View Single Post
Old 05-02-2012, 09:47 AM
LIT LOVE LIT LOVE is offline
Magnate
 
Join Date: Mar 2010
Posts: 2,304
10 yr Member
LIT LOVE LIT LOVE is offline
Magnate
 
Join Date: Mar 2010
Posts: 2,304
10 yr Member
Default

Thank you for posting this, Michael! You've been AWOL lately, I hope you're doing alright.

This is one of the most important applications for Lidoderm patches! For areas that are awkward to use patches, like the neck, then switch to lidocaine cream.

I was originally prescribed Lidoderm patches nearly 10 years ago, with the original directions to wear 1 a day in the same spot. Unfortunately, they lose their effectiveness when used that way. I discovered that even the application of 1 patch for 12 hours has turned off the dysfunctional, diaproportionate, burning pain, that had every indication of spread, countless times over the years. The sooner applied--the better!

I also use them on my original RSD site when I travel farther than 20 miles from home (it can reduce return to baseline pain by days) or for an unusual flare or when I visit an environment that will cause me to flare.

Most pain management docs should have samples to try. They can be expensive, but a generic version is hopefully going to be released soon.

Quote:
Originally Posted by fmichael View Post
I've missed much of the last few days here. Very late on Monday night of this week, I stumbled getting ready for bed (balance late at night and in getting out of bed in the morning often becomes an issue over time for people with RSD/CRPS) and as I fell down on my right side, I crashed into hand-pounded temple bell, maybe 18" high and 20" across, with a 3/8" wide lip that had been cut flat, fracturing two ribs (9 and 10). OUCH!!!

I suppose I could struggle to find a Zen koan somewhere in there: it's certainly a different take on "Meditation and Pain." Or is it? In the days that followed, as I made a deliberate movement that I knew would cause pain, I had no problem in focusing away from the pain in the instant it was most acute, so that it didn't bother me nearly as much as it otherwise would've.

But to the point: in the ER I was told that I would be miserable for the first and second day, and better thereafter. And while Tuesday was awful, until 1 cc of i.m. hydromorphone cut in, I woke up Wednesday feeling surprisingly well, and have steadily improved since then, and cancelling all of my appointments "over the hill" until Monday has I think really helped, but I want to give a shout-out on my pain doc's suggestion of putting lidocaine patches directly on top of the injured area, before any secondary pain complications could set in. In fact, the first lidocaine patch was put on right in the ER.

It may not have been continuous regional anesthesia, but it was as good as anyone could come up with off-hand. (Especially where all of my tDCS equipment is still awaiting delivery.) And think about it: when was the last time you heard of lidocaine patches being used essentially as first-aid?

Mike
LIT LOVE is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote