tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-75169918004707976752024-03-16T13:52:45.951-05:00Chronic Pain NightmareMy blog is about the "silent epidemic" as it is called Chronic Pain. The truth about chronic pain is that it knows no age limits or racial barriers. There are 73 million people in this country suffering from this deadly and unrelenting disease. I hope to call attention to the under treatment and stigma of chronic pain and the people who suffer just like me. I welcome your feedback and comments.<br>
JUST REMEMBER, YOU ARE NOT ALONE!!
JerryUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger58125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-19784343501018927252011-10-15T13:21:00.007-05:002011-10-15T14:05:26.533-05:00Well I am back. JerryHello everyone. It has been a long time since I posted anything on my blog, but it hasn't stopped you folks from reading. I want to take this opportunity to thank everyone that has read and left messageses. There is actually a lot of information an it and I plan to start writing again, but probably not as frequent. I stopped because it got so hard to write about pain when you are in so much pain. we will see how it goes.<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-41907254181326993362009-11-08T21:40:00.008-06:002009-11-08T22:19:21.067-06:00This sounds interesting for those of you like me<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjIUhY9squ8snTwcLLJE9X5QQIpkr31h-vbfIXuagdC2L9k_jwOguZ7v7ValpkfyIjGcH_bLZgxxqWZyz-MhXTOgWeABLGa1svqV98gUjQdDWgcPLu46lEgAUyMrE80w0i4QIlpJ2LuMQI/s1600-h/DSC717250..JPG"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 213px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjIUhY9squ8snTwcLLJE9X5QQIpkr31h-vbfIXuagdC2L9k_jwOguZ7v7ValpkfyIjGcH_bLZgxxqWZyz-MhXTOgWeABLGa1svqV98gUjQdDWgcPLu46lEgAUyMrE80w0i4QIlpJ2LuMQI/s320/DSC717250..JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5401952655192592498" /></a><br /><br />NATIONAL PANEL SOUNDS ALARM ABOUT LACK OF PHYSICIAN TRAINING TO TREAT CHRONIC PAIN; MAJOR HEALTH GROUPS ENDORSE NEW REPORT WHICH CALLS FOR URGENT MEDICAL SCHOOL AND HEALTH SYSTEM REFORM <br /><br /><br />“Epidemic” of under-treatment affects more than 70 million Americans suffering from persistent back pain, headaches, joint pain; disproportionately affects minorities and low income <br /><br /><br />WASHINGTON, DC (November 4, 2009)-- Warning that patients shouldn’t assume their doctor has enough knowledge to treat their pain, a national panel of experts today called on medical schools to train doctors and nurses on the basics of pain care, reform the nation’s reimbursement system, and address pain as a public health crisis. The group insists that without health reforms and better training to diagnose and treat pain properly, people with untreated pain may face a lifetime of pain as a chronic illness – which could lead to job loss, depression and in some cases, even suicide. <br /><br /><br />“Doctors, who don’t lack for compassion or medical skills, often offer only limited treatments to patients disabled by chronic pain,” said Lonnie Zeltzer, M.D., co-chair of the panel, and the director of the Pediatric Pain Program at the University of California, Los Angeles. “With little or no specific training in pain management, and working in systems that make it much easier to treat common conditions like high blood pressure than a complex problem like pain, doctors may intend to help but leave most patients under-assessed and under-treated. Minorities, children and women often faced the highest risk of under-treatment.” <br /><br /><br />The panel, convened by the New York City-based Mayday Fund, included anesthesiologists, neurologists, primary care doctors, pediatricians, emergency physicians, nurses, psychologists, pharmacists and patient advocates (the full Committee is included below). After a conference in Washington D.C. and deliberations that lasted over several months, the panel’s report, A Call to Revolutionize Chronic Pain Care in America: An Opportunity in Health Care Reform, says pain is a huge public health problem. They developed several recommendations for government agencies, Congress and the medical community to address. <br /><br /><br />The report and recommendations have been endorsed by more than 30 organizations, including the American Academy of Family Physicians, American Academy of Pediatrics, The Joint Commission, American Nurses Association, American College of Emergency Physicians, and the American Academy of Neurology (the list of current signatories is below). <br /><br /><br />“As we get closer to the possibility of health care reform, the frontlines of medicine - adult and pediatric primary care - could face enormous strains from millions of new patients seeking care for pain,” says Russell K. Portenoy, M.D., panel co-chair and the chairman of Pain Medicine and Palliative Care at the Beth Israel Medical Center in New York. “Primary care is the first stop for people in pain, and both the training received by clinicians and the system of care should facilitate best practices in pain care, but this is not the way it is.” <br /><br /><br />The Mayday Fund Special Committee on Pain and the Practice of Medicine writes that chronic pain should be reframed as a chronic illness since “the burden of chronic pain is greater than that of diabetes, heart disease and cancer combined.” People in chronic pain have longer hospital stays, and many duplicative tests and unproven treatments—all of which drive up the nation’s health care spending, the panel said. <br /><br /><br />Chronic pain costs the nation more than $100 billion a year in lost productivity and direct medical costs, the report says. “This is a wasteful system,” Portenoy adds. “Major reforms in the health care system are needed if we want to improve the quality and cost effectiveness of care for chronic illnesses, and pain is as much a chronic illness as diabetes and heart disease.” Although the impact of pain on patients and on society is among the most serious of public health concerns, chronic pain has been largely left out of the current national debate on health reform, the panel writes. <br /><br /><br />According to the report, about “one-third of people in pain report that their pain is disabling and has a high impact on their ability to function in daily life. Research suggests that the high cost of under-treated pain includes lost productivity. Pain is the second-leading cause of medically-related work absenteeism, resulting in more than 50 million lost workdays.” <br /><br /><br />The authors pay particular attention to the numerous studies that suggest low-income populations, minorities, women and children are more likely to be under-treated for pain or not receive pain care at all. If doctors do not recognize chronic pain as a serious illness, or as serious as others, or they perceive that pain complaints cannot, or should not, be treated, persistent pain results. In some cases, such as pain in young children and adults with dementia, patients may not report their pain, and under-assessment drives under-treatment. <br /><br /><br />“The tragedy of this system is that it leaves many people suffering from unrelenting pain,” says Zeltzer. “Pain that goes untreated may permanently change the body’s nervous system and may lead to pain that can be managed but never goes away.” <br /><br /><br />Federal policymakers have recognized the impact pain has on individuals and the health care system and have included provisions of the National Pain Care Policy Act 2009 (NPCPA) in health reform proposals. That bill calls for an Institute of Medicine Conference on Pain; increased funding for the National Institutes of Health to collaborate across institutes to find more effective treatments for pain and to better understand the biology of pain; a grant program to improve health professionals’ understanding of and ability to assess and treat pain; and better public education so that consumers understand the danger of letting pain go untreated. <br /><br /><br />“Remarkably, less than one percent of the NIH budget was devoted to pain in 2008,” Zeltzer said. “This amount is not commensurate with a public health problem of this magnitude.” <br /><br /><br />In addition to medical school reforms and expanded funding for pain management training programs, the panel cited specific measures that would ease this public health crisis. Among them: <br /><br /><br />•Health care providers, insurers and government agencies should eliminate disparities in access to pain care related to race, gender, age and socioeconomic status. All Americans in pain, including low-income Americans, should be offered timely and effective treatment for their pain. <br /><br /><br />•Government, health care payors and providers should develop coordinated health information technology (IT) systems to track pain disorders and treatments. Computerized IT systems can boost physicians’ knowledge about the best treatment for pain by providing them with best practice information quickly.<br /><br /><br />•The Department of Health and Human Services should reform payment to eliminate the current incentives that drive pain care toward procedures or unproven treatments. Primary care doctors should be reimbursed for the time it takes to provide comprehensive pain care to patients who are disabled by chronic pain—a system that can cost a little more up front, but often reduces the cost of treating pain over the long haul.<br /><br /><br />•The Surgeon General should mount a public education campaign to inform the public about the risks associated with under-treated pain. Consumers should understand that if they wait too long to treat acute pain they run the risk of developing a chronic syndrome, one that’s costly to treat and potentially disabling.<br /><br /><br />“Reducing the burden of uncontrolled chronic pain is a societal necessity, a medical challenge and an economic requirement,” the panel says. <br /><br /><br />The Mayday Fund is a New York City-based private philanthropy dedicated to alleviating the incidence, degree and consequences of human physical pain. The Mayday Fund does not lobby or retain individuals or organizations to lobby. The panel participants are listed below. To obtain a copy of the report please visit www.MaydayPainReport.org. This article is the pain of the mayday Fund.<br /><br />http://www.maydaypainreport.org/release.phpUnknownnoreply@blogger.com32tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-28077862493851096012009-09-12T16:35:00.011-05:002009-09-13T23:56:44.155-05:00Sometimes I feel like pulling my hair out<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi_QOWDUGmvGCQwaSJDODjM1eLv-EzoRRPfLthdLe11IpSOMPKmQL6Cfyj65oSUYsZ09VcL9VxoUmyexe5F-NAeXaZ6-pWmmvInmBOjmzswWuWpX53q2hq04VygfulOagctCm8nNL4x0NM/s1600-h/bigstockphoto_.jpg"><img style="MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 229px; FLOAT: left; HEIGHT: 320px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5380709906839353906" border="0" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi_QOWDUGmvGCQwaSJDODjM1eLv-EzoRRPfLthdLe11IpSOMPKmQL6Cfyj65oSUYsZ09VcL9VxoUmyexe5F-NAeXaZ6-pWmmvInmBOjmzswWuWpX53q2hq04VygfulOagctCm8nNL4x0NM/s320/bigstockphoto_.jpg" /></a><br />I will explain my title shortly, but first I would like to thank everyone for their comments. I had planned on giving up on my blog. I have been at this for almost 25 years, calling and writing congressman and senators, join other organizations. You name it I have done it. Of course like everyone else I am getting older, the pain is getting worse along with other problems, so after the post in February, I said to hell with it.<br /><br />Then the comments and e-mails started coming from everywhere, so it gave me the courage to start making entries again. I know it will be through tears at times and anger at others, I will try again. For that I have you to thank, so I will continue as long as I can.<br /><br />As for as the title, <b>Sometimes I feel like pulling my hair out </b>. We have now gone to 78,000,000 million people like you and I,<b> living in CHRONIC PAIN </b>. Are we any closer to getting help? HELL NO. If anything we are further away than ever. We all know the situation with the medical community. Most of them have opiodphobia which in itself is a mental illness.<br /><br />A couple of months ago my primary care DR. that helps me, looked at me and said, you don't look right. I replied that I didn't know what he was talking about. He said that my eyes had bags under them. I replied that I didn't get much sleep the night before. He then said, have you been drinking? I said drinking, I don't even drink. I reminded him that I told him that I didn't drink on my first visit to him. He said would you be willing to take a drug test. By this time I was getting mad and I said Dr. knock yourself out. Take all the tests you want to any time you want to, because you want find anything with the exception of what is supposed to be there. So he sent me down for the test and sure enough he found nothing. The next visit he apologized. But that is the way I live, from visit to visit and I am sure most of the rest of you do also. I don't know about the rest of you but I am so tired of living like that.