Hydrocodonewithdrwals, Shortness of Breath Posted: 05-09-07 06:21am
I have what is needed and want to quit. I
have been on Hydros for 4 years 6 pd
10/325 under pain management doc. I have
noticed I am getting shortness of breath
for the past 9 months and went for a
stress test. They say everything was good
but my Xray came back "it coule be
abnormal" so they want to do a cardiac
catho on me next week.
Do you know, can the Hydros cause the
shorness of breath? My doc says no but I
think different.
If I do as suggest about the clonodine,
will I have any withdrawals, can I work.
I used them before to help me sleep and
they did great. I went off off the hydros
after a facet.
Thanks
I read this article on a board:
I, as a 6 year perscription pill abuser
would like to report an unexpected success
in the area of self-treatment. I have
found success in recovery with the use of
clonidine. I have found that after a
relapse one can actually forgoe 95% of the
pain of withdrawl by careful use of
clonidine. I usually will take two 0.1mg
tablets before bed, leaving two additional
tablets by the bedside. When withdrawl is
in full effect a patient/abuser can rarely
expect more than 4-5 hours of uninterupted
sleep. When I wake, I quickly take the two
other clonidine tablets and wait to fall
back to sleep. In addition my doctor has
me using the Anti-depressent/Sleep
medication Trazadone. Using this method
one can expect to get 6-8 hours of sleep
or more. Also, by maintaining clonidine in
the blood supply one tablet every 6 hours
while awake will have the effects of
keeping muscle spasms to almost nothing. I
have found that by keeping the physical
symptoms to a minimum, the focus becomes
the inherent depression one feels during
withdrawl. I keep my mood up by watching
fun entertaining movies and eating
"comfort foods". NOTE TO EVERYONE: If an
patient/abuser is taking powerful doses of
dangerous narcotics in large quantities
this method does not help. This method is
useful to pain-management patients and
pill abusers that use between 1 darvocet
(very weak) per day to 2 percocet (very
strong) four times a day for long periods
of time. This method has the best effect
for patients/abusers using hydrocodone
5/500mg three times per day.
Many doctors I have spoken with feel that
an abuser should feel the pain of
withdrawl so they are relunctent to make
the same mistake twice. I understand the
logic in this, but I can't help but feel
this information would benefit doctors
that have patients that become addicted
through no fault of there own.