Dreams - post-op issue for anyone???

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Uh......
I must be the odd one out........or just lucky.
I didn't have any vivid dreams with Metoprolol. Took it for about 7 months post-op had no problems.
 
Well, Steve...

providing that they're not real horror-dreams relax and enjoy your "secret life".

I noticed that when I was on Toprol xl and an ACE inhibitor my dreams became ferocious. They were so real that I enjoyed the "other" life I had available. Indiana Jones and all that rolled into one. Like you, I rarely had dreams in many years... at least ones that I could remember.

I'm sure that it's annoying waking up because of the realism but you're pretty recent out of surgery so don't fret about it. Try arranging to get sleep in small increments until this passes. I'd be pretty sure that it's all just your body saying "WHOOOOOOOOOOOOHOOOOOOOOOOOO" following the trauma of your surgery. Probably trying to work up a few good "Baywatch" episodes featuring the one and only Steve.

Take care, Friend.

Jerry
 
I don't have the dreams as you describe but the third night after surgery still in the hospital I woke up my husband and asked him why they had changed my room. He asked what's different. I told him the picture on the wall and the clock as well. I said the bathroom is in a different place. He was so freaked out (he didn't tell me that) that he went for the nurse. Of course I had not changed room and nothing had been moved. So I'm guessing it was the pain meds. Earline
 
For years if I woke up in the a.m. and went back to sleep I'd have really weird dreams - based in reality. Not unusual. But the problem would come when I'd think "Now did I dream that, or was it reality?" And I was always having cases of deja vu frequently. I realize that everyone has this from time to time, but mine seemed more often. Then I read here that one of the odd, little reported side effects for metoprolol (Toprol) was just such types of things. I was taking 50 mg 2x/day. I dropped back to 50 1x a day, took note to see if my heart rate got any faster or more irregular, and it wasn't. I also noticed that these occurrences went away. They never came close to the point where I thought - wow, I have a psychiatric problem, but it was a bit freaky from time to time. It never inhibited my ability to function normally (for me:eek: ), but it was a little strange.

So now I'm on a reduced amount of metoprolol, but I'll take the extra dose in the a.m. if I'm going to have a particularly long day or stressful day that I know my affect my heart. My cardio knows I did this and she's okay with it. I would not recommend doing anything without discussing it with your doctor.
 
I remember seeing all kinds of crazy things when I would wake up in the middle of the night. From thinking my ceiling fan was a witch flying around the room to who knows what else. It was insane!
 
After the first surgery, I had awful "death dreams". I would wake up mourning a body that a surgical team was surrounding. Really, absolutely sobbing for that poor lost soul. I was on 25 mg Atenolol pre and post op, but the dreams didn't start until after the surgery and after the second I don't recall any dreaming instances.

The anesthesiologist I just had for my ACL reconstruction mentioned that I could have had moments of operative lucidity in recovery the first time, instead of being completely under. This seems possible since I remember them transferring me from stretcher to ICU bed and being lifted (briefly) for the postop x-ray in 2000, but nothing but the respirator tube gagging me after the second time around in 2006.
 
At almost 2 yrs post-op I look forward to the crazy dreams I get every night. I am another believer in the Beta-blocker theory. I have been on it since about 3 months before my OHS ....unfortunately I cant remember if I had weird dreams before my OHS. I also get the annoying awake/asleep 2-3 hour cylces so I will take a mild "over the counter" sedative to try break up the pattern, it seems to work for me.
 
What I dream about...

What I dream about...

Thanks again for all the responses! I have seen some write specific descriptions of what they dream. I didn't include that in my original post but figured, what the heck, if others are describing, I might as well, too (plus I KNOW my wife is getting bored of hearing about my dreams so I'll just use vr.com as a sounding board... but just this one time!). Plus I know in a few days time I'm going to forget these dreams and here's one way to record them (though it just occurred to me that this would be a terrific time in my life to start a dream journal).

My typical post-OHS dream involves me being around a large number of people, it could be a party, a school-setting, with lots of people hanging out (again with the party theme). In all cases I'm feeling very confident and thoroughly enjoying being around a large number of people (which is NOT what I'm all about in real life). I am actively engaged in conversation and people are finding what I have to say interesting, witty. I'm not the center of attention... not "the star" of the party or the outstanding student in school but I am very comfortable being around a lot of people. I sometimes have one of my kids with me. I also may have a friend who I've lost contact with in my dream. In one dream, I was in a school setting that involved a graduation. After the ceremony, I confronted a good friend of mine about his misuse of Dextroamphetamine. It was a very lively conversation and while he tried to make excuses, I felt I did a good job of confronting him and encouraging him to seek help. I have a very good recall of our conversation and that part of the dream seems quite real. In another setting, I was invited to the home of an influential family in town for a small party. That dream also had a very strong aura of having really occurred. I woke up another night with the sense that I was laughing out loud. I was laughing in response to something my 6 year old daughter said in my dream. My wife woke up and told me that it sounded like I was crying and she also told me she's never heard me wake from a dream making noises of any kind. I was really upset at the time that she thought I was crying because my very real experience in the dream was that I responded to my daughter's funny comment with laughter. I found it troubling that my "dream experience" did not actually carry over into reality, at least according to what my wife heard from me.