<br /><br />Wouldn't it be nice if we got half the amount of good publicity as the drug dealers do bad. I don't know why the news media has to make everything about us so negative, but they have succeeded scaring most of the Dr's. in the nation to death. If that wasn't bad enough the average person feels the same way. I JUST WONDER IF THE THOUGHT EVER CROSSES THEIR MIND THAT THEY COULD BE THE NEXT PERSON TO BE IN CHRONIC PAIN. Even my own family has made statements about me getting addicted to opioids.<br />I was talking to my sister a couple of weeks ago and she is a registered nurse. She said what you need to do is get off of those old narcotics and starting some exercise and you will feel better. There was dead silence on the phone for a while. She asked me if I was still there. I know smoke must have been coming from my ears.<br />I said yes but I cannot believe that you would make a remark that STUPID. I said, how many times have I told you that I can't even get out of the bed most days without taking pain medicine. I cannot believe this country has been brain washed to be so cruel to poor people in unbearable pain but they do.<br /><br />Well I have to go. I am to angry to write any more.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com21tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-83270413713421540092009-02-16T00:32:00.008-06:002009-02-20T22:39:18.800-06:00My life: Unrelenting Pain and Fear<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhs8NQW1zF53JqQP1krxveD1iLV5edWaHQYTKhSWaPXBxwTP7l_vHFm8b3pYwicVjZh1nemvUy_A3hnQH8sDOlnxRPwPjHUzWJJnomLATc50jf1jfZO3IyT1cUEh7PVDWjVkM2NNyEj2NY/s1600-h/bigstockphoto_hospital_Series_335854.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 235px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhs8NQW1zF53JqQP1krxveD1iLV5edWaHQYTKhSWaPXBxwTP7l_vHFm8b3pYwicVjZh1nemvUy_A3hnQH8sDOlnxRPwPjHUzWJJnomLATc50jf1jfZO3IyT1cUEh7PVDWjVkM2NNyEj2NY/s320/bigstockphoto_hospital_Series_335854.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5305105013181455170" /></a><br />Everyone in chronic pain can relate to the part about "unrelenting Pain", no matter what is causing it. The same thing day in and day out. It doesn't stop for birthdays or any other day for that matter. Some of us are in pain as a result of a fall, a auto accident or some disease like fibrormyalagia. It really doesn't matter, its all pain. Its hard to believe that a country as advanced as the USA Can have 78 million people that live this way but its true. the Suicide rate is 4-5 times higher than other people and lets face it, there is probably not a single one of us that haven't thought of taking our lives at on time or the other. I certainly have. <br /><br />Every day I read about some new pain drug coming on the market to fight pain. I ask myself why, because you can't find a doctor to prescribe it to you. What is going on in this country right now with the way chronic pain people are treated is a damn disgrace. I have someone that is helping me now but as always its not enough but it does help. He is my primary care physician.<br /><br />FEAR the other word I talked about is something we all live with. Fear of what you may ask? Fear that if you have not found a pain doctor, that you never will find one. The other side of it is you have looked and looked and finally found someone to help you, but what would you do if something happened to the doctor you now have, or if he told you he didn't want to help you any more. I live in fear of my doctor saying he is going to stop helping me. I have no idea where I would turn. It took me a year of practically begging but then one day I asked my wife if she would go with me. My wife talked to him for quiet a while and that was the key. He agreed to help me. (That is a tip by the way). Another, tip is always go well dressed and have your spouse do the same. My wife always goes with me on every visit.<br /><br />I still live in fear and dread every time I have to call for a refill. Such is the life of the chronic pain personUnknownnoreply@blogger.com26tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-81912158175100709042008-12-23T23:51:00.007-06:002008-12-27T21:44:53.036-06:00The Stigma of the uneducated Medical Profession.<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWIOHZf3VsKZtb-gSD6sMfxncvNn6-kkaR0tvXSTlkeOwBSn1RBnxkfZiT66nzRWin0mxjtgWA3b0dvZhFjHEOsj8nNsqhCqnvPbTYSXZg33bSqgKXebRTqFF0zDMUVxfw2Qqp9G1Ukh4/s1600-h/bigstockphoto_Operation_Series_335854.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 320px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWIOHZf3VsKZtb-gSD6sMfxncvNn6-kkaR0tvXSTlkeOwBSn1RBnxkfZiT66nzRWin0mxjtgWA3b0dvZhFjHEOsj8nNsqhCqnvPbTYSXZg33bSqgKXebRTqFF0zDMUVxfw2Qqp9G1Ukh4/s320/bigstockphoto_Operation_Series_335854.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5284681697624071122" /></a><br />This post #3 of 3. For those of you who want to read it, Please drop down to post #1 and read up. I have lived for 26 years now with Chronic Pain in my lower back and nerve damage due to a new procedure and an inexperienced Surgeon. I am sure that some of you may be asking why in, the hell I am writing about an abdominal surgery.<br /><br />1. Opiods can in fact cause abdominal problems because one of the side effects of most of them is constipation which can lead to blockage in the small intestine. <br /><br />2. Because of the stigma associated with people in Chronic Pain, you can be mis-diagnosed by many idiot surgeons who think they are "little gods". Not all Surgeons are that way but many are. If you take any kind of pain medication for chronic pain, you are a drug addict. That's just the way it is and I DON'T HAVE ANY HOPE OF IT CHANGING ANY TIME SOON.<br /><br />2. next thing that will happen is you will be treated and talked to like a dog.<br /><br /><br />I still find it hard to believe that you actually pay someone to treat you like I was treated. I had planned to wait until the next day to go back to the hospital day, but it was a good thing that I didn't. I had a high fever and my kidneys were failing. They had to put me on an IV. for 3 days to get my kidneys functioning again. As said before 2 of the 3 doctors refused to operate on me because they said I was a DRUG ADDICT and that was what was causing my problem.<br />One of the doctors even yelled at me in front of about 10 nurses that I was nothing but a "damn drug addict". When she left 2 of the nurses were very angry and asked me if I wanted to speak to the Patient advocate in the hospital. When I told her what had happened she covered her face with her hands. That doctor regrets what she said, because she had to go before the vice-president of the hospital and apologize to me.<br /><br />The one Doctor who was so nice to me said that taking opiods had nothing to do with my problem. He did say since nothing showed up on the test he would have to go in and do exploratory surgery. He said he would have to pull every bit of the small intestine out and inspect it an it was a risky surgery. He told me the small intestine was approximately 23 feet long. I couldn't believe it.<br /><br />I agreed and the next morning I was in surgery. What he found surprised even him. A large ulcer just like the kind you have on your lip had some how gotten down into the intestine had grown for a while leaving a growth inside the intestine blocking it to smaller than a pencil. He took a photo of the section he cut out. I will forever be grateful for this one mans experience and compassion.<br /><br />It has been a painful 2 months on top of my chronic back pain but I have recovered from that.<br /><br />Now why did a man with debilating back pain write about this surgery.<br /><br />Because there is even more of a stigma against chronic pain people than even I ever dreamed after 26 years. Sooner or later you are going to find yourself in this situation. If you are on strong pain medication, you will be treated like dirt and I mean by the doctors. Don't hesitate to ask for a second opinion. Don't be afraid to ask to talk to the patient advocate. Every hospital has one and that is what they are paid to do. I hope this helps someone.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-78638068494786375542008-12-12T02:45:00.012-06:002008-12-16T01:33:01.865-06:004 trips to the Emergency room in one month<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhpp1L6yHr7Xn2FpGF1qbZNe7Pg2xhZnOtV75gMQFL4MrxhhR1ygfIVENeyfAvBRL33ViJruYnnW0TMDPTP-mE-On96FrWkLsNRgYbFbKp-EI_5Cg4d6WA4XhURfo_8AqzDkbvrsHRfgaQ/s1600-h/bigstockphoto_Operation_Series_335854.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 226px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhpp1L6yHr7Xn2FpGF1qbZNe7Pg2xhZnOtV75gMQFL4MrxhhR1ygfIVENeyfAvBRL33ViJruYnnW0TMDPTP-mE-On96FrWkLsNRgYbFbKp-EI_5Cg4d6WA4XhURfo_8AqzDkbvrsHRfgaQ/s320/bigstockphoto_Operation_Series_335854.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5279510961946420098" /></a><br /><br />POST # 2 OF 3.<br />I decided to break this down into 3 posts because to tell the whole story would be to long, and I couldn't sit here that long. Everything I am writing is true and happened to me just 6 weeks ago. In order to under to understand the whole story, please drop down and read post #1 first.<br /><br />One Sunday in September. I started getting sick at my stomach and as the day wore on it got worse. Finally I was so nauseous that I did what we all have done at some time in our life. I walked in the bathroom, stuck my finger in my mouth and started vomiting. I wasn't prepared for what happened next. The first couple of times it was the contents of my stomach. But after that I couldn't figure what was going on except I knew that I was very sick. Then it dawned on me, I was throwing up my own BODY WASTE OR BILE.<br /><br />My wife rushed me to the emergency room of the largest room in Pensacola, Florida where we live. We sat in the emergency room for 7 hours waiting for a bed to come available. Finally we got to see a Doctor in the emergency room. I was trying to drink all of the water that I could because I was becoming dehydrated fast. The Doctor said I had a blockage in my small intestine, so the started running tests. The best test they have for this is drinking a big jug of contrast material, and have a CT scan. I kept at he contrast in my stomach just long enough for them to get a couple of pictures before I threw that up also. After what seemed an eternity the doctor came back in and said that nothing showed up on the scan to indicate a blockage, that it had probably worked its self free. The Son-of-a-bitch said they needed the bed for other patients and discharged me. My wife and I could not believe our ears. By stomach was starting to swell and I was in a lot of pain. After a very heated exchange I signed the papers and left.<br /><br />All day the next day was a living hell for me. By this time You could place your hand on by abdomen and feel the intestines Turing and twisting in my stomach.<br /><br />That afternoon I was back at the emergency room for the same thing. This time I saw a different doctor and after seeing the shape I was in and reviewing my chart he said you need to be in the hospital, so he had me transferred. The next day they were doing more of the same type tests they had done in the emergency room and came up with the same conclusion. After staying in the hospital and taking tests for a week, they discharged me and told me to try it for a few days. The same damn identical thing happened. There were 3 specialists working with me. The chief of surgery was a very nice and compassionate man. He told me that since nothing showed up on the test he needed to go in and do exploratory surgery and take all of the small intestine out, which by the way is 23 feet long, and inspect every bit of it.<br /><br />The other 2 doctors thought they were little gods and were cruel as hell. By this time they had looked over my medical records and they had the answer, they thought.<br />Because of the narcotics I was taking (their words) It was putting my bowels to sleep. Bullshit I said, I don't have any problem going to the bath room I told them.<br /><br />I ran both of them out of my room after one of the called me a drug addict. The next day the nice doctor who was Chief of Surgery told me that if I wanted him to go in and do the exploratory surgery that he would. He said if I wanted to go home for a few days and think about I could. I agreed but I should have stayed in the hospital then and let him do it, because it almost cost me my life.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-65766554418182455692008-12-06T00:38:00.008-06:002008-12-12T02:44:45.914-06:00My recent month of hell in the hospital#1 of 3 Articles on this subject Start here and read up Please.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjR2GnF4Vrl2lyrajucHdx2BeJMv0-irbsHgNwrQ-B_0e7Lk91ZXdPexajXw1SMit69qrpM4yEQS6-6Bi3uyEytnSrr9H0JjEtzAXjbU706Ptd6qbef2ui3av_F-PglxnuIOCcgsaS9Q1A/s1600-h/bigstockphoto_Operation_Series_335854.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 214px; height: 320px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjR2GnF4Vrl2lyrajucHdx2BeJMv0-irbsHgNwrQ-B_0e7Lk91ZXdPexajXw1SMit69qrpM4yEQS6-6Bi3uyEytnSrr9H0JjEtzAXjbU706Ptd6qbef2ui3av_F-PglxnuIOCcgsaS9Q1A/s320/bigstockphoto_Operation_Series_335854.