Member
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Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Paradise
Posts: 855
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Paradise
Posts: 855
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dew58
Outstanding research,Mike, Thank You so much for the effort you place into your posts.
Opioid rotation is the path my PM is following. I am in a place where my pain is tolerable, and does not rule my every thought.
Opioid rotation is increasingly becoming an option to improve pain management especially in long-term treatment. Because of insufficient analgesia and intolerable side effects, a total of 42 patients (23 male, 19 female; mean age 64.1 years) suffering from severe musculoskeletal (64%), cancer (21%) or neuropathic (19%) pain were converted from high-dose morphine (120 to >240 mg/day) to transdermal buprenorphine. The dose of buprenorphine necessary for conversion (at least 52.5 microg/h) was titrated individually by the treating physician. No conversion recommendations were given and the treating physician used his or her own judgment for dose adjustment. Pain relief, overall satisfaction and quality of sleep (very good, good, satisfactory, poor, or very poor), and the incidence and severity of adverse drug reactions over a period of at least 10 weeks and up to 1 year was assessed. Following rotation, patients experiencing good/very good pain relief increased from 5% to 76% (P < 0.001). Only 5% reported insufficient relief. Relief was achieved with buprenorphine alone in 77.4%, while 17% needed an additional opioid for breakthrough pain. Sleep quality (good/very good) increased from 14% to 74% (P < 0.005). Adverse effects were reported in 11.9%, mostly because of local irritation, did not result in termination of therapy. Neither tolerance nor refractory effect following rotation from morphine to buprenorphine was noted. Conversion tables with a fixed conversion ratio are of limited value in patients treated with high-dose morphine.
PMID: 17559481 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Jennelle..it is odd that WC is making you go through this program. What is their basis of thought for an outcome? How will you handle the pain once you have detoxed? What really bothers me is that patients in chronic pain DO NOT BECOME ADDICTED to their pain meds..as the patient takes the meds to ease pain..not to get high. I don't know about you all, I do NOT get a high from my meds. I would be interested in your replies. 
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Wow,
While I certainly agree with the results of this study and I certainly appreciate pain meds, I am afraid that if you have type I CRPS, you are excluded from this cohort. The only possible inclusion for CRPS patients as so far as this abstract is concerned is that it addresses neuropathic pain, for which you could infer type II CRPS, but without reading the full text article, it may have nothing to do with us. So, to therefore take this to the bank, might work, or could severely blow up in your face.
I am not a nay-sayer, just evaluating the abstract for what it says...
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