Posted on 06/21/2015 6:04:03 PM PDT by windcliff
Edited on 06/21/2015 6:22:05 PM PDT by Admin Moderator. [history]
Wife broke her back seven years ago - since that time she’s been using Lidocaine patches (5%) which have helped greatly in handling her residual pain - until earlier this year when Medicare suddenly decided to no longer pay for them except in very limited diagnoses for which my wife doesn’t qualify (even after letters of appeal from her doctor and herself) - the only other choice on the formulary which Medicare would cover was fentanyl patches - wife tried them once, had serious reaction within two hours including nausea and extreme drowsiness - her orthopedic doctor almost hit the roof when he heard this was the only choice left open to her, saying fentanyl is a very powerful anesthesia and unpredictable except in qualified hands - so it’s back to purchasing Lidocaine patches via prescription at $125 for a month’s supply for us - maybe a clue as to why deaths from fentanyl are on the rise - thanks, Medicare......
It is/was available from Russian munitions stores in gaseous form. No reason civilian medical staff would have any knowledge of or access to it.
Every now and then some heroin will be getting sold after getting cut with fentanyl; about ten years ago, perhaps a little less, we had an outbreak of that here in the little old Midwest (Mich, Indiana, Illinois) resulting in more than 50 deaths among heroin addicts. Fentanyl is occasionally a drug of abuse in its own right, reportedly a small cut is made in the patch, and the addict sucks out the gel. It tastes lousy until the mouth goes numb.
If my memory serves me correctly it was not fentanyl but an molecular analog of fentanyl that could be vaporized and used as a gas.
No doubt about that. I had major oral surgery and it worked like a charm. I know it is most used to cardiothoracic surgery to ease the pain of having your chest cracked open.
Folly the link below to the suspected analog of fentanyl that is what was probably used.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3-Methylfentanyl
Try a respectable Canadian pharmacy. I get my migraine meds cheaper that way than under my old good insurance.
I have stupid fingers, Folly = Follow
Toradol (ketorolac) does not work on the opiate receptors but is a very powerful non-steroidal analgesic. Think of it as Aleve (naprosyn) but many times more effective. Much of the post operative pain is due to inflammatory response of the tissues that is mediated by prostaglandins. This drug interferes with the production of prostaglandins by blocking a metabolic pathway the body used for this production. It is very effective for short term therapy. I used it post operative after getting off the morphine pump when I was an organ donor, hepatic hemiectomy.
Ketorolac tromethamine, a nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug, blocks prostaglandin complex formation and production through its S-enantiomeric form. It is a potent analgesic that does not possess any sedative or anxiolytic activities [7][3][4][12].
“Overdose deaths attributed to fentanyl, ........, tripled in New Jersey in 2014”
The herd continues to thin itself.
My doc prescribes that now WORTHLESS NORCO, and you need a PPI like Nexium to take it. That is just great news, as I am near bottom Red Zone Osteoporosis. I had weaned myself down to just 20 mg of Nexium, when he upped the NORCO to take care of the OA pain, spinal degeneration, Gastroparesis (slow Motility)Peripheral Neuropathy pain. Can’t take the PN drugs side effects get me. Which meant I had to up the Nexium back to 40 mg.
I see the Ortho today to get the results of my MRIS on my spine and if they can do anything about the damage that has been done to it. Wheelchair is next if they can’t fix some of the issues.
That was never true; among people who have used heroin, 77% never became addicted.
People died from adulterated booze during Prohibition, but don't today. Just sayin' ...
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