IS there an alternative to morphine - Pain Concern

Pain Concern

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IS there an alternative to morphine

tec2tec profile image
31 Replies

I have been in pain with my back since 1977. I have always work until July last year as a bus driver in London and on European coaches for 32 years being medically retired due to heart disease and chronic back pain i have now been told i have Scheuermann's disease doctor put me gabapentin and morphine and baclofen i take them as prescribed but find myself in more pain i don't want to relie on drugs anyone can suggest an alternative

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tec2tec
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31 Replies
Kjohnso45 profile image
Kjohnso45

So sorry!!!

kamarx profile image
kamarx in reply to Kjohnso45

Alternative to morphine would be methadone-dolophine 5-10mg tablets

RAYJAYC profile image
RAYJAYC

Such a lot for you to deal with tec2tec!

Non-medication wise, you could maybe try massage, acupuncture, yoga, pilates, physio, hydrotherapy or counselling?

Do you have access to a Pain Management Team in your area - via your GP? They generally have a Psychologist who specialises in chronic pain.

Having to rely on or just be offered medication is hard but unfortunately we have to be proactive in seeking alternatives sometimes.

Good for you for asking for something other than medication!!!!

RAYJAYC

tec2tec profile image
tec2tec in reply to RAYJAYC

seeing pain management soon

Welsh-1 profile image
Welsh-1

I have tried all the drugs you have named and more but some take the edge of it but nothing I have had helps the pain that much. Like you I do a similar job which doesn't help. However, I have managed to get completely pain free on numerous occasions over the past 5 years with nerve root block injections. They are uncomfortable uncomfortable but when they work are brilliant. Some I have had last for as long as 9 months others only 6 weeks but worth it x

tec2tec profile image
tec2tec in reply to Welsh-1

i will find out thank you

G00dman profile image
G00dman

I reacted badly to the drugs at first. I discussed it with my GP and we kept changing the cocktail and strength until we hit on something which gave some relief and minimised the side effects. There has been no magic bullet and I needed to change the change the combination every few months, but things did improve. Surgery last year helped a lot and I enjoy the good days.

beauty96 profile image
beauty96

Try Tai chi but do find a person who understands injuries etc.

tec2tec profile image
tec2tec in reply to beauty96

interesting will look into that thank you

Bonni1 profile image
Bonni1

Swimming is the best physio

Walking in water is great for the back

tec2tec profile image
tec2tec in reply to Bonni1

time to get the pool filled up thank you

Bonni1 profile image
Bonni1 in reply to tec2tec

It defo works

Big time

morphalot profile image
morphalot in reply to Bonni1

It does work but the water needs to be warm! Good luck!

SazRah profile image
SazRah

Hi! I'm in a similar position and I too carried on in spite of pain for years until I couldn't anymore. I recommend trying to find a pain management (emphasis on management) specialist. Have you had any pain education from your dr? It's very useful in understanding why you have pain and where it's coming from, then you can start altering the way you perceive pain, and it's supposed to make it better and easier to deal with...I say 'supposed' to as I'm still in the process of doing that, but I have been assured that a complete reduction in pain killers is possible. It sounds like you have an element of centralised pain, which is a problem with your central nervous system and is what can be left after an injury is healed. The pain receptors are switched on and you feel pain although the initial cause of the pain, such as a back injury, has been removed. This is what the gabapentin is for. There are two pathways that pain can take, one can be reduced by antiepileptics (gabapentin) and the other by antidepressants (such as amitriptyline) sometimes a combination of the two can help. I personally started with amitriptyline, and when that didn't give a complete reduction in pain they put me on pregabelin (an antiepileptic) as well. This gave me some worrying side effects and I had to come off it. I'm still on amitriptyline and I take strong opiates too, along with the max dose of paracetamol which my pain specialist recommended. If you are really keen to reduce your pain killers I would request a referral to a pain management program, there aren't many of them in the country so there is a long wait (there is one in London called INPUT at guys and st Thomas' hospital) but they deal with you as a whole person, not just your individual diagnoses. They teach you about pain, they look at physio and they do cognitive behavioural therapy to help you control your pain signals. I have to admit when I was first told about centralised pain and behavioural therapy, I thought they were saying it was all psychological and i wasn't really in pain, but when they explained it to me, I understood it all and my initial thoughts were completely wrong. It isn't anything to do with psychology, it involves a mis-firing of nerve signals and a misinterpretation of the situation by the brain, but they can teach you how to correct the brain and override the signals. Once you can do that you don't need the pain killers anymore! That's my goal as I hate the opiates! I hope my waffling has helped a little! There is hope, and there are other treatment options other than drugs, it's unfortunate that not all Drs are up to date with the research into pain, and not all pain specialists are either! I've spoken to lots of other patients over the years and it seems to be the norm to have tried several pain specialists before finding the right one! There definitely isn't a one size fits all treatment strategy when dealing with pain! Hope you get sorted soon!

