I did a search for the morphine bio-availability thread, and this showed up first. Links to a larger thread would be appreciated.
FYI-Getting high is not my prerogative. I am not opposed to catching a pleasant buzz, but my objective is to be pain free enough to function until my surgery, assuming it will be effective.
My doctor who is taking over my case is on an unexpected leave of absence, putting me in an awkward position. I am forced to find alternatives for the next few weeks, which is why I am asking for the purpose of harm reduction how I can make supplies stretch. Supplies are limited and I dont IV.
My question is this....and feel free to direct me to a better thread....Does the ROA matter with the form of morphine?
I may have access to a bottle of liquid morphine, 20mg per ml. My normal BREAKTRHOUGH pain medication is 30mg roxicodone oral. Sometimes I just use 15 + 15MS Contin if the pain isnt bad.
MSContin does not hit fast enough orally for acute pain, but I may have access to liquid morphine IR to tide me over until I see a pain specialist....MSContin also makes me groggy and fall asleep rather than euphoric....I dont NEED euphoria, but I do need to be awake. I noticed IR and IV opiates dont put me to sleep as easily, and I wonder if its because of where its absorbed....maybe if it hits the liver first I am getting more morphine metabolites, rather than morphine straight to the brain....or maybe its some kind of effect on the para-sympathetic nervous system, like hot eating marijuana feels very different from smoking it....
Anyway, the dosage is 20mg per ml. I normally use either 15mg MSContin + 15 to 30mg oxycodone for acute pain, but I have a lot of tolerance specifically to oxycodone.
I have MSContin, but I am trying to replace only the fast acting for acute pain. I am not looking to get wasted, I am just trying to make supplies last until I can get in with the new doctor.
If you close this thread, a link would be appreciated.
The goal is to make supplies LAST the longest, so I am going for duration rather than for the highest acute blood levels.