Home Forums Salem Place: The Main Board Carly’s prescription.

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  • #1854
    Bonbon
    Participant

    I don’t know if it’s just in Florida or not but you cannot get refils on controlled substances, yet her bottle showed four?  In fact, you can’t even have your doctor call the pharmacists to fill.  You have to have a physical prescription in hand, and that has to be on a special tamper-proof prescription pad.

    Oops, somebody goofed.

    #22796
    DeeLan
    Participant

    I’m in Alabama and have a script for hydrocodone.  60 tablets with no refills but I can only take 1/2 at a time due to sensitivity to opiates and the bottle will last me 6 months to a year.  My husband has a script 60 tablets with 2 refills and getting it refilled before the script expires will last him about 1-2 years.

     

    #22807
    Nora
    Participant

    My experience with controlled meds, i’ve never had any refills on any of them, if I ran out early, I was screwed.  insurance would NOT let you flil a prescription early.  The doctor always had to call in the prescription.  the nurse could not do it.

    #22813
    Bonbon
    Participant

    it can’t even be called in.  Nor can they mail a prescription.  You have to go in person (or someone else can do it) to the doctor’s office and pick it up.

    I guess the reason for this is the proliferation of "pail mills" here in FL.  They are trying to do something about it but, so far, have not been very successful.

    I take narcotics for my back pain and arthritis and, let me tell you, if anyone ever wants to prescribe them for you to take on a regular basis…run away as fast as you can.  I don’t think occasional usage is that bad but regular is a nightmare.   I’ve gotten to the point where they really aren’t doing much for me any more and I told the doc I wanted to stop taking them. 

    Well…you just don’t stop.  I tried and after only one day, had the most horrible withdrawal you can imagine.  I had sweats, then chills, nausea, anxiety, and the most frightening nightmares you can imagine.

    To try and make this a little shorter, he has now started to wean me off from them and I’ve been going at it for three months now and have only cut my usage in half.  A friend told me it took him six months to completely stop.  Now I understand why people go to rehab for "prescription pain meds."  The mental addiction is worse than the physicdal.  Frequently, when I get within an hour of my next dosage, I start to sweat and get nauseous and, many times, have to take it early and am SO tempted to take a whole one rather than the half.  So, unless you intend to take them for the rest of your life, DO NOT START!

    #22816
    DeeLan
    Participant

    Years ago I worked with a girl who was taking Fiornol for headaches.  We worked an 8 hour shift and she would take one at the beginning of the shift, and 3 more during the shift.  Finally the pharmacy talked to her doc and she ended up in a psych ward for withdrawl.  Turns out one of the effects of too much Fironol was rebound headaches so she was taking them to get rid of the headache they were causing.  When the doc prescribed Fironol with Codeine for migraines (before Imitrex and the rest) I would take them once or twice a month but sometines 2 at a tme or 1 every 2-3 hours to get the edge off the migraine so I could at least sleep.  I did this for 15-20 years until I had my gallbladder removed.  Suddenly if I took one I had severe pain just below my ribs where the pain had been from my gallbladder.  One night I was doubled up on the bathroom floor. I lived alone and told when I saw the surgeon at work the next day I told him I don’t know what he did to me but this is the problem.  Turns out codeine can cause spasms of the sphincter muscles.  I had the same problem when I had knee surgery and they gave me Vicodin.  I spoke with a pharmacist friend of mine because I know Vicodin doesn’t have codeine.  No, but they’re both opiates and it was the opiate in general that was causing the problem.  When Before I was diagnosed with Rheumatoid Arthritis I would take a bottle of 200 ibuprofen a month, taking 4-6 at a time because the pain in my knees, hands and back would sometimes get so bad.  My husband had a script for Lortabs (hydrocodone) and I took one with the same results as the codeine so the next time I took 1/2 and was OK.  I talked to my doc who gave me a script for that but he writes it for a smaller amount per bottle because it’s really double for me.  As I said a bottle of 60 will last me close to a year.   Don is allergic to ibuprofen and acetemaniphin (breaks out in hives, even Aleive does it to him) and he had a bleeding ulcer and gastric bypass so he can’t take aspirin.   He has arthritis and can’t take anything so doc gave him tramadal which he said was like eating candy as it did nothing.  He gave him the script for Lortabs and he doesn’t like taking it so he’s got to be in severe pain before he will and even then he tells me when he does and it’s maybe 2 in one day at most.  As I’d said a bottle of 120 lasted him 2 years. 

    My SIL has Lupus and Fibromyalgia.  She’s always taking pain pills and was taking Lortabs and Tramadal many times a day. It got to the point the docs office started limiting her on refills and she felt they were calling her a drug addict.  They sent her to pain clinics and finally the doc gave her a script for a patch that’s got a morphine derrivitive in it and you only apply it once a day but she still wants her pain pills so they only give her tramadal.  In my and my husbands opinions she is psychologically addicted because she complains if she gets a hangnail and is in the ER constantly for knee pain from osteoarthritis.  Of course we can’t tell her that.  Then her daughter who is an addict to anything she can get her hands on is always complaining of some ache or pain and taking her mother’s pain meds.  She won’t even try an OTC she jumps directly to the narcotics even for menustral cramps.  

    With all the abuse I’ve seen around me I can understand the tighter controls on narcotocs.

     

    #22818
    Bonbon
    Participant

    First, your husband is the only one (besides me) I’ve ever heard of being allergic to Ibuprofen.  I also get hives.  How weird is that?  I can’t take aspirin because of my two stomach perforations and those synthetic NSAIs are like me eating M&Ms anyway.  That’s how I got on these pain killers to start with, not knowing how insidious they’d become.