Saz x

tec2tec profile image
tec2tec in reply to SazRah

thank you saz im seeing PMT in two days so hopefully they can help

morphalot profile image
morphalot in reply to tec2tec

They will only take you on the input programme for the back if you have had spinal surgery that has failed. There isn't a particularly long waiting list, and you seem to have omitted the actual implant of the neuromodulator. I have had this implanted and it has enabled me to come off some of the medication.. I'm happy to discuss further if anybody wants me to.

Connex3 profile image
Connex3 in reply to morphalot

How does that wotk

morphalot profile image
morphalot in reply to Connex3

You go to a pain management centre (st Thomas, London; rvi, Newcastle, Liverpool, Oxford) these are all I've heard of but the may be more. Your GP can refer you. I can only tell you my experience . I had an assessment at st Thomas, by a physio and a psychologist, then the doctor and consultant. They accepted me, then i waited a few months to hear that I was on the residential course (you have to do this as well as have the implant because it taught me skills to help in my life like what to do if I fell etc.). Then I had the trial implant which is a bit like an internal TENS machine only the wires lie along my spinal column. There is also a battery in my back which I have to charge up every day, remotely. You can't feel the implant at all once it's in place. After a couple of weeks that test implant is removed and the permanent one is in. Never looked back. If i you have any questions just drop me a line. Good luck!

Boozybird profile image
Boozybird

Hi tec2tec,

you've done so well keeping working all this time - its not easy with pain. As someone suggested, you need to see a pain management clinic if you haven't already done so particularly if the cocktail of drugs is not working for you! Baclofen is for spasm - is spasm a feature of your back pain? And if you are no longer working is your pain less? Gabapentin doesn't help everyone - my consultant told me it helps about a third of patients so if it is not helping you it would be good to get medical advice to scale back.

On wiki it suggests your disease could be helped with the schroth method. If you google that there is somewhere in London I believe who may be able to help. The use special exercises to offload the worst pressures that the acute kyphosis produces.. this is what it says,

In Germany, a standard treatment for both Scheuermann's disease and lumbar kyphosis is the Schroth method, a system of specialized physical therapy for scoliosis and related spinal deformities. The method has been shown to reduce pain and decrease kyphotic angle significantly during an inpatient treatment program.

Hope this helps.

best wishes

tec2tec profile image
tec2tec in reply to Boozybird

thank you so much will look in to it and yes when i lie down i get spasm

Boozybird profile image
Boozybird in reply to tec2tec

When you lie down do you support yourself with pillows? If your kyphosis is very pronounced presumably it would transfer a lot of strain to your lumbar and neck region so extra pillow support may help....

tec2tec profile image
tec2tec in reply to Boozybird

i have a bed frame that helps to keep on a tilt to try and ease the pain but just make it harder to sleep

tec2tec profile image
tec2tec in reply to Boozybird

thank you just hoping to get pain under control then try and get back to work hope fully the P M T can help with the pain

Boozybird profile image
Boozybird in reply to tec2tec

Have you tried anti-inflammatories?

tec2tec profile image
tec2tec in reply to Boozybird

yes but no good

johnsmith profile image
johnsmith

See an Alexander Teacher.

stat.org.uk for more information.

tec2tec profile image
tec2tec in reply to johnsmith

thank you

linlow profile image
linlow

You'll have been to the pain management clinic by now so I hope you are starting to move forward with that.

