Psycho-Babble Medication Thread 81414

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Re: opiates and major depression » androog

Posted by BrittPark on January 24, 2003, at 11:31:42

In reply to Re: opiates and major depression, posted by androog on January 23, 2003, at 14:43:25

Seizures are sudden firings of a large number of neurons in the brain. They manifest themselve in many ways: from a short blackout, to a grand mal seizure in which all the muscles in the body tense and untense. Most seizures are not dangerous but some can cause breathing to stop and lead to death. The other danger of course is that seizures can occur at dangerous moments, such as driving a car.

Perhaps someone with more expertise could comment further.

Cheers,

Britt

 

Re: opiates and major depression

Posted by juanantoniod on January 24, 2003, at 12:19:15

In reply to Re: opiates and major depression, posted by Blah on January 23, 2003, at 22:40:06

Hi, Blah

I completely relate to your posting about losing hope and going for suicide as an option. I'm on my last trial of medications before probably moving on to ECT, then if that does not work, strongly considering voluntary euthanasia.

I'm not trying to be all cliche and say that things could get better overnight with new treatments, medications and such. However, the release of Strattera is a hope in that direction and then the eventual release of Lilly's new AD, Cymbalta (duloxetine) could be helpful as well.

And, as you said, you haven't tried opiates.

So, please understand that I'm not saying hang on at all costs, but please at least exhaust all options before you go to the final one. Believe me, I know how difficult that sounds, but I know how you feel.

Take care,

Antonio


> Hi Androog and all:
>
> I saw the mood disorder specialist today, and even though the first visit is $345 not much happened. He said he wouldn't give me an opioid analgesic untill I tried some mood stabalizers and antipsycotics. I'm willing to do that, but he was not willing to say how many I had to try before we could rule them out and move on to opiates. It would be great if one of them worked, but after all the "wonder drugs" I tried just to have them make me worse I don't have a lot of trust left.
>
> What's worse is he wants me to go into the hospital for a month or more so I can try more more quickly, but if I do that he still won't commit to a time when I could switch to an opioid if they didn't work. I can't try every mood stabalizer and antipsycotic. Once you try 2 or 3 drugs from a certain school you cancel that school out; to try them all is a waste of time and abuse of the body. I'm not sure what to do I'd go in the hospital if I knew that he'd rx opioids if nothing worked but he's making it clear he'll wait as long as he can to do that, and my mental and ecconomic situation requires me to get better now. In a few years I won't get supplemental money from my mother, and Bush could easily kill SSI (social security disability) even sooner. Emotionaly I have no hope left, and today I thought about suicide maybe more serious than I ever have. I have no hope or passion left, for anything. Yet this doctor still won't give me some kind of assurance that opioids could be used soon if nothing works. I'm not sure what to do.
>
> ANDROOG, I may need to do the internet ordering. What are the best companies to use. Is it better to buy a cheap membership to one of those low price ones, or buy from the ones with regular prices but with no membership. Do you know of any sites still in operation that are good. Please either email this info to me at the address in my last post, or put it on the board. Also, can you get arrested for doing this , should I not use my credit card, and is it safe to have it shipped to my home.
>
> Thanks
> Blah

 

Re: opiates and major depression

Posted by androog on January 24, 2003, at 13:33:00

In reply to Re: opiates and major depression, posted by Blah on January 23, 2003, at 22:40:06

Hi Blah,

I'm sorry to hear about your experience with the pdoc. It sounds to me like the old carrot-on- a -stick routine. There seems to be an endless loop of drug combinations that can be tried on a person with refractory depression.

I don't know if you're being strung along or if your new pdoc really intends to try opiates or tramadol. I was lucky enough to find a legit doc to write my scripts, but it took some pushing on my part -- something that doesn't come easily when you're seriously depressed.

