View Full Version : Oxycontin
Tenor CS
05-03-2009, 05:42 AM
About once a week, I see a TV news story or article in the newspaper about how some junkie robs a pharmacy (or at least tries to) in search of Oxycontin.
In the last year, I've had oral surgery and some other surgeries, and was prescribed Oxycontin as my pain reliever.
In my experience, I don't see why this medicine is addictive.
Also, it sucks as a pain killer. It kind of sort of takes the edge off, but that's about it. Hell, for me, Advil works better.
What are these losers getting addicted to?
TRicker
05-03-2009, 05:47 AM
Must be the dosage you had. When I had it for my back, it made me float in a sky surrounded by multicolored unicorns!! Also its time released, I believe the people stealing it are grinding it and snorting it so it hits all at once and not over time.
bookman
05-03-2009, 06:01 AM
I think the kids like to shoot it for a "better" high.
dunng
05-03-2009, 06:58 AM
Must be the dosage you had. When I had it for my back, it made me float in a sky surrounded by multicolored unicorns!! Also its time released, I believe the people stealing it are grinding it and snorting it so it hits all at once and not over time.
:hm You seem to know toooo much on this subject... ;)
Tenor CS
05-03-2009, 06:58 AM
They should smoke a fine cigar and just relax!
TRicker
05-03-2009, 06:59 AM
:hm You seem to know toooo much on this subject... ;)
As many as I took before my surgery, I actually got an honorary pharmacists liscense!!
dunng
05-03-2009, 07:02 AM
And I stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night... :rolleyes:
mosesbotbol
05-03-2009, 07:20 AM
Never tried them or had the need to try them (luckily), but would like to try a few to see what the hype is about. Those who are addicted as you mention will be addicted on one thing or another. It's not so much that drug, as it is themselves. The drug is the vehicle of thier destructive ways. I know a few who have fell in a bad way to Oxy.
shilala
05-03-2009, 07:30 AM
Christian, Oxycontin is the pharmaceutical equivalent of heroin. That's why it's sought after. Like TRicker said, junkers snort it, but it delivers a better buzz when they boot it (inject it).
The scenario where problems occur runs something like this...
Drug seeker finds doctor.
Said drug seeker is taken into a "pain management contract" where he/she promises to only get pain meds from that doctor and will only get them at a specific pharmacy and agrees to be subject to random drug screens.
What generally happens is that the patient becomes emotionally and physically dependant on the drugs and manages to screw up their pain management contract in one way or another. They usually find another doctor so they can get more drugs because the dose that the doctor supplies is no longer adequate for their "needs" or they piss hot for some other drug and are thrown off the program.
Once they can no longer score the drugs, they hit the open market for heroin or oxy.
You know how you mentioned they really don't have much effect for you?
It's because opioids work not only on pain centers, they shut off the pain in the brain. A person with excruciating mental anquish will get a huge relief from opioids.
If you don't have a lot of problems and a troubled mind, they just make you sleepy and sick.
The fact that they ease a troubled mind is why they are so addictive and why people find they "need" more and more. As they get used to their initial dose, it becomes less and less effective for their emotional problems and they start "seeking", which means they're gathering more drugs to get the job done.
That's when they find themselves in a tough place because docs are very reluctant to increase dosages. It's easier for them to find another doc a couple towns over and get double the meds, or find a half dozen doctors who will fill their needs.
There's no real "network" in place for doctors or pharmacies to catch folks who are heavily addicted and get them help.
Even if they can, "help" seldom works for addicts.
It's a real tough racket.
Texan in Mexico
05-03-2009, 07:43 AM
At least now I could carry on a halfway decent conversation about Oxy.
borndead1
05-03-2009, 07:49 AM
Oxycontin??????
Oh no! I just snorted some OxyClean by mistake! :(
Not sure about the why of it, but I can tell you that I have been to quite a few dead persons that have ODd on it in the past few years.
mosesbotbol
05-03-2009, 08:05 AM
Not sure about the why of it, but I can tell you that I have been to quite a few dead persons that have ODd on it in the past few years.
Prescription drugs kill more people each year than all the "illicit drugs" combined.
kaelaria
05-03-2009, 09:46 AM
If it didn't effect you you simply didn't take enough. I had severe back problems for years (thankfully ended by a great surgeon a few years ago) and was on everything they had including experimentals. In proper dosages, until you get used to it, it works wonders. I ended my use of it at three 30mg dosages (two 15mg tablets) per day. I started at three 10mg tablets a day and every few weeks would have to bump up one level. For those with extreme pain though it's certainly a mid-range drug. Two stronger that I used that come to mind that really helped in the end were morphine injections given by my doctors, and a new at the time tablet called Opana.
uncballzer
05-03-2009, 11:55 AM
Yeah, they pretty much crush it and snort it. Shilala hit the nail on the head for the most part. Although a lot don't get into it for the pain, but more for the rush and it's usually available; they'll make up a pain story to get the meds. Here in the southern counties of WV, Lortab is the pain med of choice. Lortab 10mg goes for about $10-20 a pill, or more here. Hell, you can walk behind some houses and readily get it if you got the cash, and that's why pill counts don't work, where the doc has you bring in your pill bottles and make sure you're taking the right amount. Also, since we're not to far from the Kentucky border, they go to docs or pharmacies across the border, so the State Pharm board review will not work either, although it does pick out quite a few--a doc can go onto a website and see who got what and where and from which doctor, so that way they can see if they're seeing multiple doctors for the meds, in which case the initial doc will often fire the patient. One problem, although I consider it minor, is that doctors readily prescribe it--it's easy money and income; but there are some that refuse to give any pain medications, and those that actually need it (if they're a patient of the stubborn doc) are often in unnecessary pain that the drug is actually intended to treat! Methadone is a good drug, and it's got a long long half-life and duration of action, so that's why it's used for rehab, it allows you to taper down the dose without sending the patient into seizures from withdraw. Something else to treat, Vivitrol is a naltraxone shot, once monthly. It's currently indicated only for alcohol although it is an opioid antagonist, but they're trying to get the FDA to give the OK for opioids--it works great, because no matter how much you take, you won't feel the effects of it (although I'm not sure about the metabolic effects, if it can still harm you if you take too much, which I'm pretty sure it may--especially if you're doing lortab, vicodin, percocet, lorcet, or any of them with acetamenophen in them--too much of that (ie tylenol) and you lose your liver and life).
Here's another interesting fact, opioids and benzodiazepens often go hand in hand, but more commonly it's with xanax, valium, klonopin, and ativan. Klonopin has mood stabilization effects, so it's good for bipolars with anxiety; valium has muscle relaxation properties, so great for muscle spasms with your pain; xanax, however, is the only one that also hits the side of the receptor that alcohol interacts with (alcohol, benzo's, phenytoin/dilantin, and a couple other drugs all hit the same receptor, just different parts of hit; so xanax hit's both it's side and the alcohol's side), thus you get more request for xanax. And it's addictive because of the short half-life/duration (4 hrs) compared to ativan/klonopin/valium (12-24+ hrs), so you have to keep taking it to get the effects to continue. That's when the tolerance comes in because you have to keep taking it more often.
Lets see now, any thing else want to know?
Christian, Oxycontin is the pharmaceutical equivalent of heroin. That's why it's sought after. Like TRicker said, junkers snort it, but it delivers a better buzz when they boot it (inject it).
The scenario where problems occur runs something like this...
Drug seeker finds doctor.
Said drug seeker is taken into a "pain management contract" where he/she promises to only get pain meds from that doctor and will only get them at a specific pharmacy and agrees to be subject to random drug screens.
What generally happens is that the patient becomes emotionally and physically dependant on the drugs and manages to screw up their pain management contract in one way or another. They usually find another doctor so they can get more drugs because the dose that the doctor supplies is no longer adequate for their "needs" or they piss hot for some other drug and are thrown off the program.
Once they can no longer score the drugs, they hit the open market for heroin or oxy.
You know how you mentioned they really don't have much effect for you?
It's because opioids work not only on pain centers, they shut off the pain in the brain. A person with excruciating mental anquish will get a huge relief from opioids.
If you don't have a lot of problems and a troubled mind, they just make you sleepy and sick.
