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Anyone heard of Hytrin?
I just talked to a girl who became pain free after taking this- anyone else hear of it? Or has anyone tried this?
Thanks!! :grouphug: |
DRUG CLASS AND MECHANISM: Terazosin belongs to a class of medications called alpha 1 blockers which relaxes the smooth muscles of the arteries, the prostate, and the bladder neck. Other alpha blockers in the same class of drugs include doxazosin (Cardura), alfuzosin (Uroxatral), tamsulosin (Flomax), and prazosin (Minipress). Relaxing the smooth muscles of the arteries lowers blood pressure. Relaxing the smooth muscles around the bladder neck relieves urinary obstruction caused by an enlarged prostate (prostate hypertrophy)
this is what i know of hytrin's use ... for prostate enlargement. i never hear of it used for RSD! that is something i will have to google!!! Joan |
The involvement of other sympathetic midline connections and plexi such as celiac (abdominal pain, peptic ulcer, nausea, vomiting, and weight loss), superior and inferior mesenteric plexi (diarrhea, abdominal cramps, and weight loss), and cardiac plexus (chest pain, abnormal heart beat, tachycardia, and heart attack), and carotid and vertebral plexi (severe vascular headaches, dizziness, tinnitus, attacks of falling spells, and syncopal attacks), should be identified as such and should be treated with the help of Clonodine Patch, Hytrin, or Dibenzyline as well as proper treatment applied to the source of RSD (definitely avoiding ice, but encouraging exercise, moist heat, epsom salt and hot water, and newer antidepressants as the best analgesics of choice for RSD).
this is from Hooshman's RSD Puzzle #019 .... so there you go. |
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Hi Vanessa, As Joan has said it is a drug used mainly for high blood pressure , an Alpha blocker that relaxes the nerves to the blood vessels allowing easier access of blood to the tissue. I am really happy this girl you spoke to has found a drug that has helped her so much. It seems that the major source of her pain was from the vasoconstriction occuring due to autonomic dysfunction and that the damage was not so great that it couldn't be reversed. I should imagine that her success will hopefully encourage Doctors to use it in others. I would have given it a try early in the piece but I imagine that once there are major trophic changes that there would be less likelihood of a significant change---but I guess if you don't try we may never know:confused: Lots of good luck Vanessa, you are too young to be dealing with this. Love Tayla:hug: Would you consider asking for it Vanessa?--wouldn't it be a blessing:) |
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Thanks! :hug: |
Dear Vanessa -
Thank you for posting this thread. For an older (Hooshman-era) abstract, see: "Treatment of sympathetically maintained pain with terazosin, Stevens DS, Robins VF, Price HM, Reg Anesth. 1993 Sep-Oct; 18(5): 318-21.And for something a little more up to date: "Alpha1-adrenergic receptors augment P2X3 receptor-mediated nociceptive responses in the uninjured state," Meisner JG, Waldron JB, Sawynok J, J Pain 2007 Jul; 8(7): 556-62. Epub 2007 May 23.So it would seem that there may be something to this. I join everyone in wondering why our doctors haven't mentioned this, and will certainly bring this up with both my neurologist and pm doc at my next appointment(s). Thanks for the heads up. Mike |
Wild..
Thanks Ness |
If anyone wants it, I now have a copy of "Alpha1-adrenergic receptors augment P2X3 receptor-mediated nociceptive responses in the uninjured state," Meisner JG, Waldron JB, Sawynok J, J Pain 2007 Jul; 8(7): 556-62. Epub 2007 May 23.
Let me know. |
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