I found a very helpful site pertaining to oxycontin addiction www.OxycontinNightmare.homestead.com
I have heard that oxycontin if taken for a long period of time will eventually turn your collen black or cause serious damage to your collen. I have also heard they are going to start making the pill in a gelcap to prevent the grinding of the pill in a powder form. Is this true? Please respond as soon as possible.
I have heard that oxycontin if taken for a long period of time will eventually turn your collen black or cause serious damage to your collen. I have also heard they are going to start making the pill in a gelcap to prevent the grinding of the pill in a powder form. Is this true? Please respond as soon as possible.
Hi...I was recently put on oxycontin after 6 months of vicodan. i have a ruptured disc t5-6 in my back ( between the shouldrs )...I guess I'm lucky I live on the north shore of MA and have the greatest docs in Boston. Every Surgeon I have seen has discouraged the thoaxectomy?---a 6 hours surgery in wich they need to collapse my lungs, stop my heart, remove 3 ribs, et al, just to get at the disc in question.....I have a crushing pain in my chest, right under the right rib that runs clear around to my back....of course I am very concerned about addiction, but at this point, it seems to be the lesser of 2 evils......it's nice( well, not nice) to see others in similar straits......I'll be back....
Oxycontin is oxycodone as in Percocet without the tylenol and in a larger time-released dosage (your body rarely runs out). Oddly enough, these are supposed to be less addicitve that percocet, et al, that is possible I suppose, but I read frequently that people chew them up which makes them decidedly worse that Percocet as they are no longer time-released. This is my understanding. I have been on them for about a year. I was on Percocet before, but the dosage I required went too high and the Tylenol is murder on the liver.
Oxycontin is not a drug to fool around with as one can discover on this site. I am not a doctor. My opinion is that all people who take it become addicted physically. It is an opiate; it is powerful, and for those who don't know any better, it seems safe if it comes from the doctor. Well, just because it requires a prescription doesn't make the addicted person any less of a junkie. I am not passing judgement unless one is using it for recreation. I have heard it described as the most wonderful miracle, bringing a fairly normal life to one wracked with pain, and I have heard people suffering horribly to get off it. So much depends on the individual.
People in Miami are useing a special chemical to remove the coating from 80mg oxycontin then, they grind 100's of them into fine white powder. There starting to mix it with cocaine and extasy. Sometimes a little heroin to make the users hooked faster. It's gonna be the epidimic in high school. It's being packaged in small sneak a snort vails. A 1/4 gram of straight oxycodone goes for $150. Mixed with coke and X, it can sell for $750 gram. Outragreous when an 8-ball of good coke used to go for $150-250.
If you were on any hydrcondone or oxycodone, for that time. You will fell withdrawel symtoms. Remember the Dr's have to give you what takes the pain away. But they need to learn that after, they should learn how to ween you off the right way. It can be done without discomfort. I had to it off methadone because the clinic's don't know how to , or don't care. I have detoxed many useing the same drug they are addicted to. I may be doing something illegal, but someone has to do it right.
it's time-release Percodan without the aspirin and caffeine additives. Never tried it. Sounds nice, though.
Is oxycontin the same as Percodan or Percocet? Mojo
hi i doubt very much that your addicted, i have been addicted to pain killers for 10 years and i find it almost impossable to go on without them don,t get in the rut i,m in good luck...joe
Thanx for the advice Tom Good Luck to you to!
I'm not a doc, but I really don't think one week of oxycodone will addict anyone. However, you were on the lortabs/lorcets, i.e., hydrocodone for a month. Oxycontin contains oxycodone. Lotab contains hydrocodone, both are narcotics with about the same effect on the body and brain. Oxycodone is a step up from hydrocodone in both analgesic and addictive power. Read all the posts on this site about Vicodin addiction. Vicodin is essentially identical to Lortab and Lorcet. They are both composed of hydrocodone and tylenol. So, you're really coming off of at least five weeks of narcotics. You certainly could be experiencing withdrawal. However, it should be short-lived, since you're not a long-term user. The advice I gave you on how to handle the symptoms still applies. Good luck.
I am still curious if I could be having some withdrawels after being on oxy for only a week. As for your advice, thanx every bit I can get mabe will be useful.As for My surgeon,I do not see the one who did the operation anymore I just Use my regular Doc.Yes he Knows and he is the one who put me on oxy.If it persists much longer I am going to have a nerve block done on my spine and numb all the back pain altogether for a while.This should help according to the anesthesiologist I am seeing.Thanx again.
I too had a pneumothorax but not the complications or post-op pain that you're having.
As for withdrawal from oxy (or any narcotic)? If anyone knows the chapter and verse of it, I do. Here's the laundry list of symptoms and things that help:
-- muscle aches all along both arms and legs (heat, in the form of a bath or jacuzzi, is very effective - do it as often as you can).
-- listlessness -- no energy, yawning, difficulty concentrating (only time seems to help -- sorry)
-- depression, combined with a vague, unfocused panic (valium, klonopin, librium - any benzodiazipene-family drug; some say the non-benzo Robaxin helps, which is certainly easier to get than valium; I recommend Soma if you are going with a non-benzo)
-- all-body sweating, hot and cold flashes (time, again)
-- diarrhea (good news -- over the counter Imodium is excellent, but don't be conservative on the dosage)
-- craving for more oxy (proper treatment for the cause of the pain and AA).
gerald, stopping the oxy certainly won't CAUSE the pain, but it may heighten your perception of it, especially if your mind is really after more oxy)
Long-term reliance on opiates to relieve pain also depletes your body of its natural ability to cope with pain. This will come back, again, only over the passage of time.
It's easy to just say this from my armchair, but it sounds like you need to either spend more time with your current pain specialist or try a new one. Does your surgeon know you're in such post-op pain?
That's about all I know ... hope it helps. Take care.