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Concern over proper chronic pain meds?

At 43 I am on permanent diasabilty. I have tried Fentanyl, Percocet, Methadone, and am up to over 260 mg of Morphine daily.
The issue is a lesion removal from my cervical spine requiring 2 surgeries cause permant nerve damage.
Do any physicians feel another option is better as my tolerance to Morphine wanes ?

2006-09-13 00:48:16 · 5 answers · asked by nitro_tnt_911 1 in Health General Health Care Pain & Pain Management

5 answers

What you need to do is get off the Morphine. As time goes by, the pain gets worse and worse. You will need professional help coming off that medication. My son was in the same situation. He's off the drug and his pain has actually lessened. Of course, it took time for him to become halfway normal again. Now, he may take Aleve or another simple drug for pain. Good Luck!

2006-09-13 01:43:18 · answer #1 · answered by skyeblue 5 · 0 0

I had Trigeminal Neuralgia (an extremely painful nerve disorder) and went through most of the meds you described. I was taking 2-3 percocet at a time to relieve pain. I also used Tegretol - a seizure medication that somehow controls nerve pain. I took Demerol too. The combination of those meds seemed to work, but you don't want to be on them forever. They'll damage your kidneys and/or liver. I went through four surgeries until the pain was gone. They severed the Occipital nerve on the last one, so now my skull is numb (yes, I'm a numbskull) and there is pain is limited. I know that won't work for you, but perhaps there is some type of corrective surgery available. Check different sites to see what's available. John Hopkins has some great pain management treatment programs.

2006-09-13 02:32:14 · answer #2 · answered by TJMiler 6 · 0 0

I, too live in chronic pain. Unfortunately I've been on many different meds and nothing takes the pain away completely. See a Pain Mgmt Specialist. There are shots that can give you some temporary relief, but unfortunately we just have to learn to manage the pain the best we can.

2006-09-13 04:42:52 · answer #3 · answered by vanhammer 7 · 0 0

Have you ever tried Neurontin? It's used a lot for diabetic patients who have diabetic neuropathy (Usually in the lower extremities-they have no feeling in their legs, but their nerves are going 'haywire', causing pain). Neurontin 300 mg. helped my Mother's neuropathy, perhaps it will help your nerve pain, although, your physician will give you the proper milligram, or start you out on a low dose and then adjust it as necessary. Good luck, and hope you feel better!!

2006-09-13 19:19:54 · answer #4 · answered by tiggerpat66 2 · 0 0

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2016-11-26 21:02:51 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

tell your dr to try you on oxycontin. Or ask him if maybe a morphine intrathecal pump or spinal cord stimulator will work for you.

2006-09-15 07:15:05 · answer #6 · answered by Medical Assistant 4 · 0 0

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