The fact that they ease a troubled mind is why they are so addictive and why people find they "need" more and more. As they get used to their initial dose, it becomes less and less effective for their emotional problems and they start "seeking", which means they're gathering more drugs to get the job done.
That's when they find themselves in a tough place because docs are very reluctant to increase dosages. It's easier for them to find another doc a couple towns over and get double the meds, or find a half dozen doctors who will fill their needs.
There's no real "network" in place for doctors or pharmacies to catch folks who are heavily addicted and get them help.
Even if they can, "help" seldom works for addicts.
It's a real tough racket.
Darrell
05-03-2009, 11:58 AM
I pop a couple of these, drink a beer and let the good times roll. It's like living in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.
I made that up, they gave me this after my knee surgery it made me feel worse than before I took it.
shilala
05-03-2009, 01:17 PM
One other thing, Christian. It's highly unlikely you were prescribed Oxycontin for the oral surgeries. It was most likely Oxycodone (Percocet).
It's easy to get the two mixed up, they sound the same and folks don't normally know the difference (nor should they, really).
I don't think there's a dentist or oral surgeon in the world who prescribes Oxycontin. It'd be crazy, and it'd be very irresponsible of the physician. Oxycontin is very stigmatized because of all the press it gets and most docs shudder just to hear the word because of all the negativity that surrounds it. It's also indicated for more severe situations, more chronic or severe pain.
Percocet is what the emergency room sends everyone home with when they get hurt. It's what dentists regularly prescribe for pain or post-procedure. 5/500's are the norm. That's 5mg of Oxycodone and 500mg of tylenol.
Don Fernando
05-03-2009, 01:18 PM
:hm You seem to know toooo much on this subject... ;)
maybe its what Tim uses to tollerate the other Massholes?
Tenor CS
05-03-2009, 02:35 PM
One other thing, Christian. It's highly unlikely you were prescribed Oxycontin for the oral surgeries. It was most likely Oxycodone (Percocet).
You're right, Scott. The stuff I got post root canal was Oxycodone. It gave me terrible headaches, right where the top of my neck meets my skull. It was awful. I also got very dizzy. I hated it.
However, I definitely had Oxycontin after my most recent surgeries.The real kick in the teeth is that I think I will need further surgery, and this Oxycontin didn't do jack squat to alleviate my pain.
GreekGodX
05-03-2009, 02:38 PM
This is a great convo! Considering Oxycontin is about 2x stronger then morphine at my work you hear lots of patients being "allergic" to non-opiate drugs. They say this just so the doc will order they get oxycontin or some kind of other meds that are opiate based.
DPD6030
05-04-2009, 12:48 PM
The Doc. gave me some of the percocet mixed with tylenol and it sure made me loopy. Great stuff.
The real kick in the teeth is that I think I will need further surgery, and this Oxycontin didn't do jack squat to alleviate my pain.
As long as you let them know up front, they can probably find another similar-classed drug that will help. My wife went through most of them due to a car accident, and they all were different in their own ways (in terms of effectiveness, and side effects).
GrtndpwrflOZ
05-04-2009, 01:20 PM
About once a week, I see a TV news story or article in the newspaper about how some junkie robs a pharmacy (or at least tries to) in search of Oxycontin.
In the last year, I've had oral surgery and some other surgeries, and was prescribed Oxycontin as my pain reliever.
In my experience, I don't see why this medicine is addictive.
Also, it sucks as a pain killer. It kind of sort of takes the edge off, but that's about it. Hell, for me, Advil works better.
What are these losers getting addicted to?
If I may ask, are you equating addiction with losers?
Or
Are you equating robbers with losers?
Scottw
05-04-2009, 01:29 PM
I was prescribed OXY's after major shoulder surgery and the mistakenly gave my wife two prescriptions of it instead of one and also gave me percocet. I loved every minute of that next 6 weeks although being constantly f'ed up was tough when I had to try to deal with going to doctors and helping the wife out around the house, etc.
MithShrike
05-04-2009, 01:34 PM
I went through an addiction of that crap and would rather go the less than legal route of another smokable than ever touch pain killers again. It's not just a mental addiction but also physical, I happen to be one of those people particularly susceptible to opiate/opioids. Also those can cause rebound pain, especially for patients with migraines or other vascular headaches so it becomes a vicious cycle.
