RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (Full Version)

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dollparts85 -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/10/2014 9:45:05 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyConstanze

This might sound really really disgusting, but have you considered medical leeches?

I treated the severe arthritis of my dog with it (it's an approved method for human arthritis) and after seeing how pain free she was, thought "Why not try it on my back?"

Can't do it on your own, it's fiddly and yeah, takes some getting used to, but it helps a lot for backpain, I had shots before (which worried me as they contain morphine), quite good results with acupuncture but that never lasted very long. I regularly fly long distances (UK to the West Coast of the US), so that's 18 hours flight and ages lugging luggage through airports, etc. I usually have the leeches applied 2 days before I fly (to give it a chance to scab up, wouldn't want to freak out the nice people at the border) and I'm pain free to bearable pain for something between 3 to 5 months. I had a few accidents with injuries to the spine, and did a lot of things in my misspent use that aren't really fantastic for disks, hence a few herniated ones.

You really do need medical leeches for it, not just jumping into any leech infested swamp, that are bred under almost sterile conditions and have never ever fed on anybody else, as that would be very risky.

You can't use it if you're on blood thinners or have clotting problems, so definitely check that with your doctor before. If the idea doesn't gross you out completely, you might find that it gives you great pain relief.

I have slowed clotting problem. But I'd be willing to try it if given the chance. I'd try most anything at this point.




dollparts85 -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/11/2014 9:56:22 AM)

Finally got my MRI results...

At L4-5, there are mild degenerative facet joint changes bilaterally
and small facet joint effusions. Mildly decreased T2 disc signal is
compatible with degenerative disc change.

At the L5 vertebral body level, there is high T2 signal marrow edema
within the pedicle and pars regions bilaterally. There are also
findings compatible with a right-sided pars defect and likely a
left-sided pars defect as well.


...what doesn't make sense to me is that in Aug when the doctor came into my appointment and started talking about the surgery, I hadn't had an MRI or anything done since 2011 which didn't show anything wrong with my facet joints. He ordered a pre op CT scan which says "facet joints appear well maintained" then he does surgery on my facet joints and now it's saying degenerative changes? I'm going to be talking to the neurosurgeon next week...but I'm pretty sure this pain clinic doctor (not even a neurosurgeon! Shouldn't be doing surgery on people.) shouldn't be practicing...I'm just really made at myself. I should have done more research and demanded more information...instead of just trusting him.




LafayetteLady -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/11/2014 1:12:56 PM)

LC,

As much pain as I'm in daily, just thinking about leeches starts a panic attack!




dollparts85 -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/11/2014 1:30:07 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: LafayetteLady

LC,

As much pain as I'm in daily, just thinking about leeches starts a panic attack!

It's supposed to not be painful, from my understanding. Releases endorphines and such. Just gross.




angelikaJ -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/11/2014 3:49:14 PM)

Why do you think that the pain clinic Doc shouldn't be practicing?




dollparts85 -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/11/2014 3:50:57 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: angelikaJ

Why do you think that the pain clinic Doc shouldn't be practicing?

B/c he did surgery on my facet joints when there was nothing wrong with them.




angelikaJ -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/11/2014 3:55:27 PM)

The pain clinic doc was the surgeon?

You had your back surgery done by a non-neuro surgeon?
Pray tell, why on earth would you choose to do that?
Was he even board certified?


And did you have him explain the CT scan prior to surgery?
What did he say at the time that justified the surgery?
(And why did your insurance company allow it?)




dollparts85 -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/11/2014 4:31:27 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: angelikaJ

The pain clinic doc was the surgeon?

You had your back surgery done by a non-neuro surgeon?
Pray tell, why on earth would you choose to do that?
Was he even board certified?


And did you have him explain the CT scan prior to surgery?
What did he say at the time that justified the surgery?
(And why did your insurance company allow it?)

Yes, the pain clinic doctor did the surgery. Apparently there are only roughly 600 pain clinic doctors trained to do this surgery in the world.

I didn't see the CT scan results until after the surgery. It was all very fast...I had one appointment with him where he brought up the surgery out of no where having never mentioned surgery before. Said he really thought that it would help my pain and that he's had a lot of success with other patients and that they felt better within days post OP. Then I did the EKG, the CT scan and saw my PCP who cleared me for general anesthesia...and then I had the surgery.

Insurance paid $38,000 for a surgery that I was in and out of the hospital within a couple hours...as soon as my vitals were clear after waking up from the general anesthesia, they sent me home.




