Psycho-Babble Medication Thread 981948

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Re: sensible help needed with norco

Posted by floatingbridge on April 4, 2011, at 21:06:23

In reply to Re: sensible help needed with norco, posted by sigismund on April 4, 2011, at 18:00:44

> >Could I drop to 10 norco, or 5 norco, take Ultram for no more than four days?
>
> How long have you been taking this?
>
> I think you are wanting to go way too fast.
>
> But then there are the headaches.
>

:D I have a degree in magical thought.

Oh Gawd. O.k. so slow down. But I've been trying to dump it for months.

O.K. but just to see the way out.

Thanks Sigi for listening to my back and forth. This is how I felt about dex and cymbalta and pristiq. I just began to dread taking them. The ups and downs and sides, while I felt I was getting worse.

I suppose I have some claustrophobia going here--being trapped.

I feel that maybe quicker would end the headaches faster. I mean (magical thinking) I feel better off the AD's (unless the headaches are a distantly timed affect of that.)

Oh-Boy. Thanks.

> But why will that get better if you go quicker?
>
> Are you sure there is not some magical thinking going on just to get out of the trap in which you find yourself?

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco » floatingbridge

Posted by Phillipa on April 4, 2011, at 21:23:05

In reply to Re: sensible help needed with norco, posted by floatingbridge on April 4, 2011, at 21:06:23

FB a lot of your own analysis going on think Sigi right taper down and don't go so fast? Love Phillipa

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco » Phillipa

Posted by floatingbridge on April 4, 2011, at 21:39:32

In reply to Re: sensible help needed with norco » floatingbridge, posted by Phillipa on April 4, 2011, at 21:23:05

So slow taper.

Not a good idea to use ultram to taper? I mean, if I could just start over. Four days of withdrawal?

O.K. so slow down.

What would be a reasonable plan? (I like plans. To see a bit ahead with these
headaches. Can't blame me for a little wishing here and there.)

10mg for a month?

Thanks.

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco » floatingbridge

Posted by Phillipa on April 4, 2011, at 21:56:40

In reply to Re: sensible help needed with norco » Phillipa, posted by floatingbridge on April 4, 2011, at 21:39:32

FB seriously I defer to Sigi I feel he knows more than me. He's a great person!!!! Love Phillipa ps you are sooooo brave!!!!!

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco » Phillipa

Posted by floatingbridge on April 4, 2011, at 22:06:22

In reply to Re: sensible help needed with norco » floatingbridge, posted by Phillipa on April 4, 2011, at 21:56:40

You are very sweet. I agree about Sigi. I actually held sage-like and Sigi in the same thought. Myself, I think of as more desperate.

Ah, that Eagles' song. Desperado. I feel a bit teary now. Great.

Hey, good luck tomorrow.

And me, I'm pulling into the slow lane, but advice still (desperately) welcome. (Please.)

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco

Posted by mtdewcmu on April 4, 2011, at 22:56:48

In reply to sensible help needed with norco, posted by floatingbridge on April 4, 2011, at 13:42:51

If you have been taking norco for a while, like months or longer, then you can expect to start feeling normal in about a week if you stop cold turkey. The worst will probably be day #2. After days 2 and 3, it will get better.

Ultram has a wicked withdrawal of its own, so switching to Ultram may not help.

If the problem is that norco wears off too soon and gives you a headache, you may want to consider switching to a longer-acting narcotic instead of stopping. You could switch to Oxycontin, or a small amount of methadone, or fentanyl patches (I'm not sure if they come in low doses). Maybe Suboxone or Subutex.

Quitting is probably going to be miserable, so you should think about whether you really want to quit, or just switch at your next doctor's visit.

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco » floatingbridge

Posted by sigismund on April 5, 2011, at 0:08:02

In reply to Re: sensible help needed with norco, posted by floatingbridge on April 4, 2011, at 21:06:23

I simply took forever to get off methadone.

Maybe I was on 0.25mg/d for a year?

It felt like it was the best I could do.

