Hi Tod, Guys,

 

I have been reading with interest your posts on pain, conditions and meds.
Although our pain manifests itself similarly, I was wondering if anyone else
is experiencing pain related to my condition?

I Have Arachnoiditis caused by the number of spinal surgeries I've had in
the past. I also have a fracture of a pars bone at L5 with disk herniations
throughout my lumbar. It is inoperable.

 

These conditions cause pain in lower back, and in my hip that radiates down
my right leg. My meds:  Fentanyl patches changed every 48 hours and
OxyContin every three hours. I have been managing my pain (most times)
augmented by self hypnosis. My pain management Dr. uses me to teach
residents by testing them and asking, "Do you think he takes too much
medicine?". Before they answer he quickly says, "he is taking the equivalent
of 146 Percocet a day without the Tylenol." The answer is that he ramped me
up over a year's time to this level. He finishes by telling them if he took
50 mg of fentanyl patch and put it on them they would be dead in an hour.
Cute story.

 

Anyway, I too suffer bowel problems caused by the opiates. We have run the
gamut of solutions, the latest being 2 cups of Senna tea, afternoon and
evening the day before the bowel program. It seems to be working well, real
loose but at least it's out. Never thought my quality of life would be
measured by whether I poop or not. Today's a good day.

 

I am 23 years post and have an appointment to get both my shoulders shot
next week. Then it's back to physical therapy twice a week to attempt to
strengthen what muscles I have left in both shoulders. Weird, can't
understand why the opiates I'm taking don't take care of the shoulder pain.
I know the shoulders are both bone on bone with tendon damage/loss after
using them without triceps all these years. We all have bone loss from the
chairs, meds etc., even our teeth are effected. 

 

Thanks for listening, I'll be watching the list a little more often. Stay
strong.

 

Don't let what you cannot do interfere with what you can do!

 

Billy

 

 

 

From: Tod Santee [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Sunday, October 30, 2011 10:31 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] pain in leg doctor results.( Greg) or others
interested.

 

Hi Dana, Greg, Dan and the Rest 'O the Gang!

 

Dana, I'll be starting with Forteo in a couple months.  I was wondering how
long you've used it and if you've noticed any changes (as in anything other
than the bone loss/gain/strengthening) such as how well (or not) any other
meds might work?  Bowel and/or bladder changes? Stuff like that.

 

I was taking Fosamax for a few years but then an endocrinologist checked me
out and saw that after all my time in bed after an accident a couple years
ago I was still "dumping" a lot of calcium.  I was losing more through urine
than I could take in... he said he'd never seen a loss as high as mine (and
he's been in the business a Lonn..ngg time!).  He tried me on one 3-month IV
dose of Boniva (instead of the once-a-month pills) and the IV seemed to
help.  So he switched me to Reclast.  After 2 yrs of Reclast I'm no longer
losing... but still not gaining.  So now we're switching to Forteo hoping to
begin rebuilding/strengthening some bone.  I just had a DEXA Scan that
showed a little improvement.

 

My biggest worry now is an increase in pain that might come if Forteo can
accelerate the development of bone tissue.  I have a hip that was pretty
messed up from ischial surgeries followed by a more recent, nasty bout with
MRSA *in* (and through) my hip bone.  My hip always hurts like hell and my
back --which ended up fragile enough to crack after 9-months bed time,
needing a "sacroplasty" injection of cement-- contributes to burning,
shooting, or an "over-stretching-feeling" type back and leg pain.

 

I guess I'm also wondering if you (or maybe Greg or others) have heard of
increased increased incidences of HO when using Forteo.  I know it's fairly
knew but I'll never be able to read everything out there about it!  HO is
ONE problem I haven't had and hope to "All-That's-Good-and-Decent" that I
never have to.  I doubt many docs would think about upping my pain meds.
I'm already on stuff that makes Oxy or Vicodin feel like an aspirin for an
amputation!

 

 

Thanks for any info or thoughts!  Sure wish I was able to get "on-list" more
often but I've been super busy (even after leaving work)!

 

Best wishes to Everyone, mi Amigos!

--Tod Santee

 

On Thu, Oct 27, 2011 at 2:37 PM, <[email protected]> wrote:

Hi Greg,

I guess HO is another one of those quadriplegic conditions we have to check
for.

I am on forteo injections daily and re-clasp I just got the weeks ago. My
doctor wants to do both treatments because my bone density deteriorated. The
hospital told me that they had positive results in bone density with
reclapce that is done yearly.
Dana.

In a message dated 10/24/2011 4:01:23 P.M. Central Daylight Time,
[email protected] writes:

Error! Filename not specified.Error! Filename not specified.I took Oxycontin
for awhile, but insurance changed and now I take MS-Contin.
They are the only thing that helped. Though they did not help for my common
quad stuff pain, tingling and burning, etc.
Osteoporosis is more of a bone loss I think. H.O. is more of an excess bone
growth.
But I do have both. I have osteo in some areas, but H.O. on my hip.
I take meds for the osteo now, some pill once a week with loots of water.
No doc mentioned a connection.
Greg

> Hi Greg,
>
> So sorry to hear about your pain problems associated with HO. Thank
> you for describing what that term means, as I had never heard of
> this before. What pain medication works best for you? We have often
> talked about pain medication on the list. That is such a
> unpredictable condition especially if it can inhibit joint
> movement. Is this anything like osteoporosis?   God bless you and I
> will be praying for you. Dana
> C4-5 complete, 37 years post, 58, I was a passenger in a motor
> vehicle accident at the age of 20  
> In a message dated 10/23/2011 3:16:27 P.M. Central Daylight Time,


> [email protected] writes:
>
>> The
>> term heterotopic ossification (HO) describes bone formation at an
>> abnormal anatomical site, usually in soft tissue. Cause is often
>> an injury, even
>> just a hard bruise. A large precent of SCI's have some form of
>> (HO). It can
>> grow big enough to prevent joint movement. Because it's growing
>> in the muscle, it is very painful. And because we can't feel it,
>> the pain can show up in different areas. Mine is an egg size lump
>> on my hip. My thigh feels
>> like it's being crushed, it even shows up in my dreams. I often
>> dream my leg is on fire or my leg is crushed in a car door. The
>> pain caused such bad
>> spasms, I ended up in the ER twice in 2 days before they found
>> the cause.
>> My legs and abdomen were cramping so hard I was throwing up. And
>> I thought my heart was spasming and it was harder to breath. Once
>> it's under
>> control, stopped growing. Pain meds can help a lot, but they
>> cause all kinds of bowel troubles. I've tried just about
>> everything to get off the pain meds to try to get my bowel
>> program to work better. Greg
>>
>>> What
>> is H.O.?

 

 

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