Scottw
05-04-2009, 01:36 PM
I went through an addiction of that crap and would rather go the less than legal route of another smokable than ever touch pain killers again. It's not just a mental addiction but also physical, I happen to be one of those people particularly susceptible to opiate/opioids. Also those can cause rebound pain, especially for patients with migraines or other vascular headaches so it becomes a vicious cycle.
I love me the smokeables too!:ss
bookman
05-05-2009, 07:00 AM
I'm addicted to makin sweet, sweet love to my ol lady! And i dont need no perscription for that!!!
replicant_argent
05-05-2009, 07:18 AM
Never tried them or had the need to try them (luckily), but would like to try a few to see what the hype is about. Those who are addicted as you mention will be addicted on one thing or another. It's not so much that drug, as it is themselves. The drug is the vehicle of thier destructive ways. I know a few who have fell in a bad way to Oxy.
:rolleyes:
We certainly are a diverse bunch here.
lightning9191
05-05-2009, 10:24 AM
I'm addicted to makin sweet, sweet love to my ol lady! And i dont need no perscription for that!!!
Um...thanx for sharing:rolleyes: I think?
mosesbotbol
05-05-2009, 10:31 AM
This is a great convo! Considering Oxycontin is about 2x stronger then morphine at my work you hear lots of patients being "allergic" to non-opiate drugs. They say this just so the doc will order they get oxycontin or some kind of other meds that are opiate based.
That's funny. I had a morphine injection after I herniated a disk a few year ago. I was in lala land for like an hour or two; can only imagine for Oxy would be like then...
Wanger
05-05-2009, 10:35 AM
Regarding the crushability of the tablets...some companies (like the one I work for) are working on technology that would eliminate the ability to crush the tablets to get more drug into their systems faster. Additionally, this technology shows increased resistance to alcohol, as well. I wish I could tell you more about them, but things are on the horizon that will be used in conjunction with medications like this. :)
That being said, I hate working with these active ingredients. First, there is the two person rule whenever you have them out (as they are all controlled substances) and then there is the increased attention to getting dosed wth it. If the material is a fine and light, then we wear masks, so as not to get dosed by inhalation. I got dosed with a controlled substance one time like that (the active ingredient in an anti anxiety med) and slept for like 13 hours. LOL VERY relaxed.
I haven't taken basically any meds like these, thankfully, so the only experience I can give is what I know about through the media and work.
kayak_rat
05-05-2009, 11:32 AM
Interesting input Wanger. The other issue that comes about is the homemade variety. I remember these going around Nw Arkansas when I was a kid. I dont know the actual ingredients, but know it caused alot of problems. Some poeple were getting pretty close to the real stuff while others were getting a mix of different pills. Basically a prescription cocktail. It is very sad.
Genetic Defect
05-05-2009, 11:36 AM
is a box pass starting?
MedicCook
05-05-2009, 12:00 PM
It is just like any other pain med that over constant use the body/mind need to keep a baseline to function. Also using it with alcohol creates a bigger high for people.
is a box pass starting?
:r
Smokin Gator
05-05-2009, 12:08 PM
I haven't taken anything like this for years and am glad. I can promise I would like it so it is best to stay away.
This surely dates me... but the last prescription drug I did and really fell for was the old Rorer 714 'ludes. Now that was a buzz!!!
St. Lou Stu
05-05-2009, 12:13 PM
is a box pass starting?
Oh, Oh, Oh..... Perry is here!:r
Genetic Defect
05-05-2009, 12:31 PM
Oh, Oh, Oh..... Perry is here!:r
do we start a new thread? :wo
BC-Axeman
05-05-2009, 12:35 PM
They keep me awake at night and just dull the pain. They also make me constipated. Now the injected morphine they would put in the IV worked great.
Genetic Defect
05-05-2009, 01:12 PM
IV morphine does nothing for me
St. Lou Stu
05-05-2009, 01:47 PM
They keep me awake at night and just dull the pain. They also make me constipated. Now the injected morphine they would put in the IV worked great.
That'd be horrible.... to have to **** so bad it hurts.... but ya can't feel it? :confused:
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