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5277644134267111474" /></a><br />As you can tell from my last entry it has been quiet a while since my last post and to be honest with you, I wasn't sure I ever would. I am doing this because what I have to say is important, especially to those of you who suffer from chronic pain as I do. I get so angry when I start writing about it, it is hard to keep going. but I promised myself that I would make this post if it took me a week.<br /><br />For those of you like myself who have suffered from chronic pain, especially any length of time, also suffer from depression. Of course this comes under the heading of MENTAL ILLNESS. TO THE UNEDUCATED, THIS IS IS A SCARY WORD. I knew the stigma that used to be attached to mental illness, but since my focus has been on the spine which is my problem, I had paid very little attention to mental illness in the last few years. I have a great phyciatrist that I have been<br />seeing for 15 years. I have panic attacks also even though I don't have any phobias. He has me on xanax and paxil. I see him every 3 months he writes my prescriptions and I leave his office. No big deal, Right. !!! WRONG!!!!!!<br /><br />Because of trying to deal and live with my spinal problems, I had never given much thought to mental illness and the digestive system. Some of the things that I have to say are going to be a little unpleasant to read but they are important because I just finished going through every bit of it to.<br /><br />In mid-September I started having severe burning in my lower abdomen and I noticed that it was starting to swell. Next came the worst nausea I have ever experienced. I finally became so sick I walked into the bathroom, got over the commode an stuck my finger in my mouth, thats all I had to do. I wasn't prepared for what happened next.<br /><br />While opiates are the answer to prayer for so many of us, there is one thing that people who take them like me should be keenly aware of and that is what they will do to your digestive system. Yes I am talking about constipation. I just finished a month of hell in the hospital and have a 14 inch scar down the center of my abdomen. As I was vomiting I wasn't ready for what I saw next. I was throwing up my own body waste or bile. I was in and out of the hospital 4 times in a period of 5 weeks. I was not prepared for what I had to go through in the hospital, but more than that I wasn't prepared for the way I was treated by the Doctors and some of the nurses.<br /><br />I will get into it more in my next post.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-71745449007094338302008-08-19T01:14:00.005-05:002008-08-19T02:59:56.592-05:00Living in hell-but you are still on earth!!<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhDpPKfrZSPsQunfZs3kFMG0ole0i-FUW7y7Z7wnPqGVkuYeN8uVcxdej6Pm9E13a1S2P3gtmDpYgkRUreUz79VY0b8SO2EhqXpEnAq5j45YO_p6fiiQBLjdhEL2Wq8kd6lvSFJ2XDgBBY/s1600-h/bigstockphoto_Skeletal_Back_1676270.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhDpPKfrZSPsQunfZs3kFMG0ole0i-FUW7y7Z7wnPqGVkuYeN8uVcxdej6Pm9E13a1S2P3gtmDpYgkRUreUz79VY0b8SO2EhqXpEnAq5j45YO_p6fiiQBLjdhEL2Wq8kd6lvSFJ2XDgBBY/s320/bigstockphoto_Skeletal_Back_1676270.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5236131743767481570" /></a><br />I am at the point now, when I start a post I usually go through a series of emotions. Who in the hell wants to read about PAIN? Sometimes when I try to write, I become angry when I look back at my life, I think back to the day of my accident. Sometimes I just sit and look a my computer screen. Finally I turn it off, lay my head down and cry. <strong>It is becoming increasing harder to write about pain when you are suffering so much.</strong> I don't know what drives me anymore.<br /><br />I don't seem to ever be satisfied with what I have written about Chronic Pain. Often I will see a story on T.V., but its always about the addict and those terrible narcotics. I watched a story on Fox news a couple of days ago. It was about school kids and and the majority of kids said they gained access to their parents prescription drugs. Something is wrong with this story. Where in the hell did their parents get so many opioid and opiate type drugs, that they could just leave them lying around in their medicine cabinets. <br /><br />When I hear unsubstantiated stories like this from the news media, I go into a rage.<br />They don't know or understand because for whatever reason this is the position of all of the news media. As for as that goes the general public have the same attitude.<br />If you take any of the powerful drugs, you are a drug addict. That is simply not true. Unfortunately, it has to strike close to home or to the person themselves before they really understand what a pain epidemic we have in this country. It takes only a split second to go from a happy active person to a vegatible that relies on this powerful pain medication to sustain life.<br /><br />There is not a day of my life that I don't feel like taking my 40 Cal. automatic pistol that is loaded with hollow point rounds and sticking it in my mouth. The only thing that has stopped me is my faith in Christ, the love of my family and last I really don't want to die. Everyone has a breaking where they can't stand it any more. The suicide rate in this country is 5 times higher for people in chronic pain versus people who are not. So Please, to all of the politicians, DEA, and doctors out there. There are over 75 million of us are suffering this agonizing pain 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. All we want is a life, not to sit around getting adicted to drugs. We are citizens of this great country also and should be afforded the same right to life in peace as everyone else.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-68696362980225857572008-07-27T00:10:00.010-05:002008-07-29T02:40:09.992-05:00More on the abuse of the Spinal Cord and Epidurals.<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZf-dY7dPSbOA5gZraH6SHr_OYDtzuC4cbFBEnVLiquMlf569t1V9C2eP0G2QkqKhInfWw2CJzzyznkGEtF3KV5GeEOM8bmpSNg4-5xkGZ4NnOtGuy9GozbI1mUK2JQdOYDcgSCw34R2c/s1600-h/SASpaceDraw%5B1%5D.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZf-dY7dPSbOA5gZraH6SHr_OYDtzuC4cbFBEnVLiquMlf569t1V9C2eP0G2QkqKhInfWw2CJzzyznkGEtF3KV5GeEOM8bmpSNg4-5xkGZ4NnOtGuy9GozbI1mUK2JQdOYDcgSCw34R2c/s320/SASpaceDraw%5B1%5D.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5227566097559871858" /></a><br />I would like to go a little further on procedures like the Epidural shot and the potential dangers that could come from it. I personally will never have another Epidural shot or test involving a needle inserted into my spine. While I am not a Doctor, my years of procedures and surgeries, sitting up late at night has given me a great deal of knowledge on pain, because I live with it day and night. One thing I have learned the hard way is just because the FDA approves something, does not mean it will help you with your problems. They are a panel of 5 Doctors and they are under a lot of pressure from congress, sometimes just one congressman to approve whatever product or medicine is involved. For example if the company that is going to be making the product falls in a certain congressional district this is where the lobbying kicks in. <br /><br />You have heard me talk about Dr. Charles V. Burton, Neurosurgeon. I really hope you go this article on his site and read it in its entirety. All surgeons would do well to read his information.<br /><br />"This illustration (from Noback CR: The Human Nervous System, McGraw-Hill, Inc., 1967) illustrates the human subarachnoid space surrounding the brain and spinal cord. <strong>60% of spinal fluid is produced within the brain and 40% from the spinal subarachnoid space. It flows, as shown, and is absorbed by the venous arachnoid granulations. This spinal fluid is produced at the rate of 0.35cc/min, or 500-750cc/day. Turnover rate is 3-5 times/day</strong>. A normal adult has a ventricular volume of about 30cc and about 100+cc in the surrounding subarachnoid space. The subarachnoid space serves to be a hydraulic cushion for the floating brain, a source of nutrition as well neurotransmitters. This space is the most fragile and sensitive environment in the body. <br /> <br /><br />When the subarachnoid space is subject to insult or inflammatory change damage and scarring occur. One of the primary difficulties in addressing the subject of neuropathologic change, particularly that of adhesive arachnoiditis is the great amount of confusion regarding nomenclature. Adhesive arachnoiditis is an advanced form of arachnoiditis and is most often confused with the latter. Some of the other terms by adhesive arachnoiditis has been referred to have been: <br /><br />Serosa Circumscripta Spinalis<br />Intraspinal Granulomatosis<br />Obliterative Arachnoiditis<br />Chronic Arachnoiditis<br />Spinal Meningitis<br />Chronic Spinal Meningitis<br />Chemical Meningitis<br />Sterile Meningitis<br />Granulomatous Meningitis<br /><br /><br /> <br />Once one has gotten beyond the "Tower of Babel" part of the semantic issues it is important to look closer at the normal anatomy of the lumbar spinal column, the dural membranes, and the subarachnoid space. In the image, to the left, the nerve rootlets of the cauda equina, which are in motor and sensory pairs, are shown as single nerves for simplification. If a lumbar puncture were to be performed the needle would simply push the nerve roots, floating in cerebrospinal fluid, out of the way. If a similar procedure were attempted in a patient with Class III Adhesive Arachnoiditis, where the nerve roots were fixed to each other and to the dura mater, the needle could easily injure or sever the nerves." <br /> <br />Please go to <a href="http://www.burtonreport.com/InfSpine/AdhesArachAnatomy.htm">http://www.burtonreport.com/InfSpine/AdhesArachAnatomy.htm</a>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-21533340267983314572008-07-12T01:29:00.012-05:002008-07-13T02:40:17.198-05:00Information on the Epidural shot<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgTkQ49FXkK1EssA53ZrVbgXPE7DKdqgUvZbaO7Kh5EnP7O6dIb38baJv2ahq8DH89qTJjX7B45tgWbWTa2126CqWzCFwXLUoq0llaXbI56ib9LdHyRxuWibsDXmtmpNA8wEirVvlYrD04/s1600-h/Spinal_Canalcolored200GIF%5B1%5D.gif"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5222383871580901090" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; CURSOR: hand" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgTkQ49FXkK1EssA53ZrVbgXPE7DKdqgUvZbaO7Kh5EnP7O6dIb38baJv2ahq8DH89qTJjX7B45tgWbWTa2126CqWzCFwXLUoq0llaXbI56ib9LdHyRxuWibsDXmtmpNA8wEirVvlYrD04/s320/Spinal_Canalcolored200GIF%5B1%5D.gif" border="0" /></a> So just what is an Epidural shot. There is a group of Doctors who have carved out a nice "little niche" for themselves called Pain Management Specialists. What they do primarily, is inject steroids and other pain medicine into the epidural which is the outer layer of the spinal cord depicted in green in the photo to the left. Most of them like to do a series of 3 shots to the tune of about $2,000-$2,500 dollars. If this procedure gives any relief at all, it is for about 2 weeks. Most of these doctors are anesthesiologists and while a few of them will work with you with powerful pain medications, the majority send you back to your primary care physician for him to prescribe them to you. I know because I have been through it. The ones that only want to do the epidural shots are called "procedure mills".<br /><br />They use the excuse that you might become addicted. First of all, they don't even have their terminology right. The correct word is "chemical dependency" which is a normal occurrence with opiates. If someone wants to continue taking these drugs after they no longer need them, or just try to get them for the so-called high, then they are addicts. Surveys have indicated that only 1% to 3% of chronic pain patients ever get addicted. To get off of these drugs, all you do is slowly reduce your dosage until you are off of them. I have done it 15 to 20 times myself. It is a hell of a lot easier to get off of opiates than getting off of nicotine. I can also say that from personal experience.<br /><br />The epidural marked in green, looking down on a disc showing the spinal cord in the center where the blue dot is and the green is the epidural or the outer wall of the spinal cord. The other clusters are nerves that come out of the spinal cord and go to places all over your body. You will understand better if you read what Dr Burton has to say. Then go to his website to read the entire article. If you want to learn now is the time, especially if you have back problems like I do.<br />According to him the spinal cord is the most fragile, yet the most abused part of the human body.<br /><p><a href="http://www.burtonreport.com/InfSpine/EpiduralSteroidAnatomy.htm">http://www.burtonreport.com/InfSpine/EpiduralSteroidAnatomy.htm</a> with the permission Of Dr. Charles V. Burton, a board certified neurosurgeon, who is the top spine surgeon in the USA. If you have any kind of spinal problems you need to go to his site, <a href="http://www.burtonreport.com/">http://www.burtonreport.com/</a> .