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Pat Oreilly The following is a series of articles by Pat Oreilly
We will be adding new articles on a regular basis
Addiction, Tolerance and Other Nasty Wives Tales
Many people that live with
chronic pain are afraid to take narcotic pain medicine because they don't want
to become addicted to it. They have also been told that they will develop
tolerance to narcotic medicines and need more and more and more of it to
achieve pain control. These beliefs are wives tales that can actually cost the
pain sufferer a great deal in terms of quality of life and controlling pain in
the body.
Less than 1% of the people that
take narcotic pain relievers become addicted to the medicine. This is due in
part to the fact that people with legitimate pain do not get that "high"
feeling when they take these drugs. The medicine is metabolized differently
and goes directly to the pain. The person may get tired but they do not get
high. Therefore there is no "reward" for taking the medicine for any reason
other than keeping the pain at bay.
Opiates are not highly
dangerous or destructive drugs. In general they are safer than many over the
counter medications that we use every day. Anti-inflammatory medications such
as Aspirin, Naproxin, even Vioxx can be hard on the stomach.
Another important consideration
when evaluating pain medications is to remember the longer the pain is
untreated or under-treated the more likely the pain will cause destructive and
permanent changes in the nervous system of the person experiencing the pain.
Taking the heroic position is not only not necessary, it is also dangerous to
your body.
Tolerance is another
misunderstood myth. Taking narcotic medicine can produce a type of tolerance
but the truth is most often what looks like tolerance is actually an increase
in the pain rather than a decrease in the effectivenes of the medication.
Morphine has no dose "ceiling." It can be increased in small increments to
relieve pain with no fear of overdose or loss of effectiveness. Another
approach is to switch to another opiate for a short time to give the body a
"holiday." Once the body has time to rest from the medication then switched
back it will be effective once again.
Opiates have been used for pain
relief for centuries. They are the most effective medications doctors have in
treating pain and when handled properly they are safe. Perhaps some day
science will come up with something better, but today narcotics can be our
best friend.
Pat Oreilly, 2001
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