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What prescriptions are you Rx'ed?

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#60 Adderall XR 10mg per month

Take it days that I need an extra kick for work/class. Not a huge fan of stims
 
Lodixal 240mg 1/day (high blood pressure/elevated heartrate)
Uni-Tranxene 15mg as needed (my main anti-anxiety med)
Alprazolam .5mg as needed (1x .5mg is enough for me for the day)
Xanax Retard (extended release) 1mg as needed (merely a try out if it suited me better than the Uni-Tranxene, but it doesn't)
Epsipam 50mg as needed (for neck and back spasms)
Ceterizine 10mg as needed (for allergies)

I have been RX'd all kinds of AD's in the past but I overreact to them so my psych dr has opted to give me benzo's to take as needed. To just give a little indication how my usage is, I easily do 3-4 months on a #30 refill of Uni-Tranxene. My last refill of #50 Alprazolam is nearly a year old and is only halfway. Just having this medication to take when I need it already gives me some kind of reassurance. When I'm having a period of higher anxiety I take a few more and the Epsipam is to then manage the tension in my neck and back muscles.
 
Are opioids ever Rx'ed for self-administered IV route? Just curious as I see people talking about getting ampouls of stuff...
 
They are, but most likely wouldn't be given to young adults due to the high abuse potential and the inconvience of having to use/have needles when you are your trying to live a functional life. Most likely they are scripted to middle-age and older people in serious pain who need relief around the clock from terminal diseases.
 
I wasn't asking because I want to be Rx'ed them...I hope I'm never in so much pain that a doctor tells me to shoot up...I was just asking out of curiosity...Most likely though I will end up in that much pain unless I go under the knife...I'm 20 and I'm already on max tramadol, max flexeril, and about to be max gabapentin and my pain still is undertreated...
 
I never implied you did. I was just answering your question. IMO it just doesn't seem to make to much since to give a younger chronic pain patient IV medication. which is why I said what I said. If someone is going to be on pain medication for years and years, IV medication would blow up their tolerance making pain harder to deal with as they get older.
 
I take:

Adderall IR 20mg twice daily - ADHD
Ativan 1mg daily - anxiety
Pulmicort Flexhaler - asthma
ProAir HFA - asthma (rescue inhaler)
Desogen - birth control

I also add 3mgs melatonin if my insomnia is especially bad.
 
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Clonazepam 0,5-1mg/1-2x per day
Temazepam 20mg nightly as required (usually not, get by with my other meds plus alcohol and weed)
Alprazolam 0,5mg/1-3x per day for crippling acute panic attacks not prevented by Clonazepam
 
There is a lot of bs on here.

not anymore. they are cracking down.

Perplexed by this, as well. Are you implying they are cracking down on doling out prescriptions? Because, they're most certainly not.

Anyway, do you guys think prescriptions were so commonly RXed 15-30 years ago, as they are today? Or, are we really Generation RX? It's kind of sad, no? I have my fair share of prescriptions, too.

Cheers
 
Current daily meds:

Sertraline, 50mg for social anxiety. I don't get the nasty side effects, and it is nice to be able to go to the store alone.
Diazepam, 20mg for general anxiety and insomnia; up to 100mg/day if I'm having stomach and esophagus spasms.
Omeprazole, 20mg for chronic acid reflux; 80mg/day during a vomiting cycle.
Ondansetron, 8mg ODT to control vomiting.
Quinapril, 40mg for blood pressure during a vomiting cycle. They wanted to give me beta blockers too, but those are scary.
Dronabinol, 10mg to control vomiting and bring back my appetite after a vomiting cycle.
Albuterol, 90mcg/puff for chronic bronchitis. Why are cigarettes so soothing and delicious?
Alprazolam, 1mg IR, as needed, as a fast-acting "anxiety inhaler." They had me on 3mx XR, but I wanted to remember again.
Tussionex, as needed for chronic bronchitis.

In my case it is Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome, which means I get to randomly puke my guts out for three days every two weeks or so. Fun times, especially when it is a complete crap-shoot as to which nausea med will help at a given time, and even the 100mcg/hr fentanyl patches can not stop the kidney pain.

wow, i just read up on CVS and it sounds awful. Like a curse, and they have no idea what causes it. I have a fear of vomitting, and I swear if I had CVS i'd probably kill myself lol :/
 
no. not in the sense of a person "shooting up" the med... that's not even how we do it in hospitals. for any IV push to occur, you have to start a line with an IV catheter. that is, no hypodermic needle would be delivering the medication. that is something that takes training. RNs can do it and LPNs can be certified, but even then, only RNs are certified to push narcotics, hang IV fluids/blood products, etc.