I can thoroughly recommend the acupuncture someone else mentioned, if you can find a good acupuncturist.

Cranial osteopathy might help.  Again, though, it relies upon finding a good practitioner - word of mouth recommendation would help.  I have been to 2 different specialists.  The first time was bliss, the second (closer to home, less practised but not much cheaper) made hardly any difference at all.

Hydrotherapy might be a good option if you have somewhere local - better than swimming, though swimming is good all the same.

A heat pad helps, obviously, but sometimes a cool pad is better.

Diet can play an important role in pain management.  The body's natural ph is around 7.4, the alkaline side of neutral.  Whilst this is maintained whatever you eat, an acid diet can have an adverse effect.  Do a google search on 'eat yourself out of pain' for sites like docakilah.wordpress.com/201... as a starting point.

Coconut oil acts like a natural version of Tylenol — it is has both anti-inflammatory and analgesic effect ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/206....  It should also help with mobility.  You'll have to make up your own mind on whether it is heart healthy or not.  It certainly helps improve cholesterol ratios, raising levels of HDL (aka good cholesterol).

If you don't fancy coconut oil, try (grass-fed) ghee.  In reality this possibly has more benefits, it can certainly be used to cook at higher temperatures and has a wonderful buttery flavour.

Both these oils can be used on the outside as well as eaten and, warmed, make a wonderfully effective massage oil.  Whichever oil you prefer try adding one or other of the pain relieving essential oils to the mix healthyandnaturalworld.com/....  I swear by lavender (but it isn't always to everyone's taste) or black pepper.

Look up natural painkillers like hawthorn and sour cherries (an acid food unfortunately).

If nothing else searching on google might take your mind off the pain for a while - if only you can get comfortable to start with :)

Best of luck

AndrewT profile image
AndrewT

Dear tec2tec,

I'm NOT too sure if this might be worth trying-heck surly anything is!- but have you had a 'GP' referral, to the local gym?  NOT a silly idea, on a 'GP' referral, you are fully assessed, by people who do actually know what they are doing, then, again combined with your own input, given a short series of exercises to try.  The 'Assessor' will probably be, she was in my case anyway, with you, on your first 'circuit.  As I recall after about six sections you are 'reviewed, not as bad as it sounds!, and the exercises adjusted accordingly.  Thereafter, and I have been going there for about two years now, further 'reviews/adjustments' are made at your request.

I have found regular visits to the gym have helped keep ME 'regular' too-yes it really does work!

Anyway please do, at least, make enquiries tec2tec.  I hope that, by whatever means, you start to feel better soon-in any event.

Kindest wishes AndrewT

Triptwo profile image
Triptwo

Have you tried Kratom? It's a leaf of a plant from southeast Asia.I've started to use it with cannabis instead of morphine and had some positive effects. Obviously I would advise you speak to a doctor about this first before trying.

Shumbah profile image
Shumbah

I have miracle treatment for back pain etc.

I learnt about it in NYC I traveled twice a year and had 3 injections over 10 days for Morton’s Neuroma .

Long story short this treatment is legal in the UK not in Australia where I live .

However I have managed to bring it in as I have a severe back injury and arthritis in my shoulders/ Neck.

I was spending nearly $2000 a week in Physio since March 2020when I injured my back .

So I searched and finally managed to find some Traumeel and Zeel ampules I bought them ,my doctor friend injected me on a Thursday by Sunday I was PAIN FREE back and shoulders , neck got the first time since March 2020

I have been have injections now once a week for 4 weeks I have been pain free the whole time.

In the USA for severe cases Traumeel injections for chronic pain are recommended as frequently as daily for the first few or every 3 days then weekly to 6 weeks

No more Endone , pain killers , tens machine , pain creams or expensive Physio etc.

Who would think that this homeopathic treatment could do what cortisone could not.

From first hand experiences I can highly recommend you source this treatments in London there are clinics who specialise in this treatment.

My girlfriend has a neck fusion and was also in agony

Sally as just started injections and had the same result as me.

Ps if traumeel therapy is out of reach for you NORSPAN patches about 15 mg should help.

The Traumeel injection actually helps heal , Norspan will mask some pain. traumeel may give you an opportunity to be pain free totally.

All the best

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