I AM NOT A DOCTOR. This is just logic, which does not always equate to accurate biology.
You didn't call out that your hands are vibratey, so we can mark off #1.
Also, since you're not experiencing the same symptoms in other parts of the body, we can mark off #3.
1) Your hands are actually vibratey.
2) Your hands are sending signals that they're vibratey.
3) Your spinal cord is jumbling signals, and it thinks your hands are vibratey.
4) Your brain is jumbling signals, and it thinks your hands are vibratey.
So, either there's something actually going on at your hands (which could be a whole host of things), or there's something going on at your brain.
Given the range of drugs you mentioned, and the fact that these are not targetting one part of the body chemically (other than your brain), I would assume that #2 is not feasible, unless all of these drugs do something with regards to blood vessels (which then would impact the rest of the body too, which we've already asserted does not happen).
So, that feeling is probably the result of something in that upper part of your brain getting all messed up. Which is probably the result of trauma induced by taking these drugs in the first place.
Do you have symptoms with regards to either your wrist, neck, or face with all of those drugs (and not the others) that might coincide with your vibratey hands?
« Last Edit: May 20, 2009, 10:57:41 PM by eitje »

Logged
Like yours. Only different.