LeatherBentOne51 -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/11/2014 4:42:45 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: DarkSteven

Well, the obvious question is, why are you still on pain if the surgery ws in September? Something's wrong.

This isn't exactly what you want, but a flogging (NOT on the back!) might ease things for a bit.



Yes, pain in a different area can do the trick. It will deflect the "bad" pain and allow you to concentrate on the "good" pain once the endorphins start flowing. Much can be said for the body's natural morphine.




LadyConstanze -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/11/2014 5:16:42 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: LafayetteLady

LC,

As much pain as I'm in daily, just thinking about leeches starts a panic attack!


It's a bit gross, but to be honest, I am getting more freaked out by morphine shots and possible addiction than having leeches on my back, where I don't even see them, my other half is oddly fascinated by them, I watched them when we treated my dog. Took me a while to come round to them, but back pain from previous spinal injuries and herniated disks can be crippling, if you're regularly doing long distance flights in cramped airplane seats, it makes the situation worse, I was first the same with "Ewww, no way" but after over a week not getting much sleep, waking up after a light snooze because the pain was like somebody jabbing knives into my spine, I just went "Yeah gross, but I honestly will try anything, I can't sit, stand, lay down, I haven't had a decent night's sleep in days, being still hurts, moving hurts..."

By now I have named the leeches and I'm so freaking grateful to them, I can't stand the idea of having them killed, if they're reused on the same person again, there is no risk of infection, so Vampy, Vlad, Dracul and the rest feed regularly on me (I need them about every 4 to 6 months, they are ready to feed about every 6 to 9 months), I am pain free and can move. Doggie girl has her own leeches and is arthritis free.

Seriously, if it comes down to horrendous pain, morphine and possible addiction and being a bit grossed out, I take grossed out and a normal life. I can't tell you how grateful I am for the little bloodsuckers, I even admire the odd patterns they have on their backs now. If you would have asked me before I read all the research, I also might have gone into panic attack mode. Let me put it this way, having a root canal done is pretty scary and freaks people out, unless they have an infected root canal and just want the pain to stop....




windchymes -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/11/2014 5:24:41 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyConstanze


quote:

ORIGINAL: LafayetteLady

LC,

As much pain as I'm in daily, just thinking about leeches starts a panic attack!


It's a bit gross, but to be honest, I am getting more freaked out by morphine shots and possible addiction than having leeches on my back, where I don't even see them, my other half is oddly fascinated by them, I watched them when we treated my dog. Took me a while to come round to them, but back pain from previous spinal injuries and herniated disks can be crippling, if you're regularly doing long distance flights in cramped airplane seats, it makes the situation worse, I was first the same with "Ewww, no way" but after over a week not getting much sleep, waking up after a light snooze because the pain was like somebody jabbing knives into my spine, I just went "Yeah gross, but I honestly will try anything, I can't sit, stand, lay down, I haven't had a decent night's sleep in days, being still hurts, moving hurts..."

By now I have named the leeches and I'm so freaking grateful to them, I can't stand the idea of having them killed, if they're reused on the same person again, there is no risk of infection, so Vampy, Vlad, Dracul and the rest feed regularly on me (I need them about every 4 to 6 months, they are ready to feed about every 6 to 9 months), I am pain free and can move. Doggie girl has her own leeches and is arthritis free.

Seriously, if it comes down to horrendous pain, morphine and possible addiction and being a bit grossed out, I take grossed out and a normal life. I can't tell you how grateful I am for the little bloodsuckers, I even admire the odd patterns they have on their backs now. If you would have asked me before I read all the research, I also might have gone into panic attack mode. Let me put it this way, having a root canal done is pretty scary and freaks people out, unless they have an infected root canal and just want the pain to stop....


That is just amazing. Squicky as hell, but amazing, lol.




dollparts85 -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/11/2014 5:30:59 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyConstanze


quote:

ORIGINAL: LafayetteLady

LC,

As much pain as I'm in daily, just thinking about leeches starts a panic attack!


It's a bit gross, but to be honest, I am getting more freaked out by morphine shots and possible addiction than having leeches on my back, where I don't even see them, my other half is oddly fascinated by them, I watched them when we treated my dog. Took me a while to come round to them, but back pain from previous spinal injuries and herniated disks can be crippling, if you're regularly doing long distance flights in cramped airplane seats, it makes the situation worse, I was first the same with "Ewww, no way" but after over a week not getting much sleep, waking up after a light snooze because the pain was like somebody jabbing knives into my spine, I just went "Yeah gross, but I honestly will try anything, I can't sit, stand, lay down, I haven't had a decent night's sleep in days, being still hurts, moving hurts..."