There are people, mainly with cancer in which a reservior is surgically implanted beneath the skin in fatty tissue and either fed into a vein or, more commonly, into the epidura space of the spinal canal. The doctor fills it with high-potency narcotics... sufentanil, fentanyl, Dilaudid HP 100mg/mL (i believe). things like that. the person just pushes a button to "self-administer" or essentially "shoot up", but no doctor would hand a patient vials of morphine or dilaudid and syringes and say "have a good day!" the machine will not allow the person to overdose. it is constantly feeds information back where the physician can monitor it. The doctor "refills" it by injecting more of the narcotic into the reservior when it runs out. But these are not common, though they are starting to be used more for non-malignant pain than they had previously.

Unless I am wrong in going by everything I've ever seen... I just cannot imagine a doctor prescribing IV opiates to send home with a patient. Even patients with Mediports have home health nurses that must come by to administer certain meds. I wouldn't even think a doctor would prescribe an IM injection for pain unless it were in a clinic, hospital, or nursing home.

Update/In a 24 hour period.


125 mg Sertraline
60 mg Dextroamphetamine
6 mg Bromazepam
30 mg Temazepam
7.5 mg Zopiclone

it's nice to see other countries still use dexedrine as a mainstay stimulant. with the intro of adderall... that just about threw everything else off the market other than the methylphendiates. still have plenty of ritalin and now focalin, the "cleaned up version" of ritalin. i am on dexedrine spansules but they are so hard to find! a perfectly effective drug is rendered taboo notwithstanding the therapeutic effects because of prescribing practices in the 50s and 60s... Valium... chloral hydrate... dexedrine... almost all the barbiturates (although the benzos ARE much safer). but then BIG PHARMACEUTICAL comes out with vyvanse... nothing more than dexedrine that's gotta make it to your liver to BECOME d-amph. now i swallow mine. and don't want it any other way. and as much as vyvanse may be touted to curb abuse, i am NOT paying the ridiculous prices when dexedrine is old, cheap, and more effective! also get chloral hydrate in a compounded medication. VERY good at what it does. again, don't just take it to feel nice and floaty. but otherwise i don't sleep... keep the ones that have stood the test of time around is all i can say.
 
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No your wrong haha, i like how many people have not noticed what it is saying, he gets 210 30mg pills a month, which would be almost 120mg a day not 210mg, which isn't super high i have known people prescribed three 80mg oc a day

but im on
3x10mg valiums a day for anxiety
3x10mg ir adderall for ADD
2x10-325 hydrocodones for chronic elbow pain
2x50mg tramadol for chronic elbow pain
3x300mg nuerotin for nerve pain

Your math is the math that is off. He gets 210 30mg pills for 30 days 7 times 30 =210 meaning he can take 7 30 mg pills a day. That is indeed 210mg a day of oxycodone. How do you figure it is only 120mg per day?
 
Methylphenidate, 20mg, 4x per day, ADHD
Xanax, 1mg, for sleep &occasional anxiety
Fentanyl Transdermal System, 100mcg, changed every 48 hours
Oxycodone IR, 30mg, 2 every 4 hours, breakthrough pain

Someone early in the thread asked us (if we're comfortable doing so) to say what the meds are prescribed for, SO...
To make a long story short, the pain meds are for endometriosis that was made worse by a mistake (to put it nicely) during surgery .
 
I'm jealous of alot of mutherfuckers in here i dont get shit. thinkin about tryin to get some amphetamines that shoulnt be too hard.

Without treading into sourcing territory, I will say that amphetamines and benzodiazepines are some of the easiest prescriptions to get from doctors; they're very much over-prescribed... and it's easy to see why. "Do you have trouble focusing?" Amphetamines. "Do you sometimes feel anxious or suffer from panic attacks?" Benzos.

I know that I can always get these two prescriptions from my doctor at any time, and I would if my interest in amphetamines and benzos was ever re-sparked.
 
Without treading into sourcing territory, I will say that amphetamines and benzodiazepines are some of the easiest prescriptions to get from doctors; they're very much over-prescribed... and it's easy to see why. "Do you have trouble focusing?" Amphetamines. "Do you sometimes feel anxious or suffer from panic attacks?" Benzos.

I know that I can always get these two prescriptions from my doctor at any time, and I would if my interest in amphetamines and benzos was ever re-sparked.

This. They're the easiest drugs to come by. Doctors prescribe these drugs like skittles..

Cheers
 
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