<br /></p>"The epidural space is an anatomic structure that surrounds the dura mater within the spinal canal and extends to the brain itself. In some areas it is a real space and in others only a potential space. The space itself consists of fat and blood vessels. Its importance is based on the fact that many physicians have selected this site as a depository for injected medications as a treatment for low back pain.<br /><br />The illustration to the left represents a post-mortem axial section of a normal lumbar spinal canal. The vertebral body is shown at the top and the lamina of the vertebrae at the bottom. The epidural space surrounds the dural membrane. Only the posterior portion of the epidural space is outlined in green as this is the area of clinical interest.<br /><br />The blue dot has been inserted intracathecally, that is, within the subarachnoid space. The subarachnoid space is one of the most fragile, delicate and sensitive areas of the human body. This space contains the brain, spinal cord and nerve roots of the cauda equina. It is filled with cerebro-spinal fluid which acts to support and nourish the nervous system. The subarachnoid space is very sensitive to insult while the epidural space is very resistant to insult. Unfortunately they are separated by only a thin membrane, the dura mater lined by an even thinner membrane, the arachnoid membrane. <br /><br />In this diagram the site of the epidural space is highlighted with a green dot (which lies on the dura). In this representation the dura and the underlying arachnoid membrane are both shown. Note that the epidural space is separated from the subarachnoid space by only these thin membranes. When a needle is used to deposit substances, such as steroids, in the epidural space the procedurist (physician performing the injection) has the responsibility of accurately placing the material in the epidural space because only a slight inaccuracy permits the steroid entry into the subarachnoid space thus introducing the risk of <a href="http://www.burtonreport.com/InfSpine/AdhesArachHomePage.htm">adhesive arachnoiditis</a> ".<br /><br />Go to Dr. Burtons website to see the rest of his article.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-9195249639888756312008-06-25T00:45:00.007-05:002008-06-25T03:11:37.088-05:00Politics and Pain<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhoVNXEkrmVI57JBDX7x1B5NvKND3e3gnveiGUER80aAQ0_J3pY7VSyTPrzlrvlkJ6Z0uY8hnjtlclSAZtXBpJPo2slrezcL32OvImUnRBydrKbc8hBRwhMNMOHBjaCktF7sj05CsIz1Sk/s1600-h/bigstockphoto_I_M_With_Stupid_1450316.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5215702250175820466" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; CURSOR: hand" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhoVNXEkrmVI57JBDX7x1B5NvKND3e3gnveiGUER80aAQ0_J3pY7VSyTPrzlrvlkJ6Z0uY8hnjtlclSAZtXBpJPo2slrezcL32OvImUnRBydrKbc8hBRwhMNMOHBjaCktF7sj05CsIz1Sk/s320/bigstockphoto_I_M_With_Stupid_1450316.jpg" border="0" /></a><br /><div>It has been a while since I posted, so I am going to start tonight, even though I am in so much pain I can hardly sit in my computer chair. My body is telling me to give up, that I am doing no good, then I will get a nice comment or e-mail and it then it gives me the courage to go on. There so many people just like me, either lying in bed with out the strength or courage to get up, while others are sitting in pain and and loneliness, staring at life passing them by, remembering plans and dreams they had for life or retirement. We aren't talking about a few thousand people, we are talking about 75 million people.</div><div>It is absolutely insane, what is going on in this and other Countries regarding Chronic Pain. In our country, the source for it is in the little photo to the left. They could also come together as it is non-partisan and do something to correct it.</div><div>Its that time again and I'm sure like me, you are tired of all of the phony promises. I don't know where they have been for the last 4 years, but it sure as "hell" hasn't been working for solutions for people living this ghastly life of Chronic pain. I can only speak for myself, but when it comes to trying to describe Chronic pain, I have no words to describe it to the point that I feel I have gotten my point across. When you have 75 million people suffering like I am, you have an epidemic on your hands. Even many of our wonderful military men and women who come home after being blown to hell by IED's or other ways are having the same problems, getting the powerful medication that it takes to knock out their pain. </div><div> </div><div>This medicine is not illegal folks. It was approved by the FDA just for this purpose, yet all you hear is addiction, addiction. There no studies that I know of that shows a high level of addiction with people who live in chronic pain. I have researched this mess for to long. Most studies I have seen, have been around 2 to 3%, and for 75 million people that is nothing. Most people in chronic pain who are lucky enough to get someone to help them, hate taking the damn stuff because of the side effects. We are not lucking for a high, we are looking for a life. Most of the time we not only have to suffer from the pain, but we suffer the humiliation by a Dr. yelling at you about getting addicted. Most of them don't have enough education on it to know the correct words to use.</div><div> </div><div>Its Chemical Dependency Doctor!!!! To be fair, all Doctors are not this way. We have many wonderful physicians who are educated and compassionate. They are just caught between a "rock and a hard place" with the justice dept. The Senators and Congressmen could put a stop to this insanity by putting control of the medical profession back where it is supposed to be, with the state medical boards. Then the DEA could get back to the job of stopping this massive amount of illegal drugs coming across the Mexican border. Yes there is an illegal drug problem in this country and I am all for going after them, but please not the doctors, and pain patients who can hardly make it through the day.</div><div> </div><div>These politicians want your vote, so please do what I have done and continue to do. Write them, Call their offices. Its obvious from polling data that this country is fed up with politicians who forget who they represent. People are angry and their patience has grown thin, so no matter what state you live in, please jump in let them know that pain is a human issue, not a partisan issue.</div>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-55309835252584720742008-05-21T00:22:00.009-05:002008-05-21T01:05:55.713-05:00Benefits versus risks of taking Opioids<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgwCeFyGifOMmYmk0won_ZRXp-IH9qHKFyJphm6jAehoVdl9Y_mvrb0ydd7xfyrYtNmLq4zZDvgiRRA8sk5zDk7P0E2mw7Wu31t8SglEB4je4y4IzxOI3BP3_eEwQomkvjwIMGFWuvWNSA/s1600-h/medical+research.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5202707656441405122" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; CURSOR: hand" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgwCeFyGifOMmYmk0won_ZRXp-IH9qHKFyJphm6jAehoVdl9Y_mvrb0ydd7xfyrYtNmLq4zZDvgiRRA8sk5zDk7P0E2mw7Wu31t8SglEB4je4y4IzxOI3BP3_eEwQomkvjwIMGFWuvWNSA/s320/medical+research.jpg" border="0" /></a> I wish every Doctor and the DEA would read articles like the one below. I was reading a news story last night about a DEA agent that was injured while on a raid. Now he is on a morphine pump and he talked about the difficulty in trying to get a doctor to treat him. We are all at risk here folks. It can happen to anyone. That's why it is so necessary for there to be more education about opioids and why they will stop severe pain when nothing else will. There is really a lot of research going on in this area. I just hope it doesn't fall on deaf ears.<br /><div></div><br /><div>As controversy swirls about proper clinical use of opioids and other potent pain medications, research reported at the American Pain Society annual meeting shows that, contrary to widespread beliefs, less than 3 percent of patients with no history of drug abuse who are prescribed opioids for chronic pain will show signs of possible drug abuse or dependence. In his plenary session address, Srinivasa Raja, MD, professor of anesthesiology, Johns Hopkins University Medical School, urged clinicians and policy makers not to allow the small percentage of abused pain prescriptions to prevent legitimate pain patients from getting the care they need. </div><br /><div></div><br /><div>"Physicians today face a dilemma in trying to balance the needs of their patients with demands from society for better control of opioid medications. We also are dealing with unfounded accusations in the media that increased prescribing of opioids for severe chronic pain is responsible in large part for reported upswings in the abuse of pain medications," said Raja. "We do need stronger evidence about which patients will benefit most from these medications to help make better prescribing decisions," he added. "But for most chronic pain patients, drugs are not the sole solution. More and more studies are showing that multi-faceted treatment involving physical and cognitive-behavioral therapies and appropriate interventional strategies lead to the most favorable outcomes." According to Raja, the problem of prescription drug abuse can best be attacked and hopefully solved through collaborations involving care givers, regulatory and law enforcement agencies and the pharmaceutical industry. </div><br /><div></div><br /><div>"First, I believe physicians should be diligent is communicating with their patients about the benefits and risks of opioids and also screen them for drug-seeking behavior and other warning signs of potential abuse," said Raja. "Also, we must monitor patients carefully to determine when doses can be lowered over time as they improve their pain control and overall functioning." The message for law enforcement and federal and state regulatory agencies, first and foremost, is to strive for state-to-state consistency in regulating controlled substances and crack down on illegal internet pharmacies and prescription thefts and forgeries. "Progress is being made as there is increased awareness of the source of prescription opioids being diverted into the illicit market," said Raja, "and states and municipalities are stepping up their teen drug awareness education programs." </div><br /><div></div><br /><div>For pharmaceutical manufacturers, Raja said the key challenge is to match clinical needs for less addicting pain medication with drug development priorities. "There are novel analgesic formulations in various stages of development that we hope can be prioritized and expedited for clinical use," he said. Raja noted that fifty years ago, a commentary published in the Journal of the American Medical Association recommended that opioids should be avoided in treating cancer pain because of possible addiction, and 20 years ago it was believed infants didn't feel pain and shouldn't receive anesthesia. "We abandoned such faulty beliefs as scientific evidence proved otherwise," he said. "Now I hope history repeats itself in changing professional and public attitudes as we now know opioids are effective for treating chronic non-cancer pain and that very few legitimate pain patients abuse their medications. </div><br /><div></div><br /><div>Hopefully, the evidence will foster a middle-ground approach that protects the rights of patients and clinicians while upholding society's right to control medication abuse and diversion." </div><br /><div></div><br /><div><a href="http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/107028.php">http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/107028.php</a></div>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-38187978290298921842008-05-17T23:40:00.000-05:002008-05-17T23:40:19.415-05:00Pink Pearl Girl's Migraine World: Pain Medication Does Not Lead to High Risk of Addiction<a href="http://pinkpurlgurl.blogspot.com/2008/05/pain-medication-does-not-lead-to-high.html">Pink Pearl Girl's Migraine World: Pain Medication Does Not Lead to High Risk of Addiction</a>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-68791973042895487022008-05-08T01:38:00.010-05:002008-05-08T02:18:45.290-05:00Opioid use and sexual dysnfunction<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgQfLu9cl-uq_h7RGLf6mbLOrPkj94e3ZdRmv2q4Mzl_f7DLNrD5m-Jh6RTB9Ug2Zko1H8g7zjTvHzpG8-gYGHQHkmxKN3Qt_WrnQrNaR0zA1hbhU0OdjJPlYQ5DPhxUothVyxS5k7IShg/s1600-h/doctorwithsyringe.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5197900903440926434" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; CURSOR: hand" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgQfLu9cl-uq_h7RGLf6mbLOrPkj94e3ZdRmv2q4Mzl_f7DLNrD5m-Jh6RTB9Ug2Zko1H8g7zjTvHzpG8-gYGHQHkmxKN3Qt_WrnQrNaR0zA1hbhU0OdjJPlYQ5DPhxUothVyxS5k7IShg/s320/doctorwithsyringe.jpg" border="0" /></a>I Came across this article that some of you may be interested in. I'll have to say that if you are in the kind of pain that I'm in, sex is the least of your worries. It does go to show you the amount of research that is going on but until the public, the medical profession and the Justice Department takes a different attitude about the millions of people that are suffering, and educate themselves on the use of opioids, I can't see where the great research being done is going to help. It is so sad that millions of people like me have to suffer so much because of the ego and stupidity of a few. It is happening though, every single day.