There are sites on the internet where it appears you can get tramadol legally with the benefit of an online consultation. I say "appears to be legal" because I'm not a lawyer and can't state for a fact that it is legal. A simple search on the internet took me to one such site:

xxx

Once again, I have to say that I'm not a doctor and can't make any recommendations to you regarding your decision to try to find or use tramadol. I say this because I don't in any way want to be construed as offering medical advice or trying to prescribe medicine. I think you can understand my dilemma.

The suggestion that you go into the hospital is a little scary to me. Having been in the cuckoo's nest myself, I think the whole thing was simply aimed at protecting me from myself. It was my experience that they couldn't do much more for me in the hospital than they could do on an outpatient basis. Even the ECT, which was started in the hospital, was completed on an outpatient basis. The big difference to me is that the hospital stay was VERY expensive. Also, from what little I can remember and what I'm told by my wife, I was treated like an inmate. Cigarettes (I've since quit smoking. Yea!) were used as rewards and my wife was not allowed to visit me unless she attended certain classes. Try pulling that on someone who is hospitalized for, say, diabetes.

I truly wish I could be of more help to you. I would love to be able to write a prescription for you, if only to give you temporary relief -- a "breather". What you are experiencing is more awful than most people could ever understand, and is something nobody should be forced to endure. It's just plain cruel to allow anyone to exist in your state without trying something that might possibly bring immediate relief.

Please don't do anything rash. Pursue all your options. I'm convinced that each one of us will respond to something, it's just a matter of finding what that something is.

androog

 

Re: opiates and major depression » Blah

Posted by ShelliR on January 24, 2003, at 19:46:03

In reply to Re: opiates and major depression, posted by Blah on January 23, 2003, at 22:40:06

It's an amazing thing to me how seldom it is that doctors can really relate to true suicidal urges, and how horribly painful depression can be, both physically as well as psychologically. Suicide is obviously not just a threat, and a week of hospitalization (usually the commitment for suicidal ideation) is not going to do very much to change such painful, long-term miswiring.

I recently seen several articles talking about the interaction between pain and depression. If there is any physical aspects to your depression/pain, I would go to a pain specialist before ordering opiates off the internet.

I was able to be honest with my pain doctor, saying that I was very depressed but also I had unrelenting pain in my chest. And I didn't know where one started and the other ended. My honesty with psychiatrists mostly got me labeled a drug addict, although one psychiatrist put me on oxycontin which was not a good idea either. If I was trying now to save my life, I'd lobby for buprenorphine; it just came out in sublingual form. It's purpose is to treat addiction, much like methadone, only buprenorphine is allowed to be prescribed in a doctor's office and is a partial opiate. I know the liquid form (for IM use) is also legally prescribed for pain; I'm not sure if the new sublingual release can be prescribed for pain yet. Buprenorphine can also be habituating, but less likely, since it has both agonist and antagonist properties.

It's hard for me to believe that after trying over 20 combinations of drugs to try to relieve my depression, doctors were way more worried about me becoming an addict than me being dead. The last time I was put in the hospital, taken off of opiates and pumped with too much effexor for my body, I got out and tried to kill myself. (Seriously tried). That was the last time I allowed byself to believe it was better to be dead than to be addicted (habituated) to opiates.

I think it is a very serious decision to take opiates for depression, but it's hard for me to believe that it was so hard for me to choose opiates over death because of the total lack of help and total lack of support I received in the psychiatric community for treatment resistent depression. I am also still looking for other options so I won't have to be dependent on opiates for the rest of my life, if there is another equally effective and less controversial alternative. I have become habituated to a pretty large dose of methadone and don't know when or if this dose will lose it's effectiveness. Presently, I am also being treated by a homeopathic MD.

"Be careful out there"

Shelli

 

Re: opiates and major depression

Posted by androog on January 25, 2003, at 0:08:59

In reply to Re: opiates and major depression » Blah, posted by ShelliR on January 24, 2003, at 19:46:03

The buprenorphine that Shelli suggests is a great idea. It has a "ceiling" that only allows it to take you so high, unlike the heavier stuff like morphine. Personally, I don't really understand what the problem is with feeling good, but I think docs are more likely to prescribe if they don't think you're having too much fun.

