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To: ItsTheMediaStupid
I just love the way you demoncrats come here to bash Rush!

If you don't like the facts, just sling sh#t, right?

Fox Reporter Orlando Salinas just reported that physicians they have consulted have told them that taking high doses of the narcotics Rush is alleged to have bought can cause HEARING LOSS

Is the picture becoming clear now?

Or is Fox News part of the "left-wing conspiracy" too?

You Rushbots are unbelievable.

186 posted on 10/03/2003 12:20:45 PM PDT by WackyKat
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To: WackyKat
If you don't like the facts, just sling sh#t, right

Fox Reporter Orlando Salinas just reported that physicians they have consulted have told them that taking high doses of the narcotics Rush is alleged to have bought can cause HEARING LOSS

Is the picture becoming clear now?

Or is Fox News part of the "left-wing conspiracy" too?

You Rushbots are unbelievable.

Why don't you use your own noodle instead of parroting someone else's garbage.

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The safety of OxyContin® was evaluated in double-blind clinical trials involving 713 patients with moderate to severe pain of various etiologies. In open-label studies of cancer pain, 187 patients received OxyContin® in total daily doses ranging from 20 mg to 640 mg per day. The average total daily dose was approximately 105 mg per day.

Serious adverse reactions which may be associated with OxyContin® (oxycodone hydrochloride controlled-release) tablet therapy in clinical use are those observed with other opioid analgesics, including respiratory depression, apnea, respiratory arrest, and (to an even lesser degree) circulatory depression, hypotension, or shock (see OXYCONTIN OVERDOSE).

The non-serious adverse events seen on initiation of therapy with OxyContin® are typical opioid side effects. These events are dose-dependent, and their frequency depends upon the dose, the clinical setting, the patient s level of opioid tolerance, and host factors specific to the individual. They should be expected and managed as a part of opioid analgesia.

The most frequent (>5%) include: constipation, nausea, somnolence, dizziness, vomiting, pruritus, headache, dry mouth, sweating, and asthenia.

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Clinical trials comparing OxyContin® with immediate-release oxycodone and placebo revealed a similar adverse event profile between OxyContin® and immediate-release oxycodone. The most common adverse events (>5%) reported by patients at least once during therapy were:

Table C
Adverse Events OxyContin® Immediate-Release Placebo
(n=227) (n=225) (n=45)
(%) (%) (%)
Constipation 23 26 7
Nausea 23 27 11
Somnolence 23 24 4
Dizziness 13 16 9
Pruritus  13 12 2
Vomiting 12 14 7
Headache 7 8 7
Dry Mouth 6 7 2
Asthenia 6 7 -
Sweating 5 6 2

The following adverse experiences were reported in OxyContin® treated patients with an incidence between 1% and 5%.

In descending order of frequency they were anorexia, nervousness, insomnia, fever, confusion, diarrhea, abdominal pain, dyspepsia, rash, anxiety, euphoria, dyspnea, postural hypotension, chills, twitching, gastritis, abnormal dreams, thought abnormalities, and hiccups.

The following adverse reactions occurred in less than 1% of patients involved in clinical trials or were reported in post marketing experience:

General: accidental injury, chest pain, facial edema, malaise, neck pain, pain.
Cardiovascular: migraine, syncope, vasodilation, ST depression.
Digestive: dysphagia, eructation, flatulence, gastrointestinal disorder, increased appetite, nausea and vomiting, stomatitis, ileus.
Hemic and Lymphatic: lymphadenopathy.
Metabolic and Nutritional: dehydration, edema, hyponatremia, peripheral edema, syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion, thirst.
Nervous: abnormal gait, agitation, amnesia, depersonalization, depression, emotional lability, hallucination, hyperkinesia, hypesthesia, hypotonia, malaise, paresthesia, seizures, speech disorder, stupor, tinnitus, tremor, vertigo, withdrawal syndrome with or without seizures.
Respiratory: cough increased, pharyngitis, voice alteration.
Skin: dry skin, exfoliative dermatitis, urticaria.
Special Senses: abnormal vision, taste perversion.
Urogenital: amenorrhea, decreased libido, dysuria, hematuria, impotence, polyuria, urinary retention, urination impaired.

Oxycontin Drug Interactions

Opioid analgesics, including OxyContin®, may enhance the neuromuscular blocking action of skeletal muscle relaxants and produce an increased degree of respiratory depression.

Oxycodone is metabolized in part to oxymorphone via cytochrome P450 2D6. While this pathway may be blocked by a variety of drugs (e.g., certain cardiovascular drugs including amiodarone and quinidine as well as polycyclic antidepressants), such blockade has not yet been shown to be of clinical significance with this agent. Clinicians should be aware of this possible interaction, however.


Hearing loss must be a new side-effect.
190 posted on 10/03/2003 12:44:49 PM PDT by AndrewC
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To: WackyKat
Fox Reporter Orlando Salinas just reported that physicians they have consulted have told them that taking high doses of the narcotics Rush is alleged to have bought can cause HEARING LOSS Wasn't that one of the topics two years ago? That pain killers for his back problem a few years before that caused it? Look I think he became addicted to the drug, he even implied it when it was announced that he was deaf. I just have a hard time believing that he bought them through his maid! Especially if NE held on the story for two years!
200 posted on 10/03/2003 1:07:54 PM PDT by ItsTheMediaStupid
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