Yes. Remeron (mirtazapine) is listed as having the side-effect of vivid dreams.
Yes. Yes they can cause weird dreams for some people.
Weird Dreams happened in 1988.
Weird Dreams was created in 1988.
No
Yes most people have dreams no matter what age they are and is doesn't matter if they are weird
Weird dreams can be caused by any number of factors, but the most common are alcohol, caffeine, and various sorts of drugs. Anything that tends to disturb your sleep will also cause you to remember more dreams, more vividly. Alcohol makes some people sleepy, but it is not a deep or restful sleep. In fact, alcohol can cause you to awaken every few hours and consequently, remember more dreams.> Caffeine can not only cause insomnia, but cause restless, shallow sleep. Popular energy drinks as well as many sodas contain more caffeine than is generally known.> Both Over-The-Counter and prescription drugs can disturb sleep and/or cause vivid dreams, and different individuals react differently to different medications. Your pharmacist is your best source of information about the possible affects of your prescriptions and OTC remedies.> Street drugs are completely unpredictable, and insanely weird dreams are minor compared to other possible side affects.> Note: weird dreams are NOT caused by cheese, pizza or any other particular foods eaten late at night. But indigestion and gas pains can disturb your sleep which, in turn, can cause you to remember more dreams more vividly.
No, not at all. It is an anti-depressant. In striking contrast with amphetamines, Remeron will likely cause massive weight gain (while amphetamines cause massive weight loss), it will cause mild to severe sedation (while amphetamines cause severe stimulation) and certainly it is not addictive at all, it is actually hated (while amphetamines are highly addictive). However some patients really like Remeron. Some might experience euphoria in the beginning but it will fade away.
When one is sick, the fever or other discomforts of the illness can trigger disturbing and unusual dreams by disrupting the healthy nightly cycles of sleep. Delusions are extraordinarily weird dreams that are typical of high fevers. In addition to the illness itself, medications can disturb normal sleep cycles and cause unusual dreams.
Can you take Xanax with Remeron
Some of the medications, drugs, and nutrients that affect dreams include: GABA (neurotransmitter and OTC supplement) Mirtazapine (antidepressant, sold as Remeron, Avanza, Zispin) Nicotine
When you have weird dreams it is called, "having weird dreams." There is no particular word in the English language for weird dreams. But "nightmares" are frightening dreams, and "febrile" dreams are the distorted dreams experienced when sick with fever. "Delirium" also refers to mental delusion resulting from fever, illness or withdrawal from an addictive substance. There also are countless idioms and metaphors that refer to different sorts of dreams, including dreams that are influenced by drugs, such as pipe dreams, smoke dreams, tripping out, etc. "Hallucinations" and "delusions" generally refer to distortions one perceives while awake rather than asleep, although the terms are used of both states.
It might mean that you are not sleeping soundly, and might need to avoid caffeine in the afternoons and evenings. Or you might be having weird dreams as a side effect of some medication. When you sleep soundly, you remember fewer dreams, but when you sleep poorly, you remember more dreams and they seem more weird than usual.