When I was at the lowest point of my depression I kept having this fantasy of what I called "The Hat". You stick it on your shrink and he/she feels exactly what you feel. You stick it on their head with epoxy and tell em you'll be back in three weeks to chip it off. Then you sit back and see what comes off their prescription pad. I'll bet it wouldn't be Prozac.

Blah and Antonio, I'm really getting scared with this talk of suicide. Please get on the phone, or have somebody else get on the phone, and call every shrink, pain specialist or witch doctor in the book until you find someone who will at least try you on some sort of painkiller. It doesn't have to be a shrink; dentist's have the authority to write these prescriptions, too -- all it takes is a bad toothache on the weekend. I hate to suggest that, but I think you need relief soon.

When I first discovered painkillers worked on my depression it gave me a lot of hope and helped to keep me going. Even though I had nobody at that time to write a prescription for the stuff, it helped just finally knowing there was something that worked. I think that same kind of hope would help you a lot.

Get creative in your quest for help and don't feel all alone -- there are plenty of us out here who share your experience and who really mean it when we say "I know how you feel".

androog

 

Re: licensed physicians » androog

Posted by Dr. Bob on January 25, 2003, at 10:00:23

In reply to Re: opiates and major depression, posted by androog on January 24, 2003, at 13:33:00

> There are sites on the internet where it appears you can get tramadol legally with the benefit of an online consultation. I say "appears to be legal" because I'm not a lawyer and can't state for a fact that it is legal. A simple search on the internet took me to one such site:
>
> xxx

I know you're trying to help, but I think it's best if the physician is licensed in the state of the patient.

Bob

PS: Follow-ups regarding posting policies should be redirected to Psycho-Babble Administration, thanks.

 

Re: medication without a prescription » Blah

Posted by Dr. Bob on January 25, 2003, at 11:17:59

In reply to Re: opiates and major depression, posted by Blah on January 23, 2003, at 22:40:06

> I may need to do the internet ordering. xxx Is it better to buy a cheap membership to one of those low price ones, or buy from the ones with regular prices but with no membership. xxx Also, can you get arrested for doing this , should I not use my credit card, and is it safe to have it shipped to my home.

I know you may think you don't have any other options, and the above general questions are fine, but I'd rather specific information that could be used to import prescription medication without a prescription not be exchanged on this site:

http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/faq.html#illegal

Thanks,

Bob

PS: Follow-ups regarding posting policies should be redirected to Psycho-Babble Administration. Here's a link:

http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/admin/20021128/msgs/9010.html

 

Re: licensed physicians

Posted by androog on January 25, 2003, at 11:53:22

In reply to Re: licensed physicians » androog, posted by Dr. Bob on January 25, 2003, at 10:00:23

Sorry. This site is a great outlet for people like us and I don't mean to abuse it.

androog

 

Re: opiates and major depression

Posted by Mattkit on January 25, 2003, at 13:42:43

In reply to Re: opiates and major depression, posted by androog on January 25, 2003, at 0:08:59

Hi,
I just wanted to relay my thought on the opiate subject too. I also tried many many different antidepressents, many that have some serious side effects on liver like effexor, etc. Nothing ever worked for me also. I finally quit the search and
ended just living miserably for quite some time now. In the past when I ever hurt something like my back once in an accident, my ankle, just basic
strains, and when I was prescribed codeine, or
other opiate drugs for pain, I noticed something,
I would with one pill, have an interest for life
again. This past week on thurs 1/23/03 I had my wisdom teeth removed. They prescribed 15 pills of
Vicoprofin for pain (another opiate), I have taken about 2 per day now and bingo I have a real interest in living again. Since thursday I have
cleaned my house for the first time in months,
I am going out to excercise and my mind has totally changed from depression. I can see I need to find a psychiatrist that is willing to prescribe opiates for depression (non abusing).
We are in such a bullshit world as far as all these docs only prescribing all this anti depresent drugs like prozac, zoloft, etc cause the
pharmacuetical companies pay them to prescribe them. Not to say they havent helped some but really we are all kind of Guinea Pigs as far as the long term goes with these drugs. Oh and they say but "their non addictive" (even though you may hav to tke them forever???). I want something
that works and am just sick of all the bull in
the psyco world. Also wanted to say that I have
taken Ultra tremedol and have had the same interest in life as opiates. Ultram is not an opiate but works the same way as them so its worth giving a try. I also saw the sites where you can get the tremedol so if anyone has success
with this please let me know. Thanks alot Matt

