Demerol knocks me out. Morphine and oxycodone? Nothing. I haven’t got the faintest idea how or if any of them are related - but if I were in pain I’d want something better than the last two, and I usually react strongly to low doses of medication.
Had a couple failed root canals pulled this morning. Used to get by on ibuprofen but I can’t take that any more due to the Coreg, so I’m liking my hydrocodone/acetaminophen right now.
Comparing hydrocodone to crushed up/snorted Oxycontin is like comparing being shot with a pellet gun to being shot with an ICBM. For me, in the bad old days, I was snorting an obscene amount of Oxys every day and still occasionally making it to class. I never got physically nauseous from it like some do, but I did get the itching. Of course nothing could compare to the feeling when I got the right dosage into me. At first, it was like being really buzzed but stronger. I would just float on my own little cloud and life was just something happening to someone else. Too much though and I would lie down and struggle to breathe. Like my body would forget to breathe and I would have to force myself to take a breath. I can’t even describe how scary that is-when you kind of drift off into you own world and realize after a minute that you haven’t taken a breath in over a minute. Then in another moment, the same thing happens again. This can go on for hours and you’re scared that you might just forget all together and that’ll be all she wrote.
I don’t know if the high is comparable to heroin (never tried it), but from descriptions I’ve read it sounds pretty similar to what I felt on Oxy. It only took two trips to the hospital and a seizure for me to finally quit it.
I don’t necessarily think I have an generally addictive personality either. I can drink regularly, but have no need to ever drink again. I don’t gamble and while at one point I was a heavy smoker, I quit that pretty much cold turkey with no need to go back to smoking. However, for whatever reason, pills are my weakness. Oxycontin and opiates in general being first and foremost. If I ever injure myself to point where I need to be on painkillers, I would do everything I could to make sure they were not opiates, even if it meant having to go without altogether.
I think it’s a body chemistry thing. Some people just don’t mesh with downers I’ve taken opioids medically and besides pain relief and making me sleepy they’ve never done much for me. I don’t really see what is so special about being sleepy- it happens to me every night, without fail. Sure. that “the whole world is comfy pillows” feeling is nice, but not really that nice. If I want to sleep, why not sleep for free without bad consequences?
I’ve taken Xanax for dental-work related anxiety, and it’s made me so detached that I could have a complicated root canal and not care at all. But I didn’t find the drug particularly enjoyable.
Caffeine, however, will trigger euphoria in me on occasion. I don’t dare to take stronger stimulants. Different strokes for different folks.
I have a septic tank and a well, I dont flush anything other than toilet paper and human waste, and we use biodegradable soaps,and don’t dispose of random chemicals here.
I was prescribed the stuff after my vasectomy. I took a couple and felt amazing. It scared me how much I enjoyed it so I got rid of the rest. Luckily I didn’t need anymore after the first two wore off. It seems over-dispensing the stuff is common. I was given a prescription for 20, when 5 would’ve been overkill.
I had a tooth pulled last Thursday and the dentist gave me a prescription for Vicodin. It makes the pain more bearable, but doesn’t make it go away completely. I’m not sure if I’m just one of those people that it doesn’t do much for, or if the pain would be really bad if I hadn’t taken it. The dentist also said I can take Aleve along with it so I’ve been alternating, which may also have something to do with my reaction.
I appreciate the correction. Her doctor was very concerned that she had gone ‘cold-turkey’ without consulting him and not because he is a control-freak (well no more than any other good doctor).
My son was addicted to this stuff. He started taking it for back pain and a few years later I ended up doing an intervention on his behalf and keeping him out of jail. He’s been sober for two years now. Yeah, it’s a big fucking deal.
I was at a medical office manager’s convention a few months ago. One of the managers had been with her practice, an Oxy and opiate abuse outpatient treatment clinic in waaay rural West Virginia. When she started there, it was a one doctor practice. Since then they’ve gone up to four full time docs and 20-odd support staff. She said there was enough patient demand that they were looking to add one or two more docs in the coming year.
I figure if there are enough people to maintain a 6-physician practice out in the hills and hollers, there’s gotta be something to the drug. Except for one demerol injection after getting a chest tube placed, I’ve never had anything stronger than percocet, but I really liked percocet. Not enough to want to get a refill or anything, but I can certainly understand the desire.
Due to chronic kidney stones, I’ve been on oxycodone (Percoset) many, many times. Sometimes for as long as two to three weeks. I can certainly see how it could be addictive. The only time I’ve enjoyed watching Teletubbies with my youngest daughter was when I was in full-on kidney-stone mode, strung out on Percoset and Phenergan (an anti-nausea drug).
The first time I ever had IV morphine (again, kidney-related), I thought “Gee, I can understand how people can get hooked on this”.
As others upthread have said, it’s not so much ‘pain relief’ as ‘I’m in pain but I don’t really give a damn’.
But I don’t think it’s a ‘big deal’. If you need it, you need it. That’s between you and your doctor. As for junkies, they’re going to find some kind of fix, no matter what we do.
In the mean time, when I have serious pain, I’m grateful for my Percoset!
I must be one of those people that opiates don’t do much for – yeah, Vicodin has helped a few times with various sorts of pain, but it also makes my head buzz in an unpleasant way and makes me queasy as hell, so I only take it if I really think I’m going to need it. Last year was the last time, after a somewhat involved tooth extraction; I only took one when I got home that afternoon and one more at bedtime that night. If I’m hurting enough I don’t get as queasy but it’s still not much fun. Thankfully no nausea after the extraction, vomiting under those circumstances would have been somewhere way beyond unpleasant.
From what I’ve heard, I’m perfectly happy with this.
I took a percocet (5mg oxycodone/325mg acetominophen) about an hour ago. I just spent a day in the emergency room passing a kidney stone and got the prescription along with my t-shirt and decoder ring.
I am taking it as prescribed. No crushing, snorting, or increasing my dose.
There is no way I am going to ask my doctor for a refill. This stuff is way too good. Thankfully I only have enough for a few days.
Hey, what ER do I have to go to in order to get my t-shirt and decoder ring??
Actually, because of kidney stones (dozens of them in the past 33 years), my tolerance is so high (for opiates) that if the Percoset isn’t at least 7.5mg (and preferably 10mg) it won’t do anything for me. But doctors do seem to understand this. They look at my medical records, see that I do indeed seem to grow kidney stones the way some lawns grow dandelions, see no history of drug seeking, and will cooperatively prescribe for the 7.5 or 10mg.
That doesn’t surprise me. Drug addiction is a huge issue in rural areas nowadays too…I used to see an unbelievable amount of meth addicts when I was working in a rural midwestern locale (not quite as far out as the one you’re talking about though).
In the same session someone asked her why they only did opiate abuse. Her answer was both funny and sad: “If we took in meth patients, too, we’d need 20 docs and 80 support staff, and you’re not going to get that many people to move to middle of nowhere West Virginia to deal with tweaked out hillbillies for state minimum reimbursements.”