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#1 | ||
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Junior Member
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It's not a dystonia drug per se - it's a painkiller (which only came into the picture because of the twisting spasms causing pain). I was more curious whether people had noticed difference in effects when switching between different types of the same drug really.
xxx Swift |
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#2 | ||
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Junior Member
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I tend to use aspirin for my migraines and will often use the ones you suck on when out as opposed to dissolve and swallow. I find they act quickly and work effectively. The only other experience I had was going into surgery they gave me an antinausea wafer as opposed to swallowing a tablet or injecting into IV. They said it works better, it just melted on my tongue and it was great, I had no post operative nausea at all.
It would depend on the med perhaps and long term usage. I would suggest discussing with your chemist/pharamcist. They are the most knowledgeable when it comes to meds -docs prescribe them, but the pharm knows the inside out of them. |
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#3 | ||
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Junior Member
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Umm, good question. Actually, I think my doctor told me that pills that are taken sublingually tend to work more quickly but it probably depends on the medication. I know Levsin (which is a smooth muscle relaxer) works better that way, as does Ativan. I don't know about opioids (or other types of pain medications) as I have never tried it that way, the taste is always nasty. I would just swallow those or crush them up if you're having a difficult time.
As far as your second question, I have not tried a lot of drugs so I couldn't answer that but everyone reacts differently to drugs. |
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