 

Re: medication without a prescription

Posted by Mattkit on January 25, 2003, at 13:59:28

In reply to Re: medication without a prescription » Blah, posted by Dr. Bob on January 25, 2003, at 11:17:59

Dr Bob,
What are your thoughts on using opiates for depresion?
I have had some really bad experiences with
psychiatrists and psychotherapists (never discussing the use of opiates with them) but
with being prescribed other drugs where if I wasnt on top of my own medical history and we all know when your depressed its easy to just go along
with the docs, I could have had some serious
liver problems, some docs prescribe stuff and dont even know your medical history. They look at
opiates as "taboo", almost like they just want you
to come back and back for that weekly money they
get from you while putting you on stuff that takes months to see if it works. I think this country needs to do a complete change on psychiatry and get away from the pharmacuetical companies and what their coming out with next.
I agree with some to take it into their own hands
to find their own solution. Especially after the experience I have had in the psychiatric world.
Wasting thousands of dollars and, mostly, time of
MY life.

 

Re: medication without a prescription

Posted by androog on January 25, 2003, at 15:07:34

In reply to Re: medication without a prescription, posted by Mattkit on January 25, 2003, at 13:59:28

Hi all,

Does anyone know what the statistics are regarding the success rate of ALL the antidepressants as a group? By this I mean, if you had 100 people who suffered from major depression and treated them all with ALL the drugs marketed as antidepressants, what percentage of the group would show significant improvement?

I'd also like to know, roughly, how many people who suffer from refractory major depression respond signigicantly to opiates.

I keep reading all of this good stuff about opiates, but surely there are people who have had no luck with, or even deteriorated from, opiates in the treatment of their depression.

androog

 

Re: medication without a prescription » androog

Posted by BrittPark on January 25, 2003, at 15:57:49

In reply to Re: medication without a prescription, posted by androog on January 25, 2003, at 15:07:34

> Does anyone know what the statistics are regarding the success rate of ALL the antidepressants as a group? By this I mean, if you had 100 people who suffered from major depression and treated them all with ALL the drugs marketed as antidepressants, what percentage of the group would show significant improvement?

This is a great question. I don't know of any study that speaks to it. My guess is that given enough time and drug trials, the response rate is 80-90%. I base this on what my psychiatrist, a superb psychopharmacologist, has told me. In his practice he's never, given enough time, not successfully treated a patient. That leaves out the people who leave his care. Now he may have been saying that to make me feel more hopeful at the time, but given his character I don't think so.


>
> I'd also like to know, roughly, how many people who suffer from refractory major depression respond signigicantly to opiates.

Another great question. I've never found a study even remotely likely to answer it. My guess is that a majority of people would respond well to opioids, based on the number of people I know who have found opioids pleasurable. This begs another question: what percentage of people get a continued AD effect from opioids? I would guess that the number is small because most people develop tolerance. I wish that the whole realm of opioids and psychiatry would get federal funding for research, but don't think I'll see it in my lifetime. The principle in psychiatric research seems to be that anything that makes "normal" people feel better cannot be considered.

>
> I keep reading all of this good stuff about opiates, but surely there are people who have had no luck with, or even deteriorated from, opiates in the treatment of their depression.

I'm sure there are many who've not been helped and even hurt by opioids. I'm not, of course, including the large number of people damaged by illicit opioids.

