
Have Numbness On Face And Arm. Given Ativan. Felt Elevated Heart Rate After Taking Zoloft. Worrisome

the next day i started taking zoloft 25mg. i took it for 3 days (my heart rate went back up on day 2 of the Zoloft), on the 3rd day i took .25mg of metoprolol succinate (to slow my heart rate (unsuccessfully)) and i had a bad reaction. the zoloft was making me crazy and combined with the beta blocker i was loosing my mind so i decided to stop taking everything. i've been off the zoloft for around 52 hours and off the metoprolol for around 48 hours. since that time my resting heart rate is in the high 80's-low 90's and when i get out of bed and simply walk around my house it jumps into the 110-120 range.
my questions:
1. Is the Zoloft still in my system and causing my heart rate to be elevated?
2. is the metoprolol still in my system and could the effects of it wearing off be contributing to the heart rate issue?
thanks so much.
Welcome to Health Care Magic
Half life is a term frequently used in Medicine.
Half-life is the time taken for the substance to fall to 50 % of its peak level in the blood.
Half life of one day means half the substance will be cleared by the body in one day – in other words only 50% will remain on second day.
At this rate, the reminder on day 3 = 25% / Day 4 = 12.5% / day 5 = 6.25% / Day 6 = 3.125% / Day 7 = 1.5625% / Day 8 = 0.0000
The blood level of any substance - including drugs - falls to negligible levels (5 % / < 2 Standard deviations) by the end of 5th half life.
The half-life of zoloft is about one day (1/2 to 2 days)
Therefore, by the end of one week, only less than 1 % will be left in the body.
The half-life of Metoprolol is about 3 to 7 hours / so, in 2 days, it will be gone!
Take care
Wishing speedy recovery
God bless
Good luck


thanks.
Retrospectively - 1- rare chance of recurrence of SVT / 2- zoloft could have been responsible; the effect being partially offset by Metoprolol / 3- any other incidental event.
Anaemia / Anxiety / Alcohol / Tobacco (smoking) / Caffeine (too much coffee, cola) / Medicines like Phenylephrine used for ‘cold’; Salbutamol used for asthma / Thyroid - are the usual culprits in most people...
EKG / HOLTER (24 to 48 hour ambulatory monitoring) / ECHOcardiogram / TMT (Treadmill exercise ECG) / LABORATORY work-up – may all be necessary for further assessment and assistance.
See your doctor / The treating doctor may suggest them depending on need, based on his assessment of the situation.

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