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Hana, I don't recall what meds you are taking. Do you have anything for breakthru pain?? I had an appointment with my PM today. Have been going to him for the past four or five years. Have tried all the procedures, etc., including trial. While I dislike taking all the meds I take; they are helping me get thru each day. I take Oxycontin which provides me with around the clock pain med; but there are times throughout the day where the pain gets pretty bad. I usually do not wait for the pain to get out of control before I take my breakthru med (Percocet); which really helps. Just wish you could take something in the meantime to better control the terrible pain you are dealing with. Has your PM doctor suggested any additonal meds to help deal with breakthru medication? Gerry |
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Yes, you have it right to stay on top of the pain before it is too much. I am at about my limit now for what my body can take. I am onPercocet up to 15 mg/ day for breakthrough pain , Metaxalone for breakthrough spasms,fentanyl 37mcg in patches, alternating every day,,, Neurontin 2700 mg, valium 10, split AM/PM..flector and liocaine patches.. I have literally tried about everything at one time or another and like you, have difficulties getting these things through the midsection. Oxycontin and methadone worked better than either Fentanyl or Percocet, but I got gastroparesis/IBS constipation that wouldn't abate until I'd literally gone through withdrawal. (Not even miralax, lactulose and mag citrate together worked) The doctors now are just letting me say what I need and will prescribe appropriately. I am on less than I was at one time ... of course with the sacrifice to pain, but I choose to be coherent and functional, and while I still have ability to enjoy life I am staying low on the meds, Prayers for a good day. :Heart::hug::grouphug: Hana |
It sounds just terrible..I hate that this is happening to everyone..God bless you all.I know mris wear me right out.had to use wheelchair just to get out too..Wonder why???I did not have any skin issues ..It sounds very painful..it must hurt terribly..I will pray for you all.:grouphug:
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My wife's feet and fingertips had issues with skin pealing. She also had severe issues with MRIs. Her last 2 MRIs where performed on an "Open MRI" These do not have tubes but are open where she sat upright in a chair sort of thing. Google it "Open MRI", there are a few in my area and may be in yours too.
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Hana, I have been dealing with the constipation issues. That's the awful downside to these meds. Even wound up in ER over a year ago because getting impacted. I pretty well remain coherent in spite of them. Now take up to two Miralax a day, plus. I assume it was the Oxycontin/Methadone that causing you the constipation. I have never used Methadone; but continue with Oxycontin and dealing with the nasty constipation. Can't imagine going thru Oxycontin withdrawal. Just was a few hours late from my every 6hrs of Oxy and started withdrawal. Was very painful. Is your constipation much better?? Is the Fentanyl patch the replacement for the Oxy? I would think Percocet would still have a constipating effect. Unfortunately, a year and half ago because rectal cancer; rectum removed; but enough muscle kept so I do not have bag. Still dealing with daily "potty" problems. Was suppose to have Coloscopy in December. Did Mag Citrate at noon and a full bottle of Movi-Prep at 6:00 p.m. Next morning at 7:00 a.m. had to drink another bottle of Movi-Prep plus 16 oz. water. Was to have nothing after 9:00 a.m. Colonoscopy was set for Noon that day. After drinking the last glass of the Movi that morning; all came spewing out across the table. Went to hospital hoping enough was emptied. Got changed into hospital gown, etc., but was not cleaned out enough and sent home to reschedule. GI doctor now wants me to take a couple of Mag Citrates, plus extra Movi-Preps and liquid diet a few days prior to prepare; especially because of dealing with narcotic meds . So far; haven't rescheduled. Just can't get myself in a "good place" to deal with this and all the other pain issues. Pray for us to get thru each day, taking it "one day at a time". Gerry |
Hana
I don't know the details of your medication other than what is in your post above. I wanted to just throw in a thought or two on the fentanyl and bowle management for what its worth. You are on a fairly low dose of fentanyl. It is a medication that has no upper dose limit. I'm obviously not advocating endless dose increases but if you don't feel that it is doing much in terms of pain relief then you should be speaking to your doctor about increasing the dose to an effective therapeutic level. For CRPS pain, it would be quite normal to be on a dose of double your current dose, or more. At least try the drug at a more potentially therapeutic level before you write it off as insufficiently effective. It would be very odd to be changing the fentanyl patch every day - I am assuming that what you say "alternating every day"? Have I misunderstood you? The patches are designed to release the drug at a constant rate over 36 hours. They