Chronic Pain members - Welcome, please introduce yourself
Welcome to the new Chronic Pain group.
I’m Kelsey and I’m the moderator of the group. I look forwarding to welcoming you and introducing you to other members. Feel free to browse the topics or start a new one.
Why not take a minute and introduce yourself.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Chronic Pain Support Group.
Hi Jane-
I'm wondering how you found your longitude study? I have had CRPS for almost 10 years. It started in my right foot and moved up my leg after a back surgery. There seems to be so little out there. I take oxycontin, lyrics, cymbalta... but none really seem to help and the pain just seems to progress. I live in San Diego and have been looking for studies with no luck. Would love to hear any suggestions.
The 20-year study is being conducted under the auspices of RSDSA. You can go to their web site and find various research projects that they are supporting.
My CRPS started in my right ankle as well and I take those medications and others with pretty limited success. You might also want to check out CRPS: Princess in the Tower. KNow the name is kind of funky, but they have some good stuff. Think they are out of England. Hope this helps somewhat. With you in spirit
@amberpep Abby, I made the cannabutter, at 1/3 strength. 2.5 lbs of unsalted butter, 1.5 cups of water, and I left it in the crock pot for 8 or 9 hours. Strained it through cloth into a Pyrex mixing bowl, left it in the fridge for a day, scraped the butter that had hardened on top of the water out of the bowl with a table knife, cleaned it off, and set aside enough to make chocolate chip cookies (a pound for my recipe), and froze the rest of it in jars.
I made a double batch of cookies and froze most of them. I used 2 packages of chips, but replaced one with mint chips, which I'm glad I did, because it hides the weed taste - mostly. Yesterday, I ate 4 cookies, and discovered that 4 make me incoherent. Today, I'll back off to 3. My goal is pain control, not to get high. Trouble is, buying from an uncontrolled source, there's no way to know what the ratio of THC is to CBD. The pain specialist told me to get the lowest THC I could. He explained that THC is what makes you high, and the CBD is the medical part. I think that what I have is heavy on the THC. I imagine I'm more responsive to it because it's the first time. Long time users would probably want 6 or 8 cookies.
I was able to get the surgery scheduled for the spinal cord stimulator implant, in April, after my wife gets back home from helping our daughter for a month after having a baby - her first. I've also met with a therapist, and will see him weekly. It took me a long time to get an appointment, and my mental health was deteriorating over the past few months. As soon as I said the s word, I had their attention.
My job today is to put in all of the molding in the kitchen that should have been a part of the installation. Things like quarter round under the kick space, cabinet to wall finish trim, trim to cover raw edges of plywood. Maybe I'm just too OCD. The cabinets are beautiful custom work. The people we bought our house from weren't into finishing everything they started. The wood floor in the kitchen was beyond overdue for a fresh coat of varnish, so they'll never look new. I put 3 coats of polyurethane on the floor, and before putting everything back in place, I want to do the trim work. I'm also replacing the face trim on the doors in the older part of the house, which will also mean some painting.
Gotta quit writing and get back to work.
Jim
It sounds like once you get the amount you need right, you're onto something that will work for you. Good luck. Now if the rest of the medical community would wake up.
Abby
Jim, ingested cannabus is much more potent than any other way of taking it. I once had 1/2 a small square of chocolate, like the size of a Hersey square, and I was so stoned I was afraid. I had to talk myself down from the ledge. I never realized how strong ingested pot was. So, you should probably not have even 1/2 a cookie to start and move up from there.
I would love to use marijuana for my pain, but my pain doctor said he can't treat me if I do. Since marijuana is still illegal at the Federal level, he cannot ok the use of it, even though it is legal where I live, California. So, he drug tested me at my last visit. I have never been drug tested in my entire life and im 68 years old.
Good luck with the cannabutter Jim. I hope it helps your pain. By the way, my Medical Marijuana card only cost $100, and that included the tele-doctor meeting. My husband uses the medicinal marijuana for his arthritis, and he hasn't found it to be expensive here. Just an FYI.
Hi from Switzerland - I just joined your group in search of professoinal help - I was born in 1939, always healhy, some 12 years ago I had some strange sensation, cribbling no pain, in my feet and always cold feet and legs, so my MD suggested to check with a neurologist who tols me that I had an
idiopathic polyneuropathy and that there is no cure for it - in these 10 years I visited professors and MD`s all over the country specialized in neuropathic disorders, I was put on Lyrica for years - the pain and inconvenience increased somewhat in the first 5 years but then stayed rather stabile for another
3 to 4 years, I did a yearly electro neurography in order to be able to compare my subjective pain with the objective measuring of the electric transmission
speed of my peripheral nerves. Only twice the results showed an insignificant decrease of the electric signal speed. However in the past 3 years my
pain increased to an extent that I finally accepted to go on opioides beside Lyrica and Gabapentin.
But even there I had to increase the daily intake (presently 400 to 500mg of Palexia.
To protect myself from cold air, I heat up my bedroom to 25°C and keep special thermic cloths including shirts long socks etc. cut to fit
especially feet and leggs. I also need 1mg of Temesta expidet to calm down to catch some sleep. In measuring my oxygene uptake at
night while sleeping, they found I had sleeping apnoes and I now sleep with an airpressure mouth and nose mask. I wake up quite frequently from
pain and try to influence it with cold water feet bath, sometimes cold-hot showers etc. etc.
I am wondering who has similar problems and I wonder what this person is doing to reduce the pain from cold and yet not get to high because
then the pain is triggered on too, especially in the feet. Best wishes from Switzerland
Hello @Swiss, welcome to Connect and thank you for joining us from Switzerland! Thank you for sharing your history and complications with the members of the Chronic Pain group.
I think I have an active and ongoing discussion that you may want to check out. It is called, Anyone here dealing with peripheral neuropathy? You can find the discussion using this link, http://mayocl.in/2nGKNZ8.
@swiss, if you follow the previous link, you will find a long discussion on how other members deal with peripheral neuropathy. While some members share similar symptoms as you and some experience neuropathy in a different way, you may find some of the coping strategies, remedies, and medications discussed useful. I look forward to seeing more posts from you soon.
That's great information, Jane. It is so frustrating that the pain Docs that we are sent to have no idea what to do. My doctors keep saying that because CRPS effects so few people that the Medical Industry does not want to spend time and money on studies or cures.
Frustrating!!
Hello-My chronic pain began after a serious head-on car accident. Have gone to chiropractors and they all tell me that my back should be on fire. I do varieties of stretching and will only increase that as one way for me to fight joint stiffness. I am prediabetic and have been diagnosed with arthritis in my lower neck and lower back...most days are good for me however I always manage stiffness and have an ongoing Achilles issue because of it....
@swiss
I was diagnosed 5+ years ago with idiopathic peripheral neuropathy, which started with some numbing, and pins and needles on my feet, up to my knees. It gradually became painful, and then burning, mainly the balls of my feet and my toes and heels. So far, my hands just get achy when I'm driving, so I always wear gloves. Beside medications for other things, I'm taking Cymbalta (Duloxetine) and Morphine sulfate contin for the neuropathy pain. I put Lidocaine cream on my feet at bedtime, and other times as needed. It numbs my feet for a couple of hours, long enough to get to sleep. I'm also trying medical Marijuana, and have found that it does help the pain.
I'll hear more from you in the peripheral neuropathy group.
Jim