Yeah, I wouldn't have taken the Flexaril at all, but I was really in pain. It did seem to help, and didn't make me too sleepy - two hours later, I was exercising! So with any luck I won't need it again with the larger dose of Baclofen.
hi jen yes dont take the two together baclofen is like a strong muscle relaxant i took it for awhile i had really bad back spasms it was the only thing that helped to releive them.i am actually going to go back on this med my gp wants me to start back on it because of the tightness in my legs.
Just called the nurse - the doc is on vacation, and won't be back until Monday. She isn't sure how the two will react, and doesn't want me to take Flexaril on top of the Baclofen until the doc gets back. Argh. Hope I don't have another hug today...
Of course, on Saturday this may be a moot point, as I go up to two pills a day. Keeping my fingers crossed!
I think the other thing you would want to be cautious of is how the two drugs are metabolized in your body (e.g. through the kidneys or the liver). If they are metabolized the same way you could have issues from mixing them. I don't know enough to answer this, though. Maybe Quix will. To be on the safe side, though, call your dr.
Not working aside, do you have any nasty side effects you are dealing with? I'm on Diazepam, and I hate how tired and monotone it makes me. I do say however, it does keep the spasticity at bay, just barely though.
That's good to know - although the spasticity seems to be getting worse, not better... sigh.
I learned something from this, too! thanks for asking this question. It really was my hunch that they are different - do you ever wonder how drugs know to go one place and not another? I won't lose sleep pondering this but still I do wonder.....
I missed that line though- how funny is that? I guess sometimes we really do need the obvious spelled out, but this seems a bit of overkill.
Keep upi with the baclofen taper - and remember if you ever want to come off of it, you also have to titrate down, otherwise the side effects can be really ugly, but that's a different discussion.
-L
Oh, interesting! The Flexaril did seem to help, so as you say, it sounds like it's treating the spasm rather than the cause of the spasm. Thanks for looking that up for me!
I thought this was funny:
"For the medication to work properly, it must be taken as prescribed. It will not work if you stop taking it."
that is a good question, jensequitur. I'm thinking they work in a totally different way, but I'm probably wrong on that guess. So I'm going to google and see what the difference might be .....
an explanation I like about baclofen comes from
http://www.oakwood.org/?id=1472&sid=1
"Baclofen closely resembles a natural substance in the body that controls spasticity. Baclofen works in the spinal cord. To be effective, the dose must be large enough to travel through the bloodstream and cross the blood-brain barrier. The blood-brain barrier protects the brain and spinal cord. Because of the difficulty of reaching the spinal cord, the effect of Baclofen and other oral medicines may be limited."
"The most common medication prescribed to treat spasticity is Baclofen (Liroesal®). Other oral medicines that may be used to treat spasticity include:
•Diazepam (Valium®)
•Clorazepate (Tranxene®)
•Dantrolen sodium (Dantrium®)
•Tizanidine (Zanaflex®)
•Neurontin"
So flexaril doesn't seem to be on this list.
Flexaril - from http://back-pain.emedtv.com/flexeril/flexeril.html
"How Does It Work?
It is not clear as to how exactly Flexeril works to relieve muscle spasms. However, it is known that it mostly works in the brain stem, not in the spinal cord and not directly on the muscles. The medication only works to relieve muscle spasms caused by problems in the muscles; it does not help with muscle spasms caused by problems in the brain or spinal cord."
If I am reading this right, these two drugs come at the spasms from a different direction. Still to be sure, I would call the doctor.
feel better, Lulu