If you are slightly withdrawing and still on some hydrocodone, that is making progress.

There might be better ways, but I didn't find them, aside from herbal thingos.

Sometimes you will find more strength within yourself and you will be able to handle discomfort more easily.

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco

Posted by bleauberry on April 5, 2011, at 4:35:22

In reply to sensible help needed with norco, posted by floatingbridge on April 4, 2011, at 13:42:51

There will be withdrawal no matter what. But you can make it as minor as it can be by withdrawing at a very slow pace and, more importantly, withdrawing in tiny steps. For example, 10mg down to 5mg is a huge step. That is much too big of a jump down. Not sure if you have tabs or caps. Either way, it will be extremely helpful to you to engage in the practice of making custom sized doses for yourself. For example, 10mg down to 9mg for a few days. Then 9mg down to 8mg. And so on. When you get to the trouble spot of 5mg, you'll have to make the steps even smaller. For example, 5mg down to 4.5mg. And so on.

When I withdrew from zyprexa, the hardest med I ever withdrew from, I was literally reducing the dose by crumbs each day. Tiny pieces. It took longer, but was as smooth as it could have been.

The only other option is to wean off as you have been doing, or go cold turkey, and just know you will have to weather a serious time before things smooth out. Brace for it it, mentally prepare for it, and know that it passes.

There are a handful of good supplements to replace xanax when you get to that point.

Ultram. I do not believe that would be a good option. The withdrawals from that are as harsh, or more so, than effexor or opiates. You would just be trading one miserable experience for another. The only bright side is that some people have accidentally discovered that ultram is the magic medicine they've been searching for their whole lives. It sounds like you've already tried it and it is not your magic, not sure. Anyway, for weaning off other meds, I do not see ultram as a wise choice.

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco » floatingbridge

Posted by SLS on April 5, 2011, at 5:31:34

In reply to sensible help needed with norco, posted by floatingbridge on April 4, 2011, at 13:42:51

Without getting too technical, withdrawal seems to be due, in part, to kindling. AEDs (anticonvulsants) would be a logical choice if this were true.

Look into:

Clonidine + AED (Trileptal or Topamax)

As an aside, Topamax 25-50 mg can be very effective for treating migraine. Trileptal can reduce nociception (pain).

Good luck.


- Scott

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco » floatingbridge

Posted by hyperfocus on April 5, 2011, at 6:06:59

In reply to sensible help needed with norco, posted by floatingbridge on April 4, 2011, at 13:42:51

The best advice is to go as slowly as you can. I never used opiates but I was taking benzos for a couple of years and getting off them was the worst. When stopping any drug that causes any level of psychic or physical habituation, you're going to have rebound symptoms i.e the symptoms of the thing you're treating are going to be (much) worse. Going slowly helps minimize the rebound and gives your body enough time to normalize itself. One major reason I would give up tapering is that the rebound anxiety was just too severe when I tried to go too quickly. It's even worse for drugs with a short half-like like hydrocodone and Xanax.

You can try find the next clinically significant dose lower than your current dose and start there. If you're on 25mg try 20mg for like a week and then 15mg etc. but this still might be too fast. You may have to decrease 2.5mg every week. You can take the smallest pill and use a very sharp knife to cut it into 4s and use the quarters to make up your dose. Yes this will take a while but it's no use stopping the taper because the symptoms are too bad and then have to start over. After the norco, Xanax should be done the same way.

However you do it it's going to be the pits though. Good luck to you. You always have PB to fall back on,

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco

Posted by floatingbridge on April 5, 2011, at 12:20:38

In reply to Re: sensible help needed with norco, posted by bleauberry on April 5, 2011, at 4:35:22

Hey, thanks all--I feel like I have received a very helpful spectrum of advice and knowledge to draw from.