    Also, like you, I was getting those spincter spasms after taking codeine.  Would you believe, I was the one that figured it out by searching the internet, not the doctor.  He knew what the pain was but not what was causing it.  I went to the ER a couple of times because the pain was so intense.  And what did they give me?  Codeine!!!  Before I knew what was causing it, I would get the pain and take another codein, trying to help lessen it a little bit.  Once I figured it out, I haven’t had another one.  I couldn’t believe how painful they were.

    So now here I am, trying to get off from 16 mgs. of Hydromorphone.

    #22821
    DeeLan
    Participant

    Doctors and hospital personnel never believe Don when he tells them he’s allergic to ibuprofen AND acetaminophen.  They think he’s lying and I have to back him up telling them about the hives he gets.  We didn’t realize it was all NSAIDS until we decided to try Aleive.  He took one and I had the Benadryl handy.  20 minutes later he said he felt good but 10 minutes after that and his face and back were covered in hives.  So much for that little experiment.  He’s afraid to take any medication because it might have one or the other in and I’m surprised he can take hydrocodone because it does have one of them in it but it must be such a small amount or released so slowly it doesn’t bother him.  

    #22822
    Bonbon
    Participant

    I don’t want to have to go through that again.  They don’t actually question me but I always get a strange look and the question, "What happens when you take it?"  And I can also take hydrocodone without a problem.  Strange huh?

    I just had my cataract removed and the eyedrops also had ibuprofen in them but they didn’t affect me.  It may be as you say, there’s just not that much in it.

    #22824
    DeeLan
    Participant

    Either the amount the drops contained or the fact that they didn’t go through the system the same.  Don used Voltran which is an NSAID in a gel for topical application.  He had no problems with that but it still carries the same warings as ibuprofen which is stomach problems and bleeding.  

    When I worked in Respiratory we’d put people on inhaled steroids and they were afraid to use them because they didnt’ want all the effects of prednisone.  I’d have to explain to them that by inhaling it you’re able to use less and still get the full effects on the lungs and since there’s less getting into the blood stream you’re not going to have the same side effects such as moon face and brittle bones.  I have diabetes and glaucoma (had surgery to decrease the pressure) and was on high doses of prednisone a year ago (started at 117mg) and it took about 4-5 months to taper off and it raised my glucose to over 200 and increased the pressure in my eyes to where I needed drops.  It took about 4 months of being off of it for things to go back to normal and I could stop the eye drops.  When I use an inhaled steroid for sinus problems I have no problem with the glucose or eye pressure and if I do it’s minimal even though the docs say to watch it closely.  Same with topical, the eye doc said it could cause an increase in the eye pressure but so far not so much.  

     

    #22838
    bradysgma
    Participant

    I  was taking a cough medicine with codeine for a severe cough and it did nothing for the cough. I was taking 1 tsp. twice a day as directed. My husband gets a prescription for an anxiety medication for a 30 day supply with 2 refills.  

    #22858
    Goody
    Participant

    Did it seem to anyone else that Carly regained control of herself far TOO SOON for it to be the results of the pills she took?  She was a shakey mess; took some pills, and ZIP, she stops shaking and is talking and making excuses.  I just did not realize that she would get calm so quickly; shouldn’t it take a while to get from her stomach into her system!!  Oh well, what do I know???

    Goody

     

    #22860
    Bonbon
    Participant

    But there could be somewhat of a placebo effect taking place also.  ‘Nother words, once she took the pills, she knew she would get some relief and that in itself calmed her down.  Don’t know, just trying to make excuses for our piss-poor writers!

    I do know though that if you want pills to take immediate effect, put them under your tongue and let them melt.  My hemotologist says if you want some quick energy, suck on a Lifesaver because the sugar goes into your system faster than if you "eat" some candy.  I also learned that after my cardiac by-pass when I was having angina and had to put nitro-glycerin under my tongue.  It worked almost immediately.

    #22861
    DeeLan
    Participant

    I do believe if you’re psycholigically addicted to anything just the act of taking or having it near will calm that anxiety. 

    As far as meds under the tongue, yes that is one way to get the fastest effect to meds but you’re only to do it with a med that’s meant to be done that way.  Nitro is meant to be used under the tongue.  I take Vitamin B12 and some are meant to be swallowed but they do have a sublingual available which is what I buy.  Some meds need to go through your system through the GI tract and can cause problems if not so don’t do that until you talk to the pharmacist to make sure it’s OK. Its the same way some meds can be cut in half for 1/2 the dose but other’s can’t and only your pharmacist and doctor can tell you if you can take it that way.  Some meds you can take 2 at once for a double dose but other’s are time released and taking 2 will put too much in your system at one time so if taking doubling the dose you need to take them farther apart.  I found that out with a blood pressure med.  I was taking like 5 mg of something and the doc increased the dosage and wrote a script for 10mg once a day so I took 2 of the 5mg.  BIG mistake as my BP dropped too low very fast.  Taking it the way I did caused too much to be released in my system at one time where the 10mg tablet is slower releasing and would have caused no problems.  I was told if I wanted to double up the 5mg I needed to take 1 am and 1 pm.  Now I always call the pharmacist to see if it’s OK to double them when the doc increases the dosage.  

     

    #22948
    JennyK35
    Participant

    That cough medicine with codine is just an expectorant with codine so it actually makes you cough more. It just loosens up the cough, or it’s supposed to. The stuff sucks!

    #22949
    JennyK35
    Participant

    In Minnesota it’s not like that. We can get refills on controlled substances unless it’s from the ER. If we need a refill, we just call the pharmacy and they fax the doctor for a refill and then the doc decides if we get it or not, but if we get it, then it’s just faxed back to the pharmacy and they will refill it.

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