<br /><br /><div>"Unfortunately, chronic pain and sexual problems often go together. Yet, many patients suffer in silence, healthcare providers rarely ask about patients’ sexual concerns, and guidance literature on the subject is relatively scarce. Ironically, the long-acting opioid medications prescribed to relieve patients’ pains often are the source of sexual dysfunction.<br /></div><br /><br /><div>In an evidence-based commentary article for Pain Treatment Topics – “Opioid-Induced Sexual Dysfunction: Causes, Diagnosis, & Treatment” – Stephen Colameco, MD, MEd, discusses the problem and how healthcare providers can help their patients.<br />Considerable evidence suggests that long-acting opioids used on a daily basis for more than a month can reduce hormonal function in both men and women. Besides sexual dysfunction, symptoms can include weight gain, fatigue, depression, osteoporosis, and irregular menstrual cycles.<br /></div><br /><br /><div>These problems can be treated, if they are properly diagnosed, but different approaches are needed in males and females. Colameco provides a number of recommendations:<br />-- Prior to the initiation of therapy, prescribers should inform patients that hormonal disturbances are common with higher dose, long-term opioid treatment.<br />-- After treatment is started, patients should be routinely evaluated for signs and symptoms of hormone deficiency, including sexual dysfunction.<br />-- When hormonal deficiency is suspected, appropriate laboratory testing should be ordered.<br />-- An important treatment in men often is testosterone supplementation. Topical, buccal, or transdermal formulations are preferred over intramuscular injections.<br />-- In women, testosterone treatment is controversial and supplementation with DHEA/DHEAS may be preferred due to its ability to raise hormone levels without significant side effects. Alternatively, rotation from one opioid medication to another may be effective.<br /></div><br /><br /><div>In sum, opioid treatment is intended to reduce patients’ pain, and to improve physical and social functioning. Opioid-induced hormonal deficiencies and associated sexual dysfunctions are common and often overlooked consequences of opioid therapy. If left untreated, they may negate the potential benefits of this analgesic. It is hoped that through a better understanding of these problems opioid therapy can be more effectively used in the treatment of chronic pain.<br />The complete article (8 pages) is available for free access at:<a href="http://pain-topics.org/clinical_concepts/comments.php#Colameco">http://pain-topics.org/clinical_concepts/comments.php#Colameco</a> ". </div>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-76924887618030177432008-04-19T01:06:00.009-05:002008-04-19T02:06:26.536-05:00Fibromyalgia-Chronic Pain and how it effects the brain<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhcFB9sUTBYlZ0TrZWrgWEDFk4jGKyv0WBEPEI72KkHD49vpYIa1bfL-TpF4bmClTKE9mQjP7oV2nOk0e7uilfQ7h63AU-hlE6BuPP2w7fvrQhkQf3mlgwWJLZ_9YqeXPuyUvCNxA017j8/s1600-h/business-woman-pain.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5190847343442816690" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; CURSOR: hand" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhcFB9sUTBYlZ0TrZWrgWEDFk4jGKyv0WBEPEI72KkHD49vpYIa1bfL-TpF4bmClTKE9mQjP7oV2nOk0e7uilfQ7h63AU-hlE6BuPP2w7fvrQhkQf3mlgwWJLZ_9YqeXPuyUvCNxA017j8/s320/business-woman-pain.jpg" border="0" /></a>Even though My chronic pain does not come from fibromyalgia, there are millions of people suffering from it, and my heart goes out to them. It is hard to believe that some doctors still doubt its existence, but that is ignorance on their part of as for as I am concerned. There are to many great researchers that have come forward with evidence of the debilitating and deadly disease, to have anything but compassion for those people who suffer from it. I have a sister-in-law who suffers from it. I have watched her go from a vibrant young woman who ran several miles every day with a set of weights in each hand, to an over weight person who rarely gets out of bed anymore. We correspond by e-mail and she can relate to me and my condition better than my wife, because like me, her life is one constant nightmare of pain.<br /><div></div><br /><div>"Researchers at the University of Michigan Health System have found a key linkage between pain and a specific brain molecule, a discovery that lends new insight into fibromyalgia, an often-baffling chronic pain condition. In patients with fibromyalgia, researchers found, pain decreased when levels of the brain molecule called glutamate went down. The results of this study, which appears in the journal Arthritis and Rheumatism, could be useful to researchers looking for new drugs that treat fibromyalgia, the authors say. "If these findings are replicated, investigators performing clinical treatment trials in fibromyalgia could potentially use glutamate as a 'surrogate' marker of disease response," says lead author Richard E. Harris, Ph.D., research assistant professor in the Division of Rheumatology at the U-M Medical School's Department of Internal Medicine and a researcher at the U-M Chronic Pain and Fatigue Research Center. </div><br /><div>The molecule glutamate is a neurotransmitter, which means it conveys information between neurons in the nervous system. When glutamate is released from one neuron, it diffuses across the space between cells, and then binds to receptors on the next neuron in line and causes the cell to become excited, or to be more active. This molecule was suspected to play a role in fibromyalgia because previous studies had shown that some brain regions in fibromyalgia patients appear to be highly excited. One such region is the insula. In functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies, researchers at U-M had previously shown that the insula displays augmented activity in fibromyalgia, which means neurons in these patients are more active in this part of the brain. </div><br /><div>The U-M team hypothesized, Harris notes, that more activity among these neurons might be related to the level of glutamate in this region. To gauge the linkage between pain and glutamate, the researchers used a non-invasive brain imaging techinique called proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (H-MRS). H-MRS was performed once before and once following a four-week course of acupuncture or "sham" acupuncture. Researchers used either acupuncture or sham acupuncture to reduce pain symptoms. The sham procedure involved using a sharp device to prick the skin in order to mimic real acupuncture sensations. </div><br /><div>Following the four weeks of treatment, both clinical and experimental pain reported were reduced significantly. More importantly the reduction in both pain outcomes was linked with reductions in glutamate levels in the insula: patients with greater reductions in pain showed greater reductions in glutamate. This suggests that glutamate may play a role in this disease and that it could potentially be used as a biomarker of disease severity. Because of the small number of participants in this study, further research should be conducted to verify the role of glutamate in fibromyalgia, Harris says. "</div><br /><div></div><br /><div>Everything in quotes is research information from the University of Michigan.</div><br /><div></div><br /><div><a href="http://www.med.umich.edu/painresearch/patients/fibromyalgia.htm">http://www.med.umich.edu/painresearch/patients/fibromyalgia.htm</a></div>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-11584837084357842008-03-25T00:11:00.008-05:002008-03-26T01:17:47.400-05:00Not in America<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgzg7w7Xda-mkuS0HK5xcwtJbuIwFpt50U3YMe7BrLczKflNmtgahHHkqYH5TPs2ndZVNA8w3HEw0BGmxHfHHVnRWN5QqoHebjQG3UJPawPExkiFOctI0d1KFIypMsTli1S1xrHSUpXyK4/s1600-h/bigstockphoto_Doctor_206184.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5181553730877305554" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; CURSOR: hand" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgzg7w7Xda-mkuS0HK5xcwtJbuIwFpt50U3YMe7BrLczKflNmtgahHHkqYH5TPs2ndZVNA8w3HEw0BGmxHfHHVnRWN5QqoHebjQG3UJPawPExkiFOctI0d1KFIypMsTli1S1xrHSUpXyK4/s320/bigstockphoto_Doctor_206184.jpg" border="0" /></a>It has been a while since I have posted anything. Lately I have just opened it up and looked at all of the posts I have made night after night and then just close the blog again. Frankly I am tired of being in pain, tired of sitting up until 4:00P.M. in the morning because I am in to much pain to sleep. You will have to forgive me tonight because I certainly don't feel like writing about pain. I keep asking myself over and over, how could this be happening in this country, a country that so many men and women have fought and died for to protect our freedoms.<br /><br />I myself am a veteran of one of those wars. There have been instances in war where several men and aircraft have been sacrificed just to save one life. Why? Because that is America. That is the country I love and was willing to die for. So why do so many people have to suffer like I do. We have large medical facilities and every day it seems like more new research is discovering some new disease, medication or a better way to take the ones that have been proven to work.<br />Practically any morning you can turn on the news and find hundreds of volunteers out searching for a lost child, or 2-3 fire rescue engines trying to rescue a puppy. Why do we do this? Because we are a compassionate people. That is the America I know and love.<br /><br />America has a dirty little secret that most people don't understand and that includes the medical profession for the most part. The ones who do, don't want any part of taking care of people like me because we are to much trouble, or to much regulatory scurnity to bother with it. I always wandered, how can a doctor let someone leave his office, take his money, yet do nothing to help that person. The most delicate part of the human body, the central nervous system, is also the most abused part of the body. Once you have some type of disease, or have an injury that breaches the CNS you are in a for a lifetime of living hell. My own injury was caused by a orthopaedic surgeon using a new procedure, that he had, one days training on.<br /><br /><br />Chronic Pain has stolen my live for the last 25 years. Not only do I have to live that way but I have to live the humilation of trying to find a Doctor to help me. All over America people just like me by the millions are lying in pain or perhaps sitting up like me because they are in to much pain to sleep. It doesn't have to be that way for the 70 million plus people who live the nightmare of pain that just want go away, that stays with you night and day. No it doesn't have to be that way at all.<br /><br />You see the drugs that will stop that kind of pain, are the same ones sought after by drug addicts. I know there is a drug problem in this country. Drug abuse goes back to the early Roman Empire. I as a person who now lives in Chronic Pain simply cannot relate to anyone who would want to take these powerful drugs just for fun. I know one thing. With almost 1/4 of the population living like this and several thousand killing themselves ever year, because it just becomes to painful to live, it is time for the politicians to get involved and make some legislation clear enough that people who are dying, get the treatment they need and at the same time not tie the hands of the DEA from getting the real drug abusers. I don't blame the DEA. I blame the Congress and Senate, first of all for not taking it seriously as a problem, and not writeing clear and concise laws so the law enforcement community and the medical community know will know what to do. Wake up Washington, D.C. This is America not some third world country. We believe in saving lives here, not taking them.<br /><br /><br /><br />I wander if they have ever given a thought to the fact that anyone, even them could go from being perfectly healthy to a vegtable like me in the blink of an eye. I know because that is the way it happened to me.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-57735872993586685422008-02-17T00:07:00.009-06:002008-02-17T14:28:21.437-06:00Genocide in America<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDpha2rsZ1G6NKTGUXJBxkDFsixLsCPgIfHAYehvlPq-SdYqu8RF9F6fOuia3ji69DegUDUy6o3v7A4NHrYAEejWywa-ZLui1f7Nc_w0otLO0Dw-5oPFe2-bNGRpwoax3iQVwH5uWgPeg/s1600-h/swat+team.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5167847146874017506" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; CURSOR: hand" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDpha2rsZ1G6NKTGUXJBxkDFsixLsCPgIfHAYehvlPq-SdYqu8RF9F6fOuia3ji69DegUDUy6o3v7A4NHrYAEejWywa-ZLui1f7Nc_w0otLO0Dw-5oPFe2-bNGRpwoax3iQVwH5uWgPeg/s320/swat+team.jpg" border="0" /></a> I am sure after a title like that you are probably asking yourself, what in the hell is he talking about? I love this Country. I am a Viet Nam Veteran. I have never taken the freedoms we have in America for granted, but there are things going on that you almost never here about in the News Media. We have always had our share of things in the past, as a compassionate people, we are not proud of. Usually it is after the fact. Example: The internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, the so-called Insane asylums and things done to these poor people in the name of medicine in the 1940s-1960s. I once had the disgusting opportunity to tour one. Of course, who can forget the movie, "One flew over the Coo-Coo's nest". Actually, it wasn't far off the mark.