Complete dosage information for Gaboxadol — threshold, light, common, strong, and heavy dose ranges across 1 route of administration.
Full Gaboxadol profileImportant Safety Notice
Dosage information is for harm reduction purposes only. Individual sensitivity varies greatly. Always start with the lowest effective dose and work your way up slowly. Never eyeball doses — use a milligram scale.
Depressant overdose from Gaboxadol is a life-threatening medical emergency. The primary mechanism of death is respiratory depression leading to respiratory arrest. **Signs of overdose**: Extremely slow or stopped breathing, blue lips or fingertips (cyanosis), pinpoint pupils, unresponsiveness, cold/clammy skin, gurgling or snoring sounds (may indicate airway obstruction), very slow heart rate. **Emergency response**: - Call emergency services immediately - If the person is not breathing, begin rescue breathing or CPR - Place unconscious but breathing person in the recovery position - Administer naloxone if opioid involvement is suspected - **Stay with the person** until help arrives - Be honest with emergency responders about all substances consumed **Critical combination risk**: The combination of Gaboxadol with other depressants (alcohol, benzodiazepines, opioids) is the most common scenario for fatal depressant overdose. The respiratory depression from multiple depressants is synergistic (greater than the sum of individual effects).
A common oral dose of Gaboxadol is 15–30 mg.
The threshold dose for Gaboxadol via oral is approximately 5 mg.
Gaboxadol typically lasts 0.03333333333333333–0.08333333333333333 hours via oral.