By now I have named the leeches and I'm so freaking grateful to them, I can't stand the idea of having them killed, if they're reused on the same person again, there is no risk of infection, so Vampy, Vlad, Dracul and the rest feed regularly on me (I need them about every 4 to 6 months, they are ready to feed about every 6 to 9 months), I am pain free and can move. Doggie girl has her own leeches and is arthritis free.

Seriously, if it comes down to horrendous pain, morphine and possible addiction and being a bit grossed out, I take grossed out and a normal life. I can't tell you how grateful I am for the little bloodsuckers, I even admire the odd patterns they have on their backs now. If you would have asked me before I read all the research, I also might have gone into panic attack mode. Let me put it this way, having a root canal done is pretty scary and freaks people out, unless they have an infected root canal and just want the pain to stop....

How long do they live?




LadyConstanze -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/11/2014 5:34:58 PM)

I'm due another treatment and it's not so painful (a bit uncomfy and itchy when they bite, lesser than being bitten by a horsefly and that's me being slightly allergic), but I am still drawing it out because, yeah, it's squicky, however my sleep patterns are getting worse, my exercises are getting shorter, playing with the Dobies gets a bit more difficult, I know it's just me being a bit "I don't want to do it, I know I have to but just not now..." At the same time having taken blood is pretty icky, I still do it (and faint faithfully), I know i'm just acting like a big girl's blouse, if I would need it every week or month, I'd possibly be really used to it and over it and it would just be normal, but because the results last so long, I tend to try and avoid it a bit, almost like the regular dentist visit (I faithfully go every 3 months but I make it 3 months and a week, because I can....)




LadyConstanze -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/11/2014 5:49:31 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: dollparts85

How long do they live?


You lose some because they overeat (literally) and those aren't always the largest one, basically once they fall off (which they do by themselves when they are full) you put them into a jar with filtered water, the first 10 days you change the water regularly, britta filtered water or spring water works fine, as the first 10 days they metabolize like crazy and what they can't digest gets released into the water. A big jar like a gerkin jar works fine (cleaned of course and thoroughly rinsed as they are super sensitive to chemical residue and chlorine in the water) and some cheese cloth on top of it, secured with a rubber band as they like to crawl about and tend to get through even small air holes (but do need oxygen). We have some from when we treated the doggies arthritis first, which is now 4 or 5 years ago (we make sure to label them so they are only used for the same animal or human, so nobody can be contaminated) and they seem to be fine. I really don't know how long they can actually live, never googled that, and they're not quite like pets that are affectionate, they seem to like my blood and I like that they give me a risk free pain killer.

If you do have a physican that is open to alternative treatment, talk to him about risk assessment, especially if you have clotting problems, and if you order the leeches, order them from a reputable firm where they are grown and raised in as sterile an environment as possible. I was bothering the company with a bunch of questions, like what the feed on before they are send out and stuff, and they told me that they get blood from an abattoir that is checked out by a vet and a human blood specialist for anything pathologic and they get it via a special feeding device that mimics an organism, which is one of the major expenses in raising them, I rather pay about $10 for one and have that security than pay half of it and get all sorts of nasties, though I doubt that any breeder would be stupid enough to run that risk, I still prefer to rely on the breeders who also supply hospitals and are checked out by them, I'm a bit paranoid that way.




dollparts85 -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/11/2014 5:53:52 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyConstanze


quote:

ORIGINAL: dollparts85

How long do they live?


You lose some because they overeat (literally) and those aren't always the largest one, basically once they fall off (which they do by themselves when they are full) you put them into a jar with filtered water, the first 10 days you change the water regularly, britta filtered water or spring water works fine, as the first 10 days they metabolize like crazy and what they can't digest gets released into the water. A big jar like a gerkin jar works fine (cleaned of course and thoroughly rinsed as they are super sensitive to chemical residue and chlorine in the water) and some cheese cloth on top of it, secured with a rubber band as they like to crawl about and tend to get through even small air holes (but do need oxygen). We have some from when we treated the doggies arthritis first, which is now 4 or 5 years ago (we make sure to label them so they are only used for the same animal or human, so nobody can be contaminated) and they seem to be fine. I really don't know how long they can actually live, never googled that, and they're not quite like pets that are affectionate, they seem to like my blood and I like that they give me a risk free pain killer.