Today I'm going to just take a little less norco. I see the nurse practitioner of my gp tomorrow. I do not have a headache today, but it is early :p

I'll need to take some xanax and some
norco today. Sigh. I dislike the monkey on the back feeling, but here I am. I prefer a medical authority tell me what to take, but having a MI without a protocol, (c-ptsd plus), and now an shadowy physical dx (fibromyalgia plus), and I've had to become my own little authority. One script from a well-intentioned MD, (or uninformed instruction, like stopping cymbalta in four days--ah, to be able to live in such ignorance), and I have had some untoward, even lasting results. I know
I'm not the only one familiar with this experience.

Super-thanks to everyone--It is nice, as Hyper Focus commented, to have some practical back-up here at PB.

fb

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco

Posted by sigismund on April 5, 2011, at 13:57:42

In reply to Re: sensible help needed with norco » floatingbridge, posted by SLS on April 5, 2011, at 5:31:34

>Without getting too technical, withdrawal seems to be due, in part, to kindling. AEDs (anticonvulsants) would be a logical choice if this were true.

I am doubtful about the kindling theory, I suppose because it upsets the nice mathematical feel of so much pleasure given having to be paid back with precisely the same amount of pain. But you should see me stacking the dishwasher, so that's probably an OCD variant.

Nonetheless I know that gabapentin would be really useful in opiate withdrawal, just as it is so helpful for pain.

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco » sigismund

Posted by floatingbridge on April 5, 2011, at 16:03:35

In reply to Re: sensible help needed with norco, posted by sigismund on April 5, 2011, at 13:57:42

Sigi, its cousin, Lyrica, walked me through a pristiq/cymbalta taper. There were serious sides to the Lyrica for me, however, I think it's good to have out there in common knowledge as a tapering tool.

fb

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco » floatingbridge

Posted by sigismund on April 5, 2011, at 17:37:20

In reply to Re: sensible help needed with norco » sigismund, posted by floatingbridge on April 5, 2011, at 16:03:35

Yeah, Lyrica sounded too strong and too toxic for me.

I never used gabapentin to taper opiates, but I know enough and have read enough to know how useful that type of drug could be.

I have a mild case of shingles at the moment and that is what gabapentin is supposed to be for, isn't it? And it does help in a way that a benzo would not.

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco

Posted by sigismund on April 5, 2011, at 18:13:07

In reply to Re: sensible help needed with norco » floatingbridge, posted by sigismund on April 5, 2011, at 17:37:20

The other thing I have found helpful is to see the pain as something you welcome. Since you don't welcome it, this presents problems. So you do some voodoo number on yourself where you say you do. I can do it with this pain I have now, but then it's not really bad either. I can say it is from God or like being touched by someone I love. I can say anything. It sort of helps to pass the time while it happens.

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco » sigismund

Posted by Phillipa on April 5, 2011, at 23:34:13

In reply to Re: sensible help needed with norco, posted by sigismund on April 5, 2011, at 18:13:07

Sigi there is a vaccine for shingles. Can't have it when active but if you had the chicken pox as you know shingles comes out after a certain unmentionable age. It could strike again and it's very painful. Hope it's starting to heal. PJ

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco » sigismund

Posted by floatingbridge on April 6, 2011, at 11:06:55

In reply to Re: sensible help needed with norco, posted by sigismund on April 5, 2011, at 18:13:07

Well, Sigi, sorry that you have had to learn secret methods for pain reduction whatever the reasons. Shingles can be awful from what I understand. The gabapenitin helped my MIL through a bout and isn't there evidence to suggest it helped post-hepatic nueralgia from more deeply engraving a pathway as well as give pain relief?

Thanks for the encouragement. After what happened on Lyrica (I started thinking I had stroke! Very odd thought for me), I am 2x shy about anything new. But I won't say never :|

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco » Phillipa

Posted by sigismund on April 6, 2011, at 14:17:11

In reply to Re: sensible help needed with norco » sigismund, posted by Phillipa on April 5, 2011, at 23:34:13

>Sigi there is a vaccine for shingles

Really? I must get it when this is over. I can see it could be awful.