<br /><br />I'm sure you are saying O.K., so what has all of this got to do with genocide in present day America. If you knew what I know then you would understand when I say that we are in danger of becoming a "police state" and even now a certain group of people are already having their civil rights trampled on, profiled like comman criminals, accused of being drug addicts, having compassionate doctors raided, jailed and accused of running "pill mills", when in fact all they are guilty of in most cases, are keeping people like me alive.<br /><br />There is a disease in this country right now that goes virtually ignored, untreated and stigmatized. That disease is Intractable Chronic Pain. I know, the usual reaction is hell, pain is not a disease. A little pain never killed anyone, besides I have been in pain before. If you are one of those people who feels that way, then my best friend, "Jesus Christ" said it best in the Book of Proverbs. "My People Perish for lack of knowledge".<br /><br /><br />I would say you are uneducated to what is going on at this very minute in this country and so would 72.5 Million other people who are in pain, with 30 million of those just like me, living in severe intractable chronic pain. I have another "news flash" for you. You could become like me in the blink of an eye. Doomed to a life of agony and unbearable pain for the rest of your life.<br /><br />Once you breach the central nervous system, (spinal cord) in any way my friend, You are in for a life time of agony. It could be an auto accident, motorcycle, a simple fall, playing sports or in my case the results of a surgical procedure gone bad.<br /><br />If you really want to know some of the things that are happening right now, click on this link <a href="http://painreliefnetwork.org/index.html">http://painreliefnetwork.org/index.html</a> .<br /><br />I am dieing myself, from 25 years of unrelenting pain, 24 hrs a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year. You get very little sleep and when you do fall asleep from sheer exhaustion, the pain will wake you up in an hour or two. As I write this blog it is 2:30 A.M. and I will probably go to sleep at 4:00-5:00 in the morning. I do this night after night and usually stop when the pain gets so bad I can no longer concentrate.<br /><br /><br />While it is true that the death certificate will never say that me or anyone in my situtation died of chronic pain, what usually happens is an organ failure, like a heart attack, stroke, etc. In the last 6 months, my blood pressure has gone from being perfect to extremely high. My doctor said it was from the stress of my body fighting pain. Thousands of people every year simply can fight no longer and take their own lives. My question is what is a person supposed to do when "they don't want to die", but they are in "to much pain to live" ?<br /><br /><br />So who is to blame for this "silent epidemic" as it is called? Truthfully their is plenty of blame to go around. There is a drug addiction problem in this country from people, most are not in pain, but usually take a number of different drugs at one time to get high, lack of education for not just the general public but doctors and the DEA also. For the present time in history, The GAO (govermental accounting office) issued a report that was highly critical of the DEA and their efforts to stem the flow of illegal narcotics. Then the Bush/Ashcroft/Gonzaliz so called "War on Drug dealers" which has turned out to be a "war on doctors and pain patients"<br /><br /><br />Of course the Senators and Congressmen who head up these powerful committees like nothing better than to get some cabinet head before them and chew their ass out to look good for the cameras. At the time Asa Hutchison was appointed DEA Czar and under pressure from Congress, started with a big media campaign, deliberately useing a new drug called Oxycontin that was and still is a drug approved by the FDA for the treatment of cancer and severe intractable chronic pain. So now instead of going after the bad guys, the drug smugglers, the short answer is they went after the soft targets. The poor chronic pain patient like myself who has no desire to take anything to get high. Instead we are the targets, and all we want is something to give us a few hours away from the painful, miserable, lonely existance we live. Something about this picture is terribly wrong. Its alright to let someone die just as long as you keep them from getting addicted.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-40147749782690953902008-01-16T01:45:00.000-06:002008-01-16T02:20:49.996-06:00The Toxic dump of the human body<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj2qcOa2BCNJa_41yibxqhKr0FAROk_6S5qtBJCcHrzaj-BInZbLR3ktsZBC2w-zr6jIePol9wFqR2oJF9BAgEzIhPhHhY7a0-HUHcOW0Q8stkpcYgfckVam6XEFAOilFGwT-21FDYyUj0/s1600-h/LSAATxt3.gif"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5155985769747028562" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; CURSOR: hand" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj2qcOa2BCNJa_41yibxqhKr0FAROk_6S5qtBJCcHrzaj-BInZbLR3ktsZBC2w-zr6jIePol9wFqR2oJF9BAgEzIhPhHhY7a0-HUHcOW0Q8stkpcYgfckVam6XEFAOilFGwT-21FDYyUj0/s320/LSAATxt3.gif" border="0" /></a><br /><div>I will admit this picture is very disturbing, I just wish that more spine surgeons would listen to a man who is a board certified Neurosurgeon, spine surgeon and he is also certified in forensics medicine. For years he has been trying to get the attention of his collegues about the fragile central nervous system that he refers to as the "toxic dump" of the human body. The photo is the end stage of adhesive Arocnoditis. This is inside the spinal cord at the lumbar area and as you can see all of the nerves are just melted againest the spinal wall. The information below is copyrighted material taken from his site, with his permission. He is my hero and if you want to get an education on the spine please visit his site at <a href="http://www.burtonreport.com/INDEX.htm">http://www.burtonreport.com/INDEX.htm</a></div><br /><div></div><br /><div>"Despite society's frequently professed concern with the sanctity of, and need for. the preservation of human life this attitude is not always evident when reality sets in. The melamine poisoning of pets by tainted foodstuffs has created a remarkable whirlwind of world attention which has resulted in a swiftly successful scientific investigatory response to find the culprits and make sure that this does not happen again.<br />Unfortunately, poisoned humans have not been as lucky as their pets. The <a href="http://www.burtonreport.com/PDF_Files/PoisonedMedicine.pdf">press</a> has also recently brought to our attention the fact that a syrupy poison (diethylene glycol, the prime ingredient in antifreeze) has been substituted for more expensive and safe ingredient glycerol in oral medicines, such as cough syrup throughout the world for over a decade.The effect of the oral administration of diethylene glycol produces kidney failure, paralysis, and in most cases death (please note the similarity of symptoms with pet deaths due to melamine). Massive diethylene glycol poisonings have now been documented in Haiti, Bangladesh, Argentina, Nigeria, India, Panama, and China.In underdeveloped countries most people who die don't come to a medical facility or have toxicological autopsy studies. While some may be tempted to take some solace in being in a more advanced society, they shouldn't. Please put on your seatbelts at this point in time.You will no doubt be surprised to learn that the same poison, diethylene glycol, has been injected into the spine of unsuspecting Americans and their European cousins since the 1940s as a ingredient of oil myelograms and continues to be injected today as an ingredient of steroid suspensions frequently being used to treat back pain.When diethylene glycol gets into subarachnoid space it produces a chemical meningitis. This typically leads to <a href="http://www.burtonreport.com/InfSpine/AdhesArachHomePage.htm">adhesive arachnoiditis</a>, which is severe scarring of the spinal cord and nerve roots. The most common symptom is constant and agonizing pain which is remarkably disabling. Many patients with adhesive arachnoiditis have taken their own lives as the only means of escaping their agony because adhesive arachnoiditis is rarely a direct cause of death. The common use of diethylene glycol as a ingredient of steroid suspensions being blindly injected into the spine is a real, present, and serious public heath problem in the United States and Europe today. Remarkably there is no hue and cry evident. The sufferers are not infrequently told that the problem is "in their heads" when a high resolution MRI could provide the specific diagnosis.Where are the medical and scientific professionals needed to investigate these tragedies? They are not in evidence. The only recourse a patient has today is in the medical-legal (if the statute of limitations hasn't run out) arena. The problem with this venue for society is that the settlements are not publicly propagated and the rest of the unsuspecting potential victims remain essentially uninformed. There just may be a slim chance, at this point in time, that the suffering of our pets from the melamine disaster might just possibly shift the spotlight a bit to the also not-wonderful-world of diethylene glycol. "</div><br /><div></div><br /><div>Copyrighted material of Dr. Charles V. Burton</div><br /><div></div><br /><div><a href="http://www.burtonreport.com/InfSpine/AdhesArach&PoisonedMedicine.htm">http://www.burtonreport.com/InfSpine/AdhesArach&PoisonedMedicine.htm</a></div>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-35920824703526207202007-12-31T23:46:00.000-06:002008-01-02T00:26:20.887-06:00What is your Doctor really writing in your health record?<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi32lIhoP1A8kUVE-DMSV6Qyo0wrJhS5vQ2cWzXMoeUhREFuYevQl9n1s1A-9wLzbMemEijGE9WP2NuFQB7zNlcW92xhzUIU9_dtcY945p8wFhg4s4CJxElyg39DDGCLnY6QHhHY1fZud8/s1600-h/Doctor-pharmicist.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi32lIhoP1A8kUVE-DMSV6Qyo0wrJhS5vQ2cWzXMoeUhREFuYevQl9n1s1A-9wLzbMemEijGE9WP2NuFQB7zNlcW92xhzUIU9_dtcY945p8wFhg4s4CJxElyg39DDGCLnY6QHhHY1fZud8/s320/Doctor-pharmicist.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5150760881901902402" border="0" /></a><br />I often wonder how many Chronic Pain Patients lives have been destroyed because of a doctor putting, not what you are telling him, but what he perceives that you are saying, in your medical records. As a person who has lived in Chronic pain for 25 years, the last 5 years being absolute torture and has been down this road many times, I can tell you, it happens every day. It has happened to me and if you are living in Chronic Pain, I can just about promise you that it has happened to you. Do you have a copy of your medical records now. If not and especially if you have been to several different doctors seeking treatment as most of us have, I would strongly advise you to obtain and keep as many of your records as possible. You might want to prepare yourself to be <strong>shocked</strong>!!, as to what you may find in them.<br /><div></div><div><br />While a doctor's office should be a haven for the sick, that is no longer the case, especially for the person suffering from Chronic Pain. They still take your money, as they always have, and they will prescribe you anti-inflamatory, antidepressants, etc, but the minute you mention something stronger, for example, some type of opioid, you have just entered into an <strong>aggressive</strong>, <strong>non trusting relationship with your doctor.</strong> All of a sudden, you have become a <strong>drug addict</strong>, just looking for drugs. Never mind that you are in so much pain that you don't feel that you can go on any longer. <strong>Opioid phobia</strong> has just kicked in with your doctor and you have committed the unpardonable sin of asking for the only thing that will control your pain, especially if it is at the levels of mine.</div><div></div><div> </div><div><br />Its not enough that people like you and me have to go through this demeaning process with the medical profession trying to find someone with the compassion and education to help us, we usually end up with junk and outright lies placed in our medical records that will haunt us the rest of our lives. Maybe that is one of the reasons that approximately 17,000 people suffering from Chronic Pain kill themselves every year. </div><div></div><div> </div><div><br />Even though this happens everyday all over America, and even though it is a violation of Federal laws, State laws, its unconstitutional and certainly a violation of "human rights" it keeps happening. Why? Because in 1999 some accountant in the GAO reported that opioids especially </div><div>Oxycontin was being prescribed to much. Now what in the hell some accountant knows about what is to much to prescribe a person in Chronic Pain, I will never understand , but the committees and sub-committees in congress started holding hearings and hence President Bush and John Ashcroft started the "War on Drugs" with the help of the DEA.