I've searched the archives, but couldn't find anything that answered my question:
What are the long-term effects of taking medical opioids, i.e. for years or more?
I'm asking mostly the people who are on opioids for pain management, i.e. have only ever taken medical-grade opioids, mostly pills rather than IV, and generally sticking to prescribed doses.
I've seen lots of web sites that say long-term opioids cause liver failure, veins collapsing, life of crime etc., though I'm pretty sure the first is due to contaminants in street drugs, the second injecting, and the third is moral panic BS, since neither of the heroin addicts in my extended family became criminals, despite raging addictions. So I'm interested in the effects of the meds themselves -- not contaminants, injecting, or the messed-up approach to drug abuse and addiction in our society. (Unless you're addicted to caffeine, then you're all good.)
I'm probably the big square around here: I'm a long-term pain patient on a bupe patch (20mcg) plus bupe sublingual (200mcg) for breakthrough pain. I rarely exceed prescribed doses, and only when I have bad pain flare-ups -- i.e. I don't ever take it recreationally. I've only ever had IV anything in hospital when the nurses did it; never injected myself.
I've been on bupe since 2007; oxycodone before that. In that time, a doc made me get off opioids once and switched me to tramadol, cymbalta and neurontin, which made me bed-ridden again.
I'm now under pressure from new doc to get off opioids again. I'm fine with trying all the other stuff they've proposed (Lyrica, pacing, more physio, counselling, etc.) but I'm not convinced opioids are that terrible to be on long-term. They keep citing one particular recent paper, which found people on opioids for over a decade had a range of altered inflammatory immune and endocrine markers, although the paper authors seemed to think the former was due to the patients' assorted underlying illnesses; not opioids. Other than that, everything I've read says there aren't enough studies of long-term use to really know how bad it is.
So people on medical opioids long-term, what are the actual side-effects you've experienced?
What are the long-term effects of taking medical opioids, i.e. for years or more?
I'm asking mostly the people who are on opioids for pain management, i.e. have only ever taken medical-grade opioids, mostly pills rather than IV, and generally sticking to prescribed doses.
I've seen lots of web sites that say long-term opioids cause liver failure, veins collapsing, life of crime etc., though I'm pretty sure the first is due to contaminants in street drugs, the second injecting, and the third is moral panic BS, since neither of the heroin addicts in my extended family became criminals, despite raging addictions. So I'm interested in the effects of the meds themselves -- not contaminants, injecting, or the messed-up approach to drug abuse and addiction in our society. (Unless you're addicted to caffeine, then you're all good.)
I'm probably the big square around here: I'm a long-term pain patient on a bupe patch (20mcg) plus bupe sublingual (200mcg) for breakthrough pain. I rarely exceed prescribed doses, and only when I have bad pain flare-ups -- i.e. I don't ever take it recreationally. I've only ever had IV anything in hospital when the nurses did it; never injected myself.
I've been on bupe since 2007; oxycodone before that. In that time, a doc made me get off opioids once and switched me to tramadol, cymbalta and neurontin, which made me bed-ridden again.
I'm now under pressure from new doc to get off opioids again. I'm fine with trying all the other stuff they've proposed (Lyrica, pacing, more physio, counselling, etc.) but I'm not convinced opioids are that terrible to be on long-term. They keep citing one particular recent paper, which found people on opioids for over a decade had a range of altered inflammatory immune and endocrine markers, although the paper authors seemed to think the former was due to the patients' assorted underlying illnesses; not opioids. Other than that, everything I've read says there aren't enough studies of long-term use to really know how bad it is.
So people on medical opioids long-term, what are the actual side-effects you've experienced?