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco » floatingbridge

Posted by sigismund on April 6, 2011, at 14:21:52

In reply to Re: sensible help needed with norco » sigismund, posted by floatingbridge on April 6, 2011, at 11:06:55

>isn't there evidence to suggest it helped post-hepatic nueralgia from more deeply engraving a pathway as well as give pain relief?

I have heard that. A chemist was good enough to give me some Tagamet, an old heartburn antihistamine drug which helps in some way. And I actually have gabapetin.

If it is like herpes simplex, outbreaks may lead to more outbreaks too.

 

Re: sensible help needed with norco

Posted by mtdewcmu on April 6, 2011, at 17:46:44

In reply to Re: sensible help needed with norco » Phillipa, posted by sigismund on April 6, 2011, at 14:17:11

I'm pretty sure there is no point in getting the vaccine if you've already had shingles.

http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/vpd-vac/shingles/vacc-need-know.htm

 

shingles » mtdewcmu

Posted by floatingbridge on April 6, 2011, at 19:20:19

In reply to Re: sensible help needed with norco, posted by mtdewcmu on April 6, 2011, at 17:46:44

Yes, I agree with mtdew. Though my MIL was told that when an outbreak occurs, minimize it with some high-powered antiviral (forget the stateside name); darn little b*gger virus travels along its favorite neural pathways in layman's terms.

So for my MIL, her outbreak was along the scalp down towards the left eye. Doc was glad it stopped at the brow and did
not affect the left ear. Her blisters were minimal. Most commonly affects the trunk. Inhabits the spinal column, yes?

Sorry sigi. Is this recent?

Weighing risks and benefits of vaccine for the kid, we went for the chicken pox shot just to minimize our bub's chances of shingles later. About 85% effective, the pox shot is, I've heard.

My hubby needs to get a shingles shot....
fb

 

norco update

Posted by floatingbridge on April 6, 2011, at 19:37:10

In reply to sensible help needed with norco, posted by floatingbridge on April 4, 2011, at 13:42:51

Trying for 15mg today, will accept 20mg.

Physician Assistant explained 'their plan' for me. (Nice to be included.) Stay at 20mg for two weeks, drop it again to maybe ten....

Then LDN. (I felt an great and obnoxious impulse to tell the PA that LDN was something I informed the good doc about as the PA began to explain the protocol. Sigh. I like to get some credit now and again, but I also need to let others do their jobs.)

Meanwhile, I'm trying to stay upright and re-explain why I'm not on an AD.

And then the perfunctory talk about stress, emotions, pain, and counseling. Reminded me of having to endure a service in order to eat at a mission.

(Do I sound cranky?)

She asked if I'd like a referral to a pain specialist. Absolutely. So now the big health care complex wheels are churning
away creating a referral....

First star to the right, and straight on till morning....

 

Re: shingles

Posted by mtdewcmu on April 6, 2011, at 19:47:21

In reply to shingles » mtdewcmu, posted by floatingbridge on April 6, 2011, at 19:20:19

> Yes, I agree with mtdew. Though my MIL was told that when an outbreak occurs, minimize it with some high-powered antiviral (forget the stateside name); darn little b*gger virus travels along its favorite neural pathways in layman's terms.

Usually the antiviral is acyclovir (Zovirax) or valacyclovir (Valtrex).

 

Re: shingles » mtdewcmu

Posted by floatingbridge on April 6, 2011, at 19:52:04

In reply to Re: shingles, posted by mtdewcmu on April 6, 2011, at 19:47:21

Valtrex sounds right.... Maybe....

 

Re: shingles

Posted by sigismund on April 6, 2011, at 20:50:14

In reply to shingles » mtdewcmu, posted by floatingbridge on April 6, 2011, at 19:20:19

>Sorry sigi. Is this recent?

Yeah, it started a week ago and already I am starting to feel better. The pain is almost gone. I wonder if the Tagamet / cimetadine shortened the duration? Sometimes it lasts a month. I only had 3 little sores and it was quite painful. It would be terrible if it flared up.


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