</div><div></div><div><br />Of course the doctors are now afraid to prescribe any type opioid for fear of the DEA. So what is going to happen to people like you and me? <strong>Nothing </strong>until we all get together and start demanding our rights. So do you want to be part of the solution or spend the rest of your life in pain. Personally, I hate doing this blog, because its talking about a subject that is my life, and I sit up late at night to write it and I am in pain. I spend a big portition of my life writing congress, working with advocacy groups and writing this blog. You may not be in pain now, but all it takes is an auto accident, a fall and you will find yourself in my world. So step up. We need you!!</div><div></div>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-90456277448479754412007-12-16T02:21:00.000-06:002007-12-16T02:37:10.023-06:00Are you "Chemically dependent or "Addicted"?<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgkUeMfTREWDylsQQBoj3ySjLBcx1pGqsiIhoghPsUvMy-e3NnAj654Ix2CFUXrZCsLcKfZWGYUv4HjtZs4Bm3G6_30JBR6-7C2_UkofqhMAgLLBKfyUCYonTjGShZ6qLBzvvvV0lU8H-Q/s1600-h/glass+half+full.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgkUeMfTREWDylsQQBoj3ySjLBcx1pGqsiIhoghPsUvMy-e3NnAj654Ix2CFUXrZCsLcKfZWGYUv4HjtZs4Bm3G6_30JBR6-7C2_UkofqhMAgLLBKfyUCYonTjGShZ6qLBzvvvV0lU8H-Q/s320/glass+half+full.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5144484558868101794" /></a><br />Two of the most misunderstood terms in taking opiate or opiate-like drugs is <b>Addiction vs. Chemical Dependency</b>. Doctors, especially the News Media and even Chronic Pain patients themselves often misuse the terms. As a Chronic pain patient you have a duty to educate yourself on these things. Its not fair to you and it is certainly not fair to other Chronic Pain patients who are "fighting for our rights." So educate yourself!!<br /><br />In writing this blog I want to be fair and present the other side. I just wish the "News Media" would do the same. If you take powerful Opiates or Opiods because you live with a level of Chronic Pain that is intolerable, sooner or later you will become chemically dependent on them. This is normal and if at some point you feel you no longer need them, slowely start reducing your dosage until you are completely off of the drug. I would suggest consulting with your Doctor and make sure he is aware of what you are doing. He will probably advise you at what rate you should reduce the medication. If you continue to take them after you no longer need to and make no effort to get off of the pain medications then you have become <b>Addicted</b>. At that point it is time to seek out an Addiction medicine specialist. <br /><br />When opiates are prescribed by a physician for the treatment of pain and are taken in the prescribed dosage, they are safe and there is little chance of addiction. However, when opiates are abused and taken in excessive doses, addiction can result. <br /><br />The brain itself produces endorphins that have an important role in the relief or modulation of pain. Sometimes, though, particularly when pain is severe, the brain does not produce enough endorphins to provide pain relief. Fortunately, opiates, such as morphine are very powerful pain relieving medications. When used properly under the care of a physician, opiates can relieve severe pain without causing addiction. <br /><br />Feelings of pain are produced when specialized nerves are activated by trauma to some part of the body, either through injury or illness. These specialized nerves, which are located throughout the body, carry the pain message to the spinal cord. After reaching the spinal cord, the message is relayed to other neurons, some of which carry it to the brain. Opiates help to relieve pain by acting in both the spinal cord and brain. At the level of the spinal cord, opiates interfere with the transmission of the pain messages between neurons and therefore prevent them from reaching the brain. This blockade of pain messages protects a person from experiencing too much pain. This is known as analgesia. <br /><br />Opiates also act in the brain to help relieve pain, but the way in which they accomplish this is different than in the spinal cord. <br /><br />There are several areas in the brain that are involved in interpreting pain messages and in subjective responses to pain. These brain regions are what allow a person to know he or she is experiencing pain and that it is unpleasant. Opiates also act in these brain regions, but they don't block the pain messages themselves. Rather, they change the subjective experience of the pain. This is why a person receiving morphine for pain may say that they still feel the pain but that it doesn't bother them anymore. <br /><br />Although endorphins are not always adequate to relieve pain, they are very important for survival. If an animal or person is injured and needs to escape a harmful situation, it would be difficult to do so while experiencing severe pain. However, endorphins that are released immediately following an injury can provide enough pain relief to allow escape from a harmful situation. Later, when it is safe, the endorphin levels decrease and intense pain may be felt. This also is important for survival. If the endorphins continued to blunt the pain, it would be easy to ignore an injury and then not seek medical care. <br /><br />There are several types of opiate receptors, including the delta, mu, and kappa receptors. Each of these three receptors is involved in controlling different brain functions. For example, opiates and endorphins are able to block pain signals by binding to the mu receptor site. The powerful new technology of cloning has enabled scientists to copy the genes that make each of these receptors. This in turn is allowing researchers to conduct laboratory studies to better understand how opiates act in the brain and, more specifically, how opiates interact with each opiate receptor to produce their effects. I just hope it is soon, because personally I hate taking opiods or any medication for that matter. I, like most people in chronic pain just want a life.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-79793374778013955452007-12-03T00:44:00.000-06:002007-12-03T01:43:38.680-06:00Spine surgery and all of the new "devices"<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjdx9D47h5bZbSfioXMLmixv8J1gi1g0d48Dvp1IhPQ4fB6skYs_EvPCbpyaAe84J7AhaYPh4jrtVG25YVBxoGP8710GOpCSedTPiqWQJnsjlmZidBAm-TxPTVkkVUsNHz5AYVRTXQeG6c/s1600-r/SurgAr4.gif"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKVQU6sgSL-FvzikMg4FUXuVEJ9M6jXkoFzsadzeMIwBYErpOoafpjKXC6Z4Xhx0v3AH2bzV5TXwCfUYGRv9xXo6P9E26E-Qwu87TgsJYgS0laE32vHS0WETCmkGOfd0aTIRtMizU_esg/s320/SurgAr4.gif" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5139647724774876370" /></a><br />Every MONTH it seems like another new DEVICE OR PROCEDURE for Spine Surgery is approved. There are new and less invasive ways to fuse different levels of the spine, especially the lumbar and cervical discs. There are new tools, devices and procedures. The only problem is after all the surgery and the pain of fusions most patients are no better off and in most cases worse than before. How do I know? I have been there done that, I have researched it for 20 years and I receive comments and e-mails of people just like me, a living mass of pain. <br /><br />Since I believe that man was created by a higher power, if he had meant for the spine to be rigid, he would have made it that way.<br /><br />Now enter the Charite' artificial disc which was first developed in Berlin, Germany almost 20 years ago with dismal results. Depuy Industries owned by Johnson and Johnson purchased the company that owned the disc and of course got it pushed through the FDA with a short clinical trial, spine surgeons started implanting the device in the USA, in the L4-L5 area of back patients.<br />____________________________________________________________<br />"Seven months later, on May 13, 2005, the Street.com, reported that Dr Charles Rosen, an associate clinical professor of spine surgery at the University of California at Irvine, was calling for an immediate recall of the Charite, pointing out fundamental flaws in J&J's study design. <br /><br />He told the Street that J&J compared the Charite to BAK cages in spinal fusions, a failed procedure that had not been performed in years. According to Dr Rosen, the comparison is "the worst possible operation to compare these things to." <br /><br />J&J responded by saying the BAK was the standard treatment for degenerative disc disease at the time of the study.<br /><br />According to the Street, Dr Rosen said J&J ignored the first patients who underwent the surgery, and that exclusion of such a significant portion of the sample size can seriously compromise the quality of statistical data. <br /><br />Dr Rosen, who is also the founder of the UCI Spine Center, told the Orange County Register on April 12, 2006, that the Charite can cause more pain than it cures. <br /><br />Forty-five year old, Dane Titsworth, from a hospital bed at UCI Medical Center, recovering from his fourth back surgery, told the Register, that the pain he experienced with the Charite he had implanted in May 2005, was like driving a big rig over your legs. <br /><br />After the Charite surgery, Mr Titsworth said the pain became unbearable and cost him his job with State Farm Insurance, and nearly his marriage. <br /><br />Dr Rosen fused the part of his spine where another surgeon had implanted the disc. <br /><br />The Charite does not absorb shock like a healthy disc or mimic natural motion, Dr Rosen told USA Today on July 25, 2006, and a dislocation or fracture of the disc can also cause problems, he said.<br /><br />In March 2006, Dr Rosen says, eight more patients like Mr Titsworth contacted him, who have more pain in their back with the Charite than without it. <br /><br />In May 2006, Medicare decided to stop paying for the device in patients over 60, noting that the $30,000 to $50,000 surgery had not been sufficiently tested for long-term affects. <br /><br />Blue Cross and Blue Shield also determined that more research was needed over a longer period of time, although insurance plans in each state determine coverage decisions individually, according to USA Today.<br /><br />On October 20, 2005, the Bagolie Friedman law firm announced the formation of the "International Charite Artificial Disc Practice Group," based on a belief that numerous people in the US and abroad, "suffer Charite artificial disc failure," and that "Johnson and Johnson is responsible for manufacturing a medical device they knew or should have known was unreasonably dangerous in an attempt to capture some of the lucrative multi billion dollar back surgery market." <br /><br />"We will be reviewing potential cases from the United States, Australia and Europe," said Mr Bagolie. <br /><br />On June 5, 2006, the Street.com reported that Chicago-based attorney, Pete Flowers, has more than 200 clients who have complications from the Charite and who are seeking reparations from DePuy Spine. <br /><br />Twenty-eight lawsuits have been filed, Mr Flowers told the Street, and he expects an additional 40 to 50 more to be filed this month. Dane Titsworth is a client of the firm. <br /><br />Mr Flowers' clients claim the Charite is defective and that J&J improperly marketed the device and did not adequately warn of the disc's dangers. <br /><br />"Most of these people are between 25 and 45 years old," he told the Street.com. "A lot of them have lost their jobs, their spouses, their families, their houses -- everything." <br /><br />Since the disc was approved in the US, more than 5,000 people have received the implant, says DePuy Spine's Bill Christianson, vice president of regulatory affairs, according to USA Today on July 25, 2006." <br /><br /><a href="http://www.lawyersandsettlements.com/articles/00263/Charite_Spinal_Disc_lawsuits.html">Lawsuits Multiply</a>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com13tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-27805324369259885412007-11-18T21:34:00.000-06:002007-11-18T22:32:27.909-06:00Veterinarians receive 3 times more training on pain than doctors and nurses<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEisW7sK5h6-p_Ea9Zap1fUVq92fJhO3LLVMMOqAQyOIEIwUQZm8AoJYUW6yVN4br2bhaiBFjOTMMpNJco41tlSDkDE29Axn3VV8GHS2eNJPMoWIldhWLGxVaHPXDsCcZxaz3u2giqnl82g/s1600-h/bigstockphoto_Mother_Dying_Of_Cancer_310337.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEisW7sK5h6-p_Ea9Zap1fUVq92fJhO3LLVMMOqAQyOIEIwUQZm8AoJYUW6yVN4br2bhaiBFjOTMMpNJco41tlSDkDE29Axn3VV8GHS2eNJPMoWIldhWLGxVaHPXDsCcZxaz3u2giqnl82g/s320/bigstockphoto_Mother_Dying_Of_Cancer_310337.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5134399357821482626" /></a><br />This is a Canadian survey, but I believe it and it is probably worse in the USA. I also recently learned from a reliable survey that "old people" are the most undertreated for pain, followed by "children", then "women". "Men in the 30 to 45 year old range get the best pain treatment".