If you do have a physican that is open to alternative treatment, talk to him about risk assessment, especially if you have clotting problems, and if you order the leeches, order them from a reputable firm where they are grown and raised in as sterile an environment as possible. I was bothering the company with a bunch of questions, like what the feed on before they are send out and stuff, and they told me that they get blood from an abattoir that is checked out by a vet and a human blood specialist for anything pathologic and they get it via a special feeding device that mimics an organism, which is one of the major expenses in raising them, I rather pay about $10 for one and have that security than pay half of it and get all sorts of nasties, though I doubt that any breeder would be stupid enough to run that risk, I still prefer to rely on the breeders who also supply hospitals and are checked out by them, I'm a bit paranoid that way.

I emailed the contact on the website you gave me...would I be able to buy them directly from them without a prescription or anything or does it have to be a doctor ordering it?




LadyConstanze -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/11/2014 6:07:13 PM)

I could order them directly but they told me to speak to my vet (when I ordered them for doggie) and much later when I said I want to use them, they suggested that I speak to my GP first, regarding blood thinners, allergies, etc. I did and since I had nothing that would speak against it, I signed a form that I was told to speak to my GP and got them sent. The first application was actually made by my Chinese acupuncturist, who wasn't at all surprised and told me that they have used them for centuries, he never brought it up because he thought I would have the typical Western reaction of "EEEEK, how horrible and medieval"




LadyConstanze -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/11/2014 6:22:35 PM)

I would like to add, certainly not a cure all, just seem to work very well for pain management and/or arthritis due to the pain killer and anti-inflammatory they release into the bite with the anticoagulant, however, it is really important to check contra-indications, like an impaired immune system that might lead to an allergic reaction/infection, the use of blood thinners and all that. I wouldn't apply them randomly for anything like they did in the middle ages, but always discuss it with a doctor first who's open to new approaches or holistic treatment. It's simply a possibility some people might want to consider who are in chronic back pain, but again, controlled environment, making sure there are no contra-indications and have somebody around in case something goes wrong, might work for thousands, one person can be the rare exception who is allergic.




dollparts85 -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/11/2014 6:24:42 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyConstanze

I could order them directly but they told me to speak to my vet (when I ordered them for doggie) and much later when I said I want to use them, they suggested that I speak to my GP first, regarding blood thinners, allergies, etc. I did and since I had nothing that would speak against it, I signed a form that I was told to speak to my GP and got them sent. The first application was actually made by my Chinese acupuncturist, who wasn't at all surprised and told me that they have used them for centuries, he never brought it up because he thought I would have the typical Western reaction of "EEEEK, how horrible and medieval"

Awesome. I will mention it to my doctor but I doubt she'd be opposed to it. The harder sell will be to the boyfriend...LOL he might think it's too gross. LOL We will see. I really want to try. I hope they email me back soon.




LafayetteLady -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/12/2014 8:32:28 AM)

LC,

I'm in constant pain, but the anxiety attack isn't worth it. I tried acupuncture, but had to make her stop because I had an anxiety attack.

I've had shots in my back. They didn't help, but I know they didn't have morphine in them either.

Dollparts,

So you got back surgery, something very serious without even thinking about a second opinion and now blame the doctor? Neurosurgeons are not the only ones qualifed for spinal surgery. Orthopedic surgeons can be and there are also surgeons who only do spinal surgery.

Regardless, blaming the doctor for your back troubles is kind of ridiculous unless you take responsibility for the fact that you didn't do your homework on the issue with questions and a second opinion.




dollparts85 -> RE: Natural/OTC ways to treat severe pain? (2/12/2014 12:40:33 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: LafayetteLady

LC,

I'm in constant pain, but the anxiety attack isn't worth it. I tried acupuncture, but had to make her stop because I had an anxiety attack.

I've had shots in my back. They didn't help, but I know they didn't have morphine in them either.

Dollparts,

So you got back surgery, something very serious without even thinking about a second opinion and now blame the doctor? Neurosurgeons are not the only ones qualifed for spinal surgery. Orthopedic surgeons can be and there are also surgeons who only do spinal surgery.

Regardless, blaming the doctor for your back troubles is kind of ridiculous unless you take responsibility for the fact that you didn't do your homework on the issue with questions and a second opinion.

The doctor told me that I shouldn't look at any info on the internet except the official site b/c there is a lot of false info on the internet...and then my boyfriend and my family and my therapist all said that I need to trust the doctor and let him help me...and that I was just being my normal paranoid self...I've been trying so hard to be "normal" with the worrying excessively about stupid shit...

He isn't a surgeon at all...this is what his profile says: Specialties
Pain Medicine
Board Certifications
Pain Medicine, 2002
Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, 2001




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