Name one brain-related illness that there is a universal cure for.
If it's not due to a specific vitamin/mineral deficiency that gets identified, you're usually fucked or in the very best case can dampen things a bit.
>>11814702>bromocriptine>Dopamine agonistWhat does this do for you? Does it help reduce some of the negative effects of schizophrenia? Would it maybe have recreational/euphoric effects for regular people? Does it for you?
I kind of would guess it could risk making psychoses work, and sure enough a case study titled "Bromocriptine-induced schizophrenia." comes up on Google:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2568138/>A 53-year-old male, without any prior history of psychosis, developed schizophrenia 4 days after starting low-dose bromocriptine therapy for a macroprolactinoma. Five days after discontinuation of this medication his mental status returned to normal. This case is reported in support of the dopamine hypothesis for the etiology of schizophrenia.Probably a misdiagnosis (I don't think it makes much sense to "have schizophrenia" for few days/weeks and then not have it ever again), but I could see how it could potentially induce psychosis or mania.
Does it make any of your delusions or other symptoms worse?