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Allodynia: Anyone else sensitive to touch?

Neuropathy | Last Active: Aug 30 5:28am | Replies (148)

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@rwinney

Hello @mindfulness. I'd be happy to answer your questions about the PRC program. I'm so happy to hear your husband is considering it.

Absolutely my pain has decreased for the sheer fact that not only did I learn the tools to work towards pain reduction, but I worked diligently after PRC and applied the learned principles. The most important thing to understand about PRC is that you get out of it what you put in to it. If your husband invests 3 weeks of rehabilitation and does not buy into this program, it will not work. Surprisingly, it's not rocket science. It's basic healthy principles taught to improve physical, behavioral, and emotional health. Change comes from improving the mind and body to have a better, more manageable quality of life. It's a recipe for reduced pain, symptoms, depression, insomnia, chemical intake, anxiety, etc... PRC principles break the cycle of pain that most people get swallowed up in and can not see their way out of.

I discontinued several medications, as it is part of the PRC requirements and an important part of why I chose to be there. Medication omission, or reduction, can be very scary, but once understanding the importance of chemical reduction to pain rehabilitation, you begin to learn the negative effects certain meds can have on forward progress of life quality. The PRC has a pharmaceutical team that will analyze your husband's list of meds and determine which are necessary (blood pressure, heart, etc...) and which are not helping him in his pain rehab journey. I was safely weaned off an addictive medication, and discontinued many others meds while there. I had a meeting with the Mayo pharmaceutical team to discuss all meds, their purpose, or lack there of.

May I respectfully ask, if your husband is living with chronic, not acute, conditions and suffers from chronic pain and symptoms which no other treatments have helped, cured or fixed, and he is in emotional distress and physically decondition as a result, what else is left? The problem runs deeper. Chronic conditions typically mean just that, they are chronic and not going anywhere. One can continue to aimlessly search or they can come to terms and work on acceptance by way of learning tools that help increase quality of life. The PRC teaches a holistic approach to doing just that.

At the end of the day, Rehabilitation = bravery with the acceptance of doing things differently. No one knows what's best for you and your husband. You both have to make that decision. My advice is to have an honest, heart to heart about what the program entails and whether he wants to commit to a 3 week out patient program, and put in the work. I can attest that he will be in good hands. It's simply amazing what this program does and how they change peoples lives. The PRC has a huge success rate of giving people (and their families) their life back. There are people, however, that aren't ready to commit to change or don't buy into the program. In either case, I wish your husband the strength to make the best decision for himself. I wish you the strength to continue being the great support system that I think you are. Life ain't easy, but so worth living when you can find joy despite circumstance.

Do you have any other questions that I can help with?

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Replies to "Hello @mindfulness. I'd be happy to answer your questions about the PRC program. I'm so happy..."

Thank you for sharing your experience. I am very happy that the program worked so well for you.
Have you followed the teachings of Dr. John Sarno and Dr. Howard Schubiner? There is a chance that your pain can be reversed. https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=howard+schubiner+md+pain&&view=detail&mid=901DB5D7F94027EE797C901DB5D7F94027EE797C&&FORM=VRDGAR&ru=%2Fvideos%2Fsearch%3Fq%3Dhoward%2Bschubiner%2Bmd%2Bpain%26FORM%3DHDRSC4

Hi. I'm fairly new to this blog. I have allodynia on my back since it started abruptly (hence, I don't think it's diabetic neuropathy, as I understand that starts slowly and progresses, though I am diabetic) last January. Gabapentin helps keep me sane.
What is PRC? I will ask my doctor if cymbalta is worth a try and not contraindicated as I take a load of meds already.
Thanks for the info.