Fibromyalgia -- Need help on how to handle severe pain
I was told by a Rheumatologist last year that I have Fibromyalgia. She referred me to my GP for treatment, but he doesn't know anything about this disease. I need advice on how to handle the pain which is sometimes so severe and lasts all day. It usually eases some by bedtime, but lately I've been waking up about 3:00 AM with bad legs pains that keep me from falling back asleep. Since this started 18 months ago, the pain has gone into remission for a few months and flares up again for a couple months. The insomnia and other issues remain. My latest flare started about 5 weeks ago. The only meds I'm taking are Tylenol, which doesn't help, and sometimes Cyclobenzaprine at night. I am afraid of Cymbalta after hearing horror stories about terrible withdrawal issues when wanting to discontinue it due to it's side effects or when it stops working. It seems like all the drugs used for this disease have withdrawal problems. Any help would be appreciated.
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As long as someone finds it useful, more power to them. but that doesn't negate my previous comment.
There are blood tests for imflammation (SED rate and C Reactive Protein) that can help diagnose PMR. I'm 72 and have had the tests before and they were always normal. I will ask my Dr about checking again.
Very good information, thanks for sharing. I've tried Flexeril (Cyclobenzeprine) as well as Tizenadine but couldn't handle the side effects. I did find Darvocet-100 to be the best pain relief years ago but it has since been taken off the market. Now it's just the Tramadol and Ambien at night. Some afternoons I take Tylenol because the Tramadol interferes with my sleep if taken after 2pm even with 5mg Ambien and I'm not keen on upping that. I've been on this combination and prior it was Soma for sleep since 1999 or so.
Finding what works is so important.
Same. I didn't show any inflammation until PMR lifted its ugly head.
Interesting info about the meds that you tried. I've never taken Tienadine nor Darvoce-100 (while it was on market) but I have been prescribed Tramadol (as in Tylenol with Tramadol) and the Ambien. The tramadol is Never to be prescribed for a patient who is on cyclobenzeprine, as I discovered when the same doctor (my then-rheumatologist who had diagnosed the fibromyalgia) added the Tylenol-Tramadol medication. ONE dose and I had frightening hallucinations. When I returned and informed her, she gave a nervous laugh, and said "sorry, I didn't know..." You are supposed to know these things as a medial professional for goodness sake! So I left her practice, just couldn't and wouldn't deal with that. That's when I went to my husband's wonderful rheumatologist, the one who was so knowledgeable and ALWAYS cross referenced supplements and meds to rule out complications. Then another doctor prescribed Ambien for my inability to sleep longer than 20 minutes to an hour and jerking wide awake and stressed out. Supposed to help with sleep...had reverse effects on me. Slept up to two hours, then starkly awake for the day (as early as midnight!) and then overcome with desire to close eyes and sleep by noon time, and in a "drugged" state. So I dropped that pill. Can't take morphine or codeine either (hallucinations/night terrors). I could write stories based on my experiences that would make Stephen King take notice! Not much help when my system reacts so strongly and negatively to medications. I'm going to research the Soma that you include in your post, for personal knowledge and to add to my "data base." BTW: other meds that I cannot take are ALL antidepressants (night terrors, hallucinations, inability to follow a conversation, pounding headache with one in particular along with sensation of impending death), ALL statins, as well as Topamax and Depakote (both had been prescribed for severe migraines, but instead each had serious side effects). Had to get off Imitrex injectable, prescribed for those serious migraines due to having had pain INTENSIFY instead of decrease after injecting, making my brain feel like it was about to burst....Doctors just either are interested in working with me and helping, or they give off vibes of "hey, you are more trouble than what I want to take on..."👀. I advocate for myself. Exhausting on so many levels. BUT, I forge forward, and have plenty to be appreciative about.
Oh, Ripley, I'm so sorry you're having a hard time accepting what may be your new normal. Change is hard and acceptance of something your not happy about makes it all the harder. I stubbornly resisted significant changes in my life, too, especially when it meant no longer being capable of working. Loss in any shape or form is something we naturally mourn. It's important to give ourself grace during the process. Journaling and the practice of mindfulness helped me quite a bit, along with cognitive behavioral therapy. Have you considered therapy to work through your challenges?
Oh wow, you've been through it. I haven't taken the Tramadol/Tylenol combo but I have noticed that Tylenol does help the Tramadol along. I just don't want to take too much of the Tylenol (generic since Tylenol is too expensive) it can be hard on the kidneys. I take 2 or 3 Tramadol per day depending on pain level and just to keep it below screaming level. That would be too much Tylenol.
Night terrors are horrible. I get those with Codeine. I was on fentanyl which worked well for the pain but it irritated my gut enough that I ended up in the ER with another bout of diverticulitis and an eight day hospital stay with micro perforation.
Keep in mind that doctors are practicing and that one you had.... yikes.
I always use a drug interaction checker whenever I'm given a new medication, including otc meds. Most times the pharmacist will catch something but I go that extra step. Stay vigilant and safe.
I had earlier posted about my pain of fibromyalgia and no more meds. I used to be on Tramadol-APAP. 3 YEARS and had hardly any pain if at all. I had to stop it because they put a ban on taking it. But Tram-Apap is tramadol with acetaminophen. It was good. But now with neuropathy in my legs and feet in and severe lower back pain I just might look into PT. I will give it a good try. Hang tough!
I've had to switch doctors bc mine is retiring. He was the director if the clinic and pretty much told me 'good luck' getting Tramadol refills. It's ridiculous that there's a pain relief, one of, if not the weakest narcotic 'type' medicine and doctors have been harrassed into not prescribing it. I've mentioned I've taken it more or less over 20 years and have only climbed up from one or two per day to two or three due increasing pain. Of course taking more would get me to a normal but I have a fear of addiction.
I will try whatever their alternative is but for the ssri meds. I get a very heavy chest feeing after 9 days or so and ofc that wasn't even long enough to see if it worked.
We'll see.
Do you take Tramadol every day? Did you have any trouble finding a doctor that would prescribe it?