>
> androog


Britt

 

Re: opiates and major depression

Posted by Blah on January 25, 2003, at 17:32:02

In reply to Re: opiates and major depression » Blah, posted by ShelliR on January 24, 2003, at 19:46:03

When you say pain doctor what kind of doctor do you mean, an orthopiedist? I probably spelled that wrong. What I'm asking is what would I look under in the yellow pages?

Thanks

> It's an amazing thing to me how seldom it is that doctors can really relate to true suicidal urges, and how horribly painful depression can be, both physically as well as psychologically. Suicide is obviously not just a threat, and a week of hospitalization (usually the commitment for suicidal ideation) is not going to do very much to change such painful, long-term miswiring.
>
> I recently seen several articles talking about the interaction between pain and depression. If there is any physical aspects to your depression/pain, I would go to a pain specialist before ordering opiates off the internet.
>
> I was able to be honest with my pain doctor, saying that I was very depressed but also I had unrelenting pain in my chest. And I didn't know where one started and the other ended. My honesty with psychiatrists mostly got me labeled a drug addict, although one psychiatrist put me on oxycontin which was not a good idea either. If I was trying now to save my life, I'd lobby for buprenorphine; it just came out in sublingual form. It's purpose is to treat addiction, much like methadone, only buprenorphine is allowed to be prescribed in a doctor's office and is a partial opiate. I know the liquid form (for IM use) is also legally prescribed for pain; I'm not sure if the new sublingual release can be prescribed for pain yet. Buprenorphine can also be habituating, but less likely, since it has both agonist and antagonist properties.
>
> It's hard for me to believe that after trying over 20 combinations of drugs to try to relieve my depression, doctors were way more worried about me becoming an addict than me being dead. The last time I was put in the hospital, taken off of opiates and pumped with too much effexor for my body, I got out and tried to kill myself. (Seriously tried). That was the last time I allowed byself to believe it was better to be dead than to be addicted (habituated) to opiates.
>
> I think it is a very serious decision to take opiates for depression, but it's hard for me to believe that it was so hard for me to choose opiates over death because of the total lack of help and total lack of support I received in the psychiatric community for treatment resistent depression. I am also still looking for other options so I won't have to be dependent on opiates for the rest of my life, if there is another equally effective and less controversial alternative. I have become habituated to a pretty large dose of methadone and don't know when or if this dose will lose it's effectiveness. Presently, I am also being treated by a homeopathic MD.
>
> "Be careful out there"
>
> Shelli

 

Re: opiates and major depression

Posted by Mattkit on January 25, 2003, at 19:15:02

In reply to Re: opiates and major depression, posted by Blah on January 25, 2003, at 17:32:02

I sure would like to know if it is possible to take opiates in a controlled manner. As with any drugs or alcohol when one is out of control its a
problem. I know alot of people who have a couple
of drinks of wine thru the day and it is not a problem. I wish I could try doing this but with opiates because it seems to me that when they are in my system I have come "up" to the level of how
"normal" people feel. I actually feel normal for once.

 

Re: opiates and major depression » Blah

Posted by ShelliR on January 25, 2003, at 19:25:40

In reply to Re: opiates and major depression, posted by Blah on January 25, 2003, at 17:32:02

>When you say pain doctor what kind of doctor do you mean, an orthopiedist? I probably spelled that wrong. What I'm asking is what would
I look under in the yellow pages?<

My doctor is listed under physical medicine. I was referred to him years ago for a misdiagnosed stomach spasm years ago and more recently for the chest pain. Many of the doctors in the pain field also have a background in anesthesiology.

I just did a yahoo yellow pages search, put in physicians and pain and most specialists were listed either under pain and rehabilitation or pain management. I think I'd go for pain management out of the two, or else get a referral from your internist or primary physician.

