Pain pump, I have one, how about one for you?
I have had an implanted pain pump in my abdomen for about 18 months. It is a miracle. I get a total of 4.764 mgs. of Dilaudid, If I administer all of the 10 extra micro does I can have in 24 hours. If I don't use those extra doses I get 2.74 mgs. over 24 hours. The effect is 300 times more effective than if I took the same dose orally. I go to my doctors office every 3 months to have the pump refilled. I'm there for about 15 minutes. The actual process of refilling the pump takes no more than 5 minutes and is painless. No prescriptions to worry about, no one wondering if I'm misusing or selling my pain meds, no one making me feel like a drug addict or a criminal. In our current climate this is even more important than it was two years ago. Many Doctors want nothing to do with pain patients or writing scripts for pain meds. I know many of you have been there. This method is especially good for back issues as the drug is delivered via a catheter which runs up my spin. Yes, I still have pain but it's pain I can live with. If your Doctor doesn't know about this or doesn't want to do it contact a pain clinic. The Doctor who put mine in is a Neurosurgeon. If you have any questions please respond.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Chronic Pain Support Group.
My friend says the pain makes the decision, not us I think that;s true. Good luck.
You have the same story as me except I now have to use a catheter a few times a day and have dementia so they are lowering the dose and added the Metronic’s stimulator (no worth it). I am not sure what the long term choices will be.
I wish you had your husband support as my wife fights me with trying to manage the pain; they don’t understand long term pain!
I misspoke. You must have the meds tested via spinal injection directly into the spinal fluid. Almost all the meds you swallow are lost to the digestive system. The spinal delivery skips the digestion which is why there are no adverse digestive issues.
Hi and so glad you are relieved.
I have neuropathy on both my feet hands. Pain level is consistent through the day. Sleeping time has been dramatic as in a painful state 9 (scale 1-10)
Cold tub full shower 20 mins does the pain relieving thus allow to fall a sleep.
Looking for your feedback or advice.
Blessings.
In 2001 I went over the handlebars of my bicycle. Since then, my pain has gotten worse. I'm now going to a spine and pain center where I only see a doctor once a year and last year doesn't count. With pre-authorization problems and pharmacists looking at me like I'm a druggie looking for my next hit, I found myself last month without a way of getting my pain meds.
The pain was horrendous and if my mom hadn't died several years ago, leaving some pain meds behind, I would have been in a serious bind. Pain levels were skyrocketing and no one was taking it seriously except me. Even our doctors don't often take us seriously! And I'm not kidding in the least when I say on this occasion on a one to ten level, my pain was a sixteen. Had I not been able to find a way to get meds, my goal wouldn't have been to find an alternative doctor, but to find a good undertaker!
Before I retired from federal service in 2006, I worked at NIH, and one day I was shooting the breeze with the head of the Pain and Paliative Care Department at the Clinical Center (who didn't know my situation), I asked him how people in the 1700-1800s dealt with horrible chronic pain, he didn't say a word, nor did he smile. He just looked at me, took his hand and, extending the thumb and small finger of his right hand, tipped it up like he was drinking something. Then he turned the same hand into a pistol, pointed it to the side of his head and released the hammer, which was his extended thumb.
It clearly was something he'd done before, and it wasn't lost on me!
I've only been in pain that serious twice before. Once when I couldn't get my pain meds, as mentioned, and the other when I had serious abdominal cramps and couldn't find relief. Both times I seriously considered suicide.
People often don't take people like me seriously until we're on a slab with with a toe tag. And I've met others like myself. Like the woman who barely survived an incident where her parachute barely opened in time, or the guy who was struck by lightning as he was setting up a live television feed. Or the dad who was doing some electrical work in his bathroom and was knocked into his bathtub and had a near death experience (fortunately he made a full recovery). We're out there and we need to be taken seriously.
Damn seriously!
About fifteen years ago I looked into a pain pump, but the doctors couldn't find the right place on my spine, but now I'm ready to try again. But I'd like to hear your success stories and your stories of failure. As they used to say, the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat!
Thanks!
The Metronic’s pump works; however after a few years I was found to have dementia and now they believe the drugs being use caused the dementia. I now have to decide what worse pain (yes this is worse for me) or lost of memory (which is worse for everyone else).
Hello @jriler53 and welcome to Mayo Clinic Connect. Because you are interested in connecting with others who have experience with pain pumps as you reconsider one again, I have moved your post into this discussion on the same topic: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/pain-pump-i-have-one-how-about-one-for-you/
I see member @gcranor has replied to you. I would also like to bring in @wsh66 to see if he may be able to share more with you.
Do you have another doctor you are working with as you consider a pain pump again?
I have the same Pain Doctor for 10 years and always try’s to help manage the pain; I don’t believe science has or will solve pain management
The stigma of being dependent on drugs is both real and ridiculous. I’m dependent on several drugs to keep me alive and able to cope. The drugs I take to keep me alive are carcinogenic and have serious side effects and a narrow therapeutic index, but since they aren’t classed as narcotics there’s no stigma. But when it comes to pain meds and MH meds, get ready to be looked at askance for being dependent.
I’m not sure what can be done about this, but I know all of us on long term pain and mental health meds have to deal with it ad nauseam.
Hang in there, and make noise. You aren’t alone and together we’re powerful.