Guest guest Posted December 16, 2007 Report Share Posted December 16, 2007 I have been reading many new posts and I must say I'm pretty perturbed at some of your doctors regarding pain relief. First I'm a new member so I don't want to start off on the wrong foot here--but I simply can't sit by and not get involved in this issue. Second off, I am an RN specializing in ER. I understand doctors not wanting to create addicts but that would be an extreme. Also, ER docs are notorious for thinking every patient is a drug seeker so I understand the mentality( don't agree but understand.) When I read a post the other day that a patient was going to be weaned off meds before sugery so that post op the pain meds will work better, that just angers me. How can this doctor let the patient sit in that much pain until then. Other doctors prescibe the bare minimum fearing that there patients will become addicted. Well ladies and gents, the condition that we have requires pain medication and strong pain medication at that! I Have a pain specialist who is an anesthesiologist and we have this conversation all the time. First of all the worst kind of med to put somebody on for more than two months of steady dosing would be a combination pill--for example hydrocodone/APAP or percocet--these meds contain tylenol along with the narcotic pain releiver and for long term at high doses they could damage your liver. Second, there is no ceiling for pain releif--doses can go as high as you need them. Patients including myself feel as if pain meds hold a stygma (bad bad bad), and can't wait to get off the meds. My anesthesiologist has helped me get over that feeling of being a failure. Of course the body becomes tolerant of the medicine and dosage increase over time will be necessary but, the meds have certainly improved my quality of life in every way. I just want everybody to not be ashamed if meds are required. Also a surgeon may need a consult with a pharmicist or a pain med doc to keep from undermedicating their patients. Be your own advocate when it comes to your body. Fortunatley pain releif is finally being taken seriously in the field of medicine--not only for cancer patients. There are fantastic meds out there and nobody should live with unbearable pain. I have been on the same dose of medication for two years now, I take a little somthing for breaktrough pain which I don't need very often. For dental procedures or airplane flights (which kill me) I use a fentanyl buccal pop for immediate pain release. You can never come to the point where pain meds will not work--there is no ceiling! Please don't live in pain. If need be have a pain specialist prescribe the meds and your surgeon do the surgery of course! Anyway, I'll get off my high horse now haha--I guess I'm just a little passionate when it comes to relieving pain! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 17, 2007 Report Share Posted December 17, 2007 Kerry, You are right....pain management is a " hot button " issue for this group as well as the population at large. Ironic isn't it...a woman steals prescription narcotics from someone she is supposedly " caring " for and our member gets a " ho, hum " response from the authorities? Let a doctor prescribe needed medications to one of our members and both come under severe scrutiny as drug pushers and addicts. Infuriating. Thankfully it seems that there is small headway being made on Capitol Hill and chronic pain is slowly getting some of the recognition it needs. It does scare me that the medical community generally seems to have bowed to the pressure of the political/enforcement world for years for fear of losing their licenses or funding, I guess. You have written a clear and passionate piece on the absolute necessity of finding a good pain management doctor. Unfortunately I think it is a somewhat evolving specialty. Still...members who have finally found their way to one have had near miraculous improvements in their function and quality of life. Since many members find that after revision their old friend pain either revisits from time to time, or never really packs his bags and goes...it is an important fact to keep in mind: you do not have to live in pain! I won't pretend that I have the foggiest idea of what appropriate pre- surgery medications might be, or their impact on post-surgical pain management. I do know that when I pressed my surgeon after being told by the pre-surgical consult team that I needed to be off Celebrex (I could not use narcotic pain medication because of my employment and so I suffered quite a bit of pain...the Celebrex just took the edge off) he okayed me staying on it until 24 hours before surgery. I don't know what effect it might have of blood loss but perhaps he just decided he would manage that. Point was, when I made clear that being glued to my couch the week leading up to surgery was not an option we found a resolution. As you say...there is nothing like a patient advocating for themselves. If we do nothing here as a group other than help members learn enough to adequately do this well for themselves then I will feel that we have all made a huge contibution. I am so glad you are here in this group (not glad you have this condition!)and am happy that we have a growing number of people with medical backgrounds to help us sort through some of this. Knowing there are understanding and compassionate medical professionals everywhere helps. Many thanks. And by all means please continue to make sure that you remain our " Jimminy Cricket " on this topic. In the " Links " section there is a link to the American Chronic Pain Foundation's medication guide, and you can also get their web address there. They are working very hard to bring changes that effect all of us. I hope you have, or will, visit their site. Take Care, Cam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 18, 2007 Report Share Posted December 18, 2007 Hi Kerry, I am 10 years post revision surgery and take methadone daily for pain relief, given to me by my wonderful pain doc (he's a physiatrist). In February, I will be having wrist surgery. My pain doc and surgeon have already told me they will confer before my surgery date. The surgeon has already told me he, and the anesthesiologist, would consider the methadone dose I take now as my base and go up from there to take care of the surgical pain. Yes! A surgeon who understands! When I mentioned this to my pain doc, he said, "Sure, that's how it's done. Whew! (The surgeon also said they will inject a long acting pain med into the surgical site while I'm under anesthesia, to take care of the worst of the immediate surgical pain, about two days worth. Bonnie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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