 

Re: opiates and major depression » Blah

Posted by ShelliR on January 25, 2003, at 20:36:39

In reply to Re: opiates and major depression, posted by Blah on January 25, 2003, at 17:32:02

One more thing:

My pain doc wouldn't treat me unless I also was being treated by a psychiatrist. Since my pdoc wouldn't treat me if I was on opiates, I changed pdocs to one that the pain guy recommended. I like the new pdoc; he won't prescribe opiates, but he accepts that I am taking them as part of my treatment. I am exploring other options with him and with my homeopathic doctor.

 

Re: opiates and major depression

Posted by bee happy on January 26, 2003, at 21:44:50

In reply to Re: opiates and major depression » Blah, posted by ShelliR on January 25, 2003, at 20:36:39

I have been treated for depression with Buprenorphine for the last 6 months and I knew the first day that it worked for me. If you have a compassionate family doctor who knows you well you might want to ask him or her to try it just for a day or two...to see if it works for you. It is not a triplicate. This drug was studied at Harvard.Find the study on the internet and show your doctor.

 

Buprenorphine-- bee happy

Posted by Peter S. on January 26, 2003, at 22:24:18

In reply to Re: opiates and major depression, posted by bee happy on January 26, 2003, at 21:44:50

Hi bee,

Can you say a little more about your buprenorphine experience. How much do you take? HOw often? How do you take it- sublingually? Any side effects?

Thanks!

Petrer

> I have been treated for depression with Buprenorphine for the last 6 months and I knew the first day that it worked for me. If you have a compassionate family doctor who knows you well you might want to ask him or her to try it just for a day or two...to see if it works for you. It is not a triplicate. This drug was studied at Harvard.Find the study on the internet and show your doctor.

 

Re: Buprenorphine-- bee happy

Posted by androog on January 26, 2003, at 22:30:05

In reply to Buprenorphine-- bee happy, posted by Peter S. on January 26, 2003, at 22:24:18

bee-

Can you also tell us if you have built up a tolerance for the buprenorphine?

Thanks,
androog

 

Re: opiates and major depression » androog

Posted by Luka62 on January 26, 2003, at 22:30:29

In reply to Re: opiates and major depression » Blah, posted by androog on January 21, 2003, at 13:29:13

WOW! I can't believe there's someone else out there who's had an experience with Ultram and depression. I've been taking Ultram for several years. Mind you, I've been prescribed Ultram for chronic pain. But I definitely noticed early on how it lifts my mood. I'm also on Nardil and Lamictal. Interestingly though, when I was taken off the Nardil for a trial period , the Ultram didn't seem to have any effect, so I figured it must be the interaction.
If I take more than is prescribed, I can start to have breathing difficulty though.
Recently I went to a neurosurgeon who has me taking daily, so I don't have to worry as much about whether my reg doc will rx it. (My psych. doc does not prescribe. it)

 

Re: opiates and major depression

Posted by androog on January 27, 2003, at 1:49:04

In reply to Re: opiates and major depression » androog, posted by Luka62 on January 26, 2003, at 22:30:29

Watch out for that Nardil! It put me in the hospital hooked up to an EKG, sucking on nitroglycerin. They didn't tell me I couldn't use OTC nasal spray while on Nardil, just that I couldn't eat certain things.

And they think opiates are dangerous!

Glad to hear the Ultram is working for you.

androog

 

Opioids and anxiety...?

Posted by Ame Sans Vie on January 27, 2003, at 4:14:08

In reply to Re: opiates and major depression, posted by androog on January 27, 2003, at 1:49:04

Well, in the past I've been prescribed Hycodan (Canadian formulation), propoxyphene HCl, codeine, and hydromorphone. The Hycodan (at a dose of 15mg q8hr) worked especially well-- it both relieved the anxiety, yet didn't have me throwing up all day. I'm interested in trying buprenorphine, and it shouldn't be difficult to obtain it (or hydrocodone) seeing as my pdoc already has me on Klonopin, Valium, Ativan, Xanax, and just a few days ago called in prescriptions for BuSpar and Marinol (which works incredibly well, I might add... I'd rather not be taking it though, on the basis of drug testing for when I finally get out to look for a job. I have the feeling that most employers would frown upon finding THC in your system, even if it were backed up by a Rx). Another consideration is Stadol (butorphanol) nasal spray-- anyone have any experience at all with this stuff? I've used it recreationally years ago, but that was before my disorder(s?) hit full force. TIA!

