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SCS & Pain Pumps For spinal cord stimulator (SCS) and pain pump discussions. |
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#1 | ||
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Junior Member
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I had my SCS put in yesterday. When I was talking to the Anthestic person during the surgeon they told Motrin would be more than enough for pain knowing me! We are friends and he watched me go through 2 c sections and. Open gallbladder and took no medicine after I left hospital.
Anyway being 36 hours out of surgery I feel as my back is broken. It hurts. I had Vicodin which came from the doctor who done my surgery, I take it so sparely I was only missing 10 pills out of a bottle that was filled two months ago, but I did pick up a new script on my way. So the doctor has taken good care of making sure I had pain medicine. I am just in shock, should I be in pain like this. I am so scared of what this means, for my life I am a 31 year old with RSD and now SCS. What restriction do you live with? Please share any and all info! ![]() |
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#2 | |||
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Grand Magnate
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Hi Bratette- Thank you for coming here and trusting to post. Caring folks will clamor to give you their thoughts and hugz. Here is one
![]() If you just had the SCS implant, you have just been through significant surgery. At least two incisions and the push of an implement from one incision to the other to pass through the wires to connect the leads to the signal generator. It all produces pain. If you had paddle leads emplaced in your spine as I did, you have probably had a laminectomy, which means some of your spinal bone was removed to make way for the paddles to be inserted. Much has been done. Pain is the natural result. Good news is it will pass. My docs and especially the nurses said USE THE PAIN MEDS POST SURGICALLY TO STAY AHEAD OF THE PAIN. They were not kidding me when it was said. The hurt was outa sight. All of this being said, if you follow post surgical restrictions such as BLAST [no bending, lifting, stretching, twisting], walk, take your pain meds, walk, be kind to yourself, walk, and then walk some more [not to excess, but enough to let those disturbed muscles know things are OK, then you will soon see relief on the horizon. A couple of weeks of pain would not be outside the norm. It will decline as that time progresses. Use the prescribed pain meds. Not to excess, just as prescribed. It will help calm the fear. For me the surgical incisions calmed faster than that channel through which the implement [it looks like a stainless steel spike] was passed. That channel was irritated for a good while, but it did calm. THEN...... when your program is turned on, hopefully you will know the JOY I felt when the stim was brought online. It gave me peace from the unrelenting nerve pain. It is not absolutely perfect....but, I was able to totally abandon the pain meds and get my career up and running again. I hope and pray the same for you. All the best, ![]() ![]() |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | eva5667faliure (09-20-2013), ger715 (09-16-2013), Hannabananna (09-16-2013), MessyMark (09-16-2013), Rrae (09-16-2013) |
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#3 | |||
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Grand Magnate
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Welcome!
Mark said it very well. I laid on my back with a cold gel-pack, which helped a lot while my surgical pain was healing. I remember going thru a time just as you are - feeling very uncertain and discouraged. This WILL pass! The way I look at it is that this is a wonderful trade-off. The surgical pain WILL wear off and the SCS helps very much in covering the chronic RSD pain I was suffering prior. Other words, I would gladly go thru the surgical pain again if it meant achieving the quality of life I've gained via the SCS. THE most important thing right now is that you follow the strict post-op instructions in which Mark speaks of. This is the time you will be very restricted. As you heal and as the lead wires scar into place you will realize that the pain you are feeling will become less each day. After the healing, I got to a place where I'd forget the unit was even in me! The soothing stimulation is a godsend and now I can get out and do things and actually ENJOY life, as opposed to being stuck at home feeling as tho the world was passing me by. It's great to have you here! Stick around and ask anything you'd like. It's so nice to have this place to come to and visit w/others who know exactly what you are going through. The vast majority of family and friends can't really grasp the whole picture. But it sure is nice to have their support. Rae ![]() |
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"Thanks for this!" says: |
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#4 | ||
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Junior Member
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Mark56,Rrae,Nanc,Tk, All have been great and very informative wealth of knowledge for me answering any and all of my questions and concerns and pre op jitters for me. Hopefully even I maybe of some help in some way. From all of my reading here on this site and other places researching scs implants and the vast majority of scs devices I do know it is of great importance as Mark56 & Rrae suggest please please please follow what they mentioned about BLAST its very important. Here is a link to that acronym it will take you right to it. http://neurotalk.psychcentral.com/sh...ferrerid=59152 Hopefully all goes well for you and will be trying to keep an eye out for you. MessyMark
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"Thanks for this!" says: | eva5667faliure (09-20-2013), Hannabananna (09-16-2013), Mark56 (09-16-2013), Nanc (09-17-2013), Rrae (09-16-2013) |
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#5 | ||
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Junior Member
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Thanks everyone! I just had nothing but relief when I did the trail. So I thought I would instantly go to that.