To aussigal's comment, since my dreams are yet to be nightmarish or depressing, I also tend to look forward to the dreams. I'm not happy with how I tend to wake up so quickly and so often I wake up just as the story, oops, I mean dream takes an interesting turn. At times like this, I'll wake up and first thing I'll notice is my heart is beating rapidly, sometimes with a sense that it's pounding. (I've made an appointment with a pulmonary specialist who treats sleep apnea.) And like others mention, I do have a tendency to sometimes blur dream and reality but not to the point of feeling like I'm chronically delusional (though I know we're talking dreams, not fantasies, here).

Now my inclination is to apologize for babbling on and on about this topic but it occurred to me if anyone bothered to read this far into my posting, they must have some interest in this issue or in the subject of dream and sleep patterns. Obviously what I'm writing is more of a "dumping of feelings" on vr.com than anything else right now... maybe an effort to purge out the psychologically odd state of mind I'm in right now. So... no apologies and thank you to those out there who actually read to this point.

I do find it terribly interesting that so many people have experienced similar issues with dreams and sleep patterns after surgery. Probably not OHS specific though the link to beta blockers appears to be significant. I return to work next week and I expect to get a number of people asking "how are you doing?" I'm skeptical about that question... I really don't believe most people want to know many details. It's a different way of stating "I hope all is well." I plan on responding... "I'm fine but the dreams I've had since surgery are out of this world!"... and leave it at that.

Steve C.
 
Well then, i havn't had OHS and am not on any medication. I have just started a new job cleaning hotel rooms and i keep having vivid dreams about being in a haunted hotel room, they are so real iam afraid to go back to sleep. Just wondering if some of your dreams could be conected to the worry of the surgery aswell. The only other times my dreams have been this vivid is when i was useing nicorette patches.
 
I would also wake up it seemed every 3 hours. And i will tell you all my dreams were about my ex husband and it was always aobut something bad happening to him LOL But it stopped after i stopped taking the vicoden
 
South Sound Sailor said:
Probably not OHS specific though the link to beta blockers appears to be significant.

I'm not sure I would jump to that conclusion. I wasn't on beta blockers and had (still have) dreams, well beyond what I experience pre-op.
 
I am actually sleeping a lot better post op, dreaming occasionally, but not too bizarre. It is said when you dream you are actually in the deepest sleep, (REM), which our bodies need. As long as I don't dream about work I'm ok!:)
 
I have had vivid, wacky dreams since I have been on Inderal (before my first OHS). I do not think they became more intense after OHS but they have never decreased with time. It can be tough because I do not sleep that much anyway so waking up from crazy dreams only makes things worse.

However, I do get some great ideas for my writing. ;) :D
 
No bad dreams but if I were not taking Lunesta every night I would be lucky to get 3 hours sleep. Since the operation (5 weeks now) I have been taking 2mg at bed and 2mg around 3 am when I wake up all restless. Getting a pretty good 6 -7 hours per night is helping me heal and get through the day. I plan on cutting back to 1 a night when in week 6 or 7 and then zero by week 12.
 
For a good while after surgery, I was getting very little sleep, so dreams weren't an issue usually. Now I am sleeping better (though rarely the whole night through) and yes I, too, have some wacky dreams. Prior to OHS, I rarely had a dream that I could recall later, but now I not only remember them, but if I wake up and then go back to sleep, I resume dreaming the same dream! They are not really disturbing dreams, though last night I was in some sort of military situation, and my guys kept going out on patrol and were being sniped at from anove, even though we controlled the turf above us. Never really solved that puzzle -- maybe tonight. :D

Medicine may well have something to do with all this, or just the psychology of having been through OHS and being a survivor.

In any event, I fully welcome the dreams (just wish more hot babes could join in them:D ) because they mean I am actually getting some sleep! :)
 
I take Coreg and Accupril and have for probably 3 years.


I don't notice having any more or less dreams.

I must be dreaming that this posting part is like being faster than the speed of light. The stupid thing can't keep up with my typing. It only seems to be on this site also (sorry for the small rant).

You guys all need to get a 6 month and a 3 year old. I sleep 2 hours at a freaking time ALLL THE TIME!!! Not by choice mind you.

If it isn't the 6 mo old one then it is the 3 year old wanting to sleep in my bed at 3:30 am. I walk around like a zombie.
 
dreams still

dreams still

maybe i'm the only one but after 6 months i'm still having crazy dramatic dreams, sometimes 3 a night, before surgery i never remembered a dream i've had, now i cant even forget them. its almostl ike another world when i go to sleep, the feeling after waking up is so dramatic its like it happened. oh well i just got used to always dreaming now. good luck!
 
I had like 20 extremely vivid dreams last night after switching from atenolol to metoprolol... Not very thrilled about it. Alot of them were war or action type dreams so it feels like I didn't sleep at all. I'm not post-op but I think it's relevant to the thread.
 
I experienced more frequent and vived dreams in the first few months than I ever did before. I had one that really freaked me out, I wake up in a sweat from a nightmare in which I have been opened up with a circular saw and had an animal part installed in my chest. it takes me a minute or so sitting on the edge of the bed and then I realize holy s.... Its a bizzare experience, Ive had this dream at least three times in the last nine months since my surgery,it takes me awhile to get back to sleep afterward.
My experience is that my sleep has improved with time,
good luck
 

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