--Michael

 

Re: Opioids and anxiety...?

Posted by utopizen on January 27, 2003, at 6:12:34

In reply to Opioids and anxiety...?, posted by Ame Sans Vie on January 27, 2003, at 4:14:08

Okay, I don't know how Canada works, but I'm assuming they did model their drug schedules roughly around ours because we were the first to have them.

While benzos like Klonopin may be controlled, they're a far cry from an opioid. And Marinol is not an exciting drug. If you think this, you are having a placebo effect. It is an isolation of the anti-nausea properties of THC, and is very similar to ondanestron in effect. There's nothing exotic aboutt that.

Your doctor will laugh at you. I'm just trying to bring you down to Earth. Good luck with your anxiety. But why isn't Klonopin working??


> Well, in the past I've been prescribed Hycodan (Canadian formulation), propoxyphene HCl, codeine, and hydromorphone. The Hycodan (at a dose of 15mg q8hr) worked especially well-- it both relieved the anxiety, yet didn't have me throwing up all day. I'm interested in trying buprenorphine, and it shouldn't be difficult to obtain it (or hydrocodone) seeing as my pdoc already has me on Klonopin, Valium, Ativan, Xanax, and just a few days ago called in prescriptions for BuSpar and Marinol (which works incredibly well, I might add... I'd rather not be taking it though, on the basis of drug testing for when I finally get out to look for a job. I have the feeling that most employers would frown upon finding THC in your system, even if it were backed up by a Rx). Another consideration is Stadol (butorphanol) nasal spray-- anyone have any experience at all with this stuff? I've used it recreationally years ago, but that was before my disorder(s?) hit full force. TIA!
>
> --Michael

 

Re: Opioids and anxiety...?

Posted by androog on January 27, 2003, at 11:31:06

In reply to Re: Opioids and anxiety...?, posted by utopizen on January 27, 2003, at 6:12:34

Hi Everyone,

With regards to Marinol, the makers of the drug have this to say on their website:

"A cannabinoid dose-related “high” (easy laughing, elation and heightened awareness) has been reported by patients receiving Marinol in both the antiemetic (24%) and the lower dose appetite stimulant
clinical trials (8%)..."

Having been through the drug ringer, I've noticed that not everyone has the same reaction to any given drug. What might give me a boost might make someone else drowsy. That kind of thing.

So I don't think it's a stretch to believe that Ame Sans Vie (Isn't "Sans Vie" French for "without life"? Cool spooky name for a depressed person!) might experience a feeling of well-being by taking Marinol.

androog

 

Re: Opioids and anxiety...?

Posted by utopizen on January 27, 2003, at 12:04:41

In reply to Re: Opioids and anxiety...?, posted by androog on January 27, 2003, at 11:31:06

This would explain the similarities in logistical transport between Marinol and Uranium security wise.

But isn't it $40 a pill? Um, I wonder if my health insurance covers it. Must be one of those "Tier 3" drugs that cost a whopping $25 in my co-payment.


> Hi Everyone,
>
> With regards to Marinol, the makers of the drug have this to say on their website:
>
> "A cannabinoid dose-related “high” (easy laughing, elation and heightened awareness) has been reported by patients receiving Marinol in both the antiemetic (24%) and the lower dose appetite stimulant
> clinical trials (8%)..."
>
> Having been through the drug ringer, I've noticed that not everyone has the same reaction to any given drug. What might give me a boost might make someone else drowsy. That kind of thing.
>
> So I don't think it's a stretch to believe that Ame Sans Vie (Isn't "Sans Vie" French for "without life"? Cool spooky name for a depressed person!) might experience a feeling of well-being by taking Marinol.
>
> androog


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[dr. bob] Dr. Bob is Robert Hsiung, MD, [email protected]

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