I am so tired, it seems I have little energy but since I can not do anything anyway not a big deal! How many of you were able to return to work. I was originally hurt falling down a set of stairs. The step broke and I fell to ground, while at work. It took 13 months to get a tendon repair surgery and that is with the lovely RSD set in. I learned to live with some pain, but I did not think it would get worse with the surgery. My ankle pain is a little bit better, but I am still so sore. I am open to any ideas, advice, help that any of you have. I thought I would only get better, never thought I could hurt more. I worry about work, and stuff like that. |
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#6 | ||
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Junior Member
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#7 | |||
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![]() I had my two SCS'c (thoracic and cervical) implanted at the same time. The surgical pain was awful, after all I had four big cuts in my back! I thought this pain would last forever and amazingly it didn't! I went back to work 1 1/2 wks after the surgery...really a little too fast. But I was amazed in how much the pain was reduced in just the first week. I had a revision on the thoracic SCS and that battery relocated five months later. That time I took 2 1/2 wks off, that was better. I am not saying that I was 100% when I went back to work, I still moved a little slow and was very careful following post-op instructions (as Mark56 mentions) but it was doable for me. Surgical pain is different from RSD pain, and it is temporary ![]() I had the SCS's placed for RSD pain. I have RSD/ CRPS in my face, both hands and feet, left leg, both shoulders, trunk, head and left arm. The SCS's helped me continue to work for an additional year and a half. I am very thankful for that. Not sure what type of work you do, but I was a financial and human resource manager. Not as physical, but very demanding. I stopped working Dec 28, 2012. Wishing you the best, Nanc ![]() |
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"Thanks for this!" says: |
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#8 | |||
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Member
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hello my dear! Just a short note to let you know what you are feeling is normal after surgery for the implant! My experience is one as both a nutty nurse and a SDS patient. I am currently on my third (
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Illegitimi non carborundum For he shall give his angels charge over thee, to keep thee in all thy ways. psalms 91:11 |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | eva5667faliure (09-20-2013), Hannabananna (09-19-2013), Mark56 (09-19-2013), MessyMark (09-19-2013), Rrae (09-20-2013) |
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#9 | |||
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Grand Magnate
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So....don't overwork your bod too much!! K???? ![]() |
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"Thanks for this!" says: |
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#10 | |||
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Junior Member
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I'm also in a lot of pain, although my stim unit is turned on, but not at full ability/capacity. Hydrocodone has been keeping my pain under control, mostly, and I did a lot of research by reading this forum throughout the entire process, and I've been sticking with BLAST and keeping up the hydrocodone even when I don't feel like I REALLY need it right then, just keeping ahead of the pain. I am also feeling SUPER tired and just exhausted/sleepy but sometimes not able to fall asleep, and then other times not able to stay awake. I know part of this is likely the meds in combination with the beating my body took from surgery, and I hope it'll start getting better soon. As far as work, I plan on taking Monday off because it's a stressful day at work for me, but I can do my entire job from home (it's a desk job that I can do as long as I have a phone and laptop) and my employers have been incredibly understanding and are letting me work from home for the first two weeks. Based on how I feel today, I think I shouldn't have too hard a time getting going again--my biggest problem is the extreme fatigue/tiredness/sleepiness and that's what worries me about work--I can just see me falling asleep on a conference call! I too look forward to the guidance of those who have gone through this before us--as I said, this forum was a huge help to me as I went through the entire process of testing/trial/finally implant. Good luck and congrats and I hope we can both feel better soon! |
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