can be prescribed on a 48 hour change cycle but if it is being changed ever 24 then something isn't right and, again, the dose needs to be reviewed. You may find that a change of patch type would be more effective for you. Fentanyl patches use 2 different drug delivery approaches - reservoir or lattice. The reservoir patch has a pool of liquid drug and the lattice patch looks just like a piece of sticky scotch tape or Sellotape with no liquid. The two types are not interchangeable so whichever type you are prescribed, is the type you need to keep being prescribed. However, you could have a "one off" physician managed swap to the other type to see if it works better for you. If I have misunderstood what you mean about alternating, then sorry. Fentanyl is potentiated by concurrently taking paracetamol (acetaminophen in the USA). In other words its painkilling effect is made greater and it is more effective if it is taken with acetaminophen. Unfortunately, a lot of doctors, especially those who aren't pain management specialists, aren't sufficiently aware of this so patients don't always get the best advice. Of course, not everyone can take acetaminophen but in order to maximise the effect of your fentanyl a good doctor would prescribe the maximum daily acetaminophen dose of 4 grams per day. Of itself, acetaminophen is unlikely to give you any noticeable pain relief from the extreme pain of CRPS but that's not the point of taking it in these circumstances. Opioid induced constipation is a side effect that your body will not get used to in time. Everyone has to decide what is right for them but my personal view is that if the opioids are helping, then even severe constipation is a price worth paying. I will not get CRPS remission so I know that I will have to take opioids for the rest of my life to manage my pain. That's just how it is and it means I need to take powerful laxatives - the gentle types are a waste of time so there is no point. I assume Bisacodyl is available in the US? It is a more powerful laxative and its effect can be increased by increasing the dose and/or using Bisacodyl suppositories. None of it is pleasant but its a matter of finding and ensuring you regularly and continuously use a sufficient quantity of strong enough laxatives. Trying to just use them intermittently or use low doses might seem better for your body but it actually creates more problems. There is another option if you can't get an acceptable routine with diet, hydration, laxatives and softners and that is an irrigation system like Coloplast's Peristeen system. It is very effective for chronic constipation. Its clean and simple once you get the hang of using a bowel irrigation system. It is NOT the same as colonic irrigation - that is completely different from these medical bowel management systems. They have to be prescribed by a physician after a proper medical assessment. Again, CRPS is for the long haul so the bowel management routines are for the long haul too, a mindset that its something that will go away will only lead to frustration and misery. Just my thoughts for what they are worth. |
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Thank you for all the input. From Hana's post, It has appeared to me the Fentanyl might be less constipating. Your post seemed to have cleared it being less constipating because of her taking a very low dose. The constipation issue is something not often dealt with on NT. I finally realized trying to take laxatives more one day, less the next, only led to the constipation being worse. Your post was most reassuring. Gerry |
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Gerry
I was more coming from the perspective that the "relatively" low dose of fentanyl could be a cause of Hana's less effective pain relief so she might want to look at a higher dose and potentiating with acetaminophen before she decides it doesn't work sufficiently well for her. I wasn't trying to say that her dose was "small" and therefore less constipating. The reality is that any dose of any opioid will often be very constipating. The effect is compounded and made worse by the fact many of the other drugs in a CRPS patient's cocktail will also have constipation as a side effect. Its a matter of managing the constipation effectively with a suitably powerful regime in the long term rather than stopping and starting and living with the false hope that it will go away or improve. Painman The key to living with the pain of CRPS is to rapidly abandon the hope or idea that you will be able to find some drug or mixture of drugs that will allow you to be pain free and"on your way". It doesn't work like that. The very best you should expect is that your pain levels will be reduced to some extent. You then have to decide if the reduced pain levels you achieve are sufficient to warrant the side effect profile you get from that particular mix of medication. Accepting the pretty unpleasant reality that you are only going to be able to try to manage your pain levels rather than 'getting rid of your pain' is fundamental to living with chronic pain. It doesn't mean you are giving up or not trying - it is possibly the single most important (and difficult) step in the process of learning to live with CRPS. |
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