<br /><br />"Toronto - A recent survey for the Canadian Pain Society found students in veterinary medicine received an average of 98 hours on pain education, while medical students spent about 16 hours studying the subject.<br /><br />Among the vets in training polled in the University of Toronto survey, the least amount of specific pain education received was 27 hours, whereas some medical and nursing students admitted they'd received no training on pain at all.<br /><br />Nursing students spent an average of 31 hours on the subject of pain.<br /><br />"All the veterinary colleges had way more hours than medicine, nursing, dentistry (and) pharmacy," said lead researcher of the study, Judy Watt-Watson.<br /><br />She told 680News a stubborn stigma around chronic pain is playing a role. "There are chronic diseases related to pain that we can't take an X-ray of," she said.<br /><br />One in four Canadians have suffered from chronic pain, according to researchers, who suggest training on the subject should be mandatory, not elective, in more medical schools across the country. <br /><br />The society said this lack of training is leaving Canadian health care professions inadequately equipped to treat pain-related problems".<br /><br />Source:Taiwo Lewis <br />.<a href="http://www.680news.com/news/local/article.jsp?content=20071104_122739_4400">680 News</a><br /><br /><br />I receive a lot of e-mail from people all over the world, especially Canada, New Zealand, UK, and of course here in the USA and it really doesn't matter where, its the same horror stories and the same stigma no matter what the country. It is also a damn disgrace.<br /><br />I will leave my first bit of education for the medical profession. Here is the stigma. "I am afraid you will become addicted". That statement in itself is wrong. You don't become addicted. Addiction is a behavioral problem, part of it even hereditary, where by people get medication for the high, the euphoric feeling and most have no chronic pain problems. <br /><br />Chemical dependency is the correct word and is a natural occurrence when people have to take powerful medication for a pro-longed period of time. All you do is start slowly reducing the amount of medication you are taking until you are off of it. As a matter of fact "addiction" and "chemical dependency" take place in two totally different areas of the brain. <br /><br />How do I know? Because I have gotten off of powerful opiods myself, seven or eight times. If I felt like I needed help getting off of them, I would tell my Doctor and ask him to help me. Why, because like the majority of people in chronic pain, I am not a damn drug addict.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-72083805040863788552007-11-09T00:15:00.000-06:002007-11-09T02:41:15.803-06:00How can you write a blog about Chronic Pain when you are in so much pain?<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZ7os-jQiqgNgwqJYDqJ4mjxda3mCb9WByld-vx9Mcj8-bk6LplpuX08tWeTsuQXDGDq2-dW9QJlQ-MCI0qaPfj1RlUGu3delDYi2ug7wPmaNpbiYga1OjPXjsS-JOTK_el2VukAGPbDE/s1600-h/DSC01225.JPG"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZ7os-jQiqgNgwqJYDqJ4mjxda3mCb9WByld-vx9Mcj8-bk6LplpuX08tWeTsuQXDGDq2-dW9QJlQ-MCI0qaPfj1RlUGu3delDYi2ug7wPmaNpbiYga1OjPXjsS-JOTK_el2VukAGPbDE/s320/DSC01225.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5130755885689797570" /></a><br />I was recently asked this question by my Psychiatrist. "How can you write about chronic pain when you are in so much pain yourself". Honestly, it is getting harder to keep this blog updated. In the beginning it was my hope of getting the attention of the medical profession and the politicians. The most rewarding thing is to get comments and I also receive a lot of e-mail from people in pain. I am an advocate for chronic pain through such wonderful organizations as <a href="http://www.painfoundation.org/">The American Pain Foundation.</a> Chronic pain is one of the most stigmatized diseases in the world, just like Mental Illness used to be and still is to a degree, but not as bad as in the past. <br /><br />It is only in the past decade that mental illness and psychiatrists have been getting the credit they deserve. In the past people suffering from any form of mental illness were characterized as <strong>"being crazy"</strong>, <strong>"retarded"</strong>, <strong>"messed up in the head, sickos"</strong>. In 2006 an independent study showed that 11% of women and 5% of men take antidepressants. This situation is far from perfect but thanks to scientists and research, we are finally starting to understand the complexities of the human brain and the central nervous system. <br /><br />Depression and anxiety problems or panic attacks which is a form of mental illness is a problem that Chronic Pain sufferers have to deal with also, especially if you have lived with chronic pain like me, for years. The Psychiatrist I mentioned above, I believe "with all my heart", was placed in my life by <strong>GOD.</strong> I have been seeing him for 16 years. I have been in Chronic Pain for 25 years. He has treated me for depression and panic attacks for 16 years. He has watched me go from a person with constant pain levels of 3-4 to constant 10 pain levels. He has also watched me battle with back surgeries that only made the pain worse. He has watched me battle the so-called pain management specialists who only want to do their spinal injections at $2500.00 per shot then send you back to your primary care Dr. for pain medication.<br /><br />Out of anger at what I have been through and compassion for the way I was having to live he made this statement to me. He said, I really have no desire to get into pain management, but I am going to start treating you for your pain. He knows that the medication he prescribes is not sufficient for my pain level but it helps. That was 5 years ago and he still prescribes all of my medication. Not only is he a good psychiatrist but he is a very knowledgeable Medical Doctor. I have nothing but gratification for him and in my life he is one of about three in the medical profession I can say that about. <br /><br />Chronic Pain is a disease and finally research is starting to reveal the complexities of it. It will not be in my life time that the "he is only wanting drugs because he is an addict" stigma will be lifted. In the meantime myself and about 60-70 million others will continue to "suffer in silence".Unknownnoreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-2631548492451417092007-10-23T23:36:00.000-05:002007-10-26T00:40:51.003-05:00It makes sense to me.I had the good fortune to find a Neurosurgeon who has more certifications and belongs to more medical organizations than anyone I have come across. I just wish more surgeons would read his material and take some of the advice that Dr. Burton offers. He is certainly qualified to give it.<br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgaz2xzuMN-i-vF3Pq_Mx3uYVVSMIb-3YLm16PrqodNrFD8MqMXOcpBkxrv9zfx0CV52rhHy0iPY0WvcGQdPtNybgeGIMrtf32DmzB960SfVQGar06mcP5sBkJTMzHg8RxkuMm9fE0TyZU/s1600-h/spine+surgery.bmp"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgaz2xzuMN-i-vF3Pq_Mx3uYVVSMIb-3YLm16PrqodNrFD8MqMXOcpBkxrv9zfx0CV52rhHy0iPY0WvcGQdPtNybgeGIMrtf32DmzB960SfVQGar06mcP5sBkJTMzHg8RxkuMm9fE0TyZU/s320/spine+surgery.bmp" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5124761243472488530" /></a><br />The following is from Dr. Charles V Burtons <a href="http://www.burtonreport.com/">Burton Report</a><br /><br /><br />"It is remarkable, but true, that most people seem to spend a great deal more time in selecting downloads for their iPods than in selecting a spine surgeon. This is unfortunate because it is an important decision which often dictates a patient’s long-term quality of life. <br /><br />Medicine is a profession, as many others, where prevailing therapeutic approaches may be, in fact outdated. There was a time, not too long ago when diseased hips, knees and ankles were routinely fused. Then the era of artificial joints changed this previously universal approach. <br /><br />Spine surgery is still being held hostage to the "fusion" mind set. The spine is inherently flexible and forcing it to become rigid over many segments is the cause of significant stress related continuing problems. The result of this continues to be the inordinate production of "failed back surgery syndrome" patients. <br /> <br />It should seem readily evident that the architects who design skyscrapers include some flexibility in case of external stress such as hurricanes or earthquakes. If they do not do so these structures collapse. The same is true of the human lumbar spine and this is an important part of restorative spine surgery. <br /> <br />The need to reduce spine surgery failure has led to the advent of more physiologic, motion preserving, spine technologies of which artificial discs have probably received more than their fair share of M2H attention. It continues to be a sad, but true, story that some of the very best treatments often are associated with less commercial profit expectations and thus become medical "orphans" ignorant of William of Occams' Razor. Flexible stabilization systems and artificial disc nuclei exist today as well as restorative neuroradiology where polymers are injected. <br /><br />It is essential for patients to become aware of all valuable options and search out those associated with less risk and higher efficacy. In spine surgery motion-preserving reconstructive (restorative) spine surgery represents one such important choice." <br /><br />The information in quotes is the copyrighted material of Dr. Charles V. Burton and used with his permission. If you want to get a lot of information on the human spine and surgery, I suggest you visit his site below. <br /><a href="http://www.burtonreport.com/InfSpine/RestorativeSpineCareSurgical.htm">http://www.burtonreport.com/InfSpine/RestorativeSpineCareSurgical.htm</a>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516991800470797675.post-71935863391985016432007-10-10T00:05:00.000-05:002007-10-11T01:31:23.022-05:00Undertreatment of Pain: A National Disgrace<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgyPTVgtrlcHOriWR0hJexoTGw5XzLxnDuOJv8bB-S-J9ssroSs1bnhOtoIucBWW0pFptdFceEn_uYvsppBsm8_5buRZF-Sh_DyEQc-pDWT21mzlbBhZi1fHBioWuPmfj1G3BMe_ULFq7c/s1600-h/bigstockphoto_Stressed_Out_1580689.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgyPTVgtrlcHOriWR0hJexoTGw5XzLxnDuOJv8bB-S-J9ssroSs1bnhOtoIucBWW0pFptdFceEn_uYvsppBsm8_5buRZF-Sh_DyEQc-pDWT21mzlbBhZi1fHBioWuPmfj1G3BMe_ULFq7c/s320/bigstockphoto_Stressed_Out_1580689.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5119955504830597314" /></a><br />These are the words of Professor Ronald T Libby, in a commentary on pain that appeared in "The Pain Community" a monthly news letter published by <a href="http://www.painfoundation.org/">The American Pain foundation</a> this month, and he is exactly right.He reaffirmed what I have been saying, that most experts agree that right now there are approximately 76 million people struggling with Chronic Pain. Even though I have focused on the spine mostly, there are a host of other diseases and injuries like cancer, diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, fibromyalgia, migraines, Hiv/Aids and other trauma from injuries. Even our veterans returning with all types of traumatic injuries are faced with not getting treatment for their injuries and that is a damn shame and a disgrace. If patriotic soldiers who have sacrificed themselves for the defense of their country do not receive adequate pain treatment for combat related injuries, what chance does the rest of the population have of getting pain relieving treatment. The reason for the failure to provide life giving pain relief to patients is the pervasive fear of prescribing opioids, narcotics. The societal enforcer of opioid-phobia is the DEA,(Drug enforcement agency). I really don't blame them entirely and this is why. Much of the problem lies with the powerful committees and sub-committees in Washington, D.C., playing to the cameras for their own selfish gain. Have you ever watched a cabinet member or a department head testifying before them on C-Span. The want more results on the drug trafficking trade so they go after the Doctors who are trying to help people like me and millions of others. Hey you political bastards, we are not Drug addicts. We are people suffering to the point of taking our own lives just to get away from the pain. This medication was approved by the FDA for the purpose of helping people like myself and Richard Paey live. <br /><br />The biggest problem of all is the disinformation or misinformation by the damn News Media. They will talk about some pro-athelete overdosing on steriods for a month, or some celebrity getting picked up on a drug charge, but they will not devote one minute of time to some of the Chronic Pain Advocacy groups appearing on T.V. to tell the truth about the Chronic Pain undertreatment disgrace going on in this country at this very moment and it affects millions.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com10