Joined: 12 Sep 2007 Posts: 2 Location: Sacramento, CA Sacramento
Pain Management Medications That Work For Patient W/pain? Posted: 09-12-07 03:05am
I am a pain patient of many years. I have
tried all the pain meds available and have
ended up w/injectable meds! These meds
have saved me from being nonambulatory
w/out a life! I also take meds for
breakthrough pain. I am interested in
people that have a good pain regimen that
really works for them. Patients w/severe
chronic intractable pain. It is very hard
to find and keep a doctor that will
prescribe very strong pain meds as needed.
Any advice?
Kat :
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sillyakchick
Moderator
Joined: 12 Apr 2007 Posts: 2690
Thanks: 5
Thanked:0
Posted: 09-19-07 10:56am
Kat;
What kind of pain are you being treated
for?
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1Kat
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 12 Sep 2007 Posts: 2 Location: Sacramento, CA Sacramento
Responding to My Response Re: Chronic Pain Posted: 09-28-07 22:24pm
The type of pain I have been diagnosed
with is: Severe chronic Intractable Pain.
(i.e., Lupus, R. Arthritis, Scoliosis, I.
Cystitis, post stroke, etc.)
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silverbullet71
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 08 Feb 2008 Posts: 7
Chronic Pain Posted: 02-08-08 19:36pm
HAve you seen a pain management doctor?
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algosdoc
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 23 Mar 2004 Posts: 186
Posted: 02-09-08 09:46am
Narcotics rarely work well for central
pain such as post stroke pain. When
patients with central pain are withdrawn
from high dose narcotics completely, they
rate their pain intensity the same with or
without narcotics. Most physicians will
not provide patients with injectable drugs
as this is bordering on substandard
medical care. Intrathecal pump infusions
of narcotics for selected pain states are
much preferable to injectable narcotics.
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Kittylover
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 13 Jun 2008 Posts: 2
Pain Management Posted: 06-13-08 10:24am
I've been on Hydrocodone for 15+ years for
several pain disorders. Am interested in
Intrathecal pump. Can anybody tell me
where to go to get help with this?
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Gina-MI
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 13 Aug 2008 Posts: 9
re pain pump Posted: 08-18-08 16:41pm
Kat, it sure is. Part of it is the
campaign against prescription pain killers
- 'cause kids are using them to get high
instead of buying illicit drugs (well, not
all kids, but a lot are). This makes it
more difficult, and doc's necks are on the
line, for if they make one mistake and
give someone who's drug seeking the wrong
stuff, the doc can be prosecuted, even
though it wasn't their fault. In some
states, giving out too much pain med can
put them under surveillance and endanger
their practice. Many people with chronic
pain take mega doses of pain meds that
would kill the normal person, but they
have worked their way up to a higher
dosage.
Kittylover?
I have an interthecal pump and LOVE it to
death! It stared in 1970, when I fell
while hiking in Colorado. Over the years,
falls, t-bone accidents, rear-end
collisions, etc. nevermind age, has
conspired to create major back and
sciatica pain. Finally, it got the the
point where I couldn't walk down a hallway
without stopping every few feet or so in
excruciating pain. After I moved to
Detroit, I found out about 'canadian
aspirin' (they put codiene in), then
stumbled over vicoden after a lumpectomy
for breast cancer in 2001 (I'm 7 years
cancer-free!); then duragesic, when I had
a hernia that was painful but couldn't be
fixed immediately. That kept me going
until the pain started radiating down my
leg(s).
At that point, I went in search of more
pain relief, preferably with less medicine
and more other. I had facet injections
and so on that didn't work. Finally,
after a little research on the net, I got
referred to a pain specialist that inserts
the medtronic pain pumps. I had mine
inserted February of this year, and
although not totally pain free, I can walk
up and down hallways and so on without too
much pain. I use a cane/walker, as well,
to lean on. I also have a lung disease
that makes me short of breath when walking
too far, and that combined with the pain
is challenging! (There's an 80%
possibilitiy I have pulmonary fibrosis...I
have a CT scan tomorrow that should tell
the tale. Pulmonary Fibrosis is where
your lungs get scarred and become stiff.
It has a life span of about 3-5 years, and
the only 'cure' right now is a lung
transplant, which was mentioned to me
during my last hospital stay for an
exacerbation/pneumonia - the 6th since
Feb.).