Message-ID: <homalb$usi$2(a)news.eternal-september.org>

I just keep seeing a pudgy 50 year old with his nethers rattling against
his knees...