Epsilon Alpha
Bluelighter
Epsilon Alpha -
You are now my new favorite bler of the week for not only bumping this, one of my very favorite threads, but casting this king-bitch of a knowledge gem into the myalgia pool!
I just started lyrica again 75mg TID for Anxiety, Fibromyalgia, and arthritis, and was planning on adding neurontin into the mix again.
From the years 2009-2010 I used neurontin exclusively for anxiety and depression, although I'd consider it more of a euphoriant than anything else. After discovering this thread I started cutting my 800mg tablets 4 ways, taking 200mg every half hour for two hours. I would do this an additional four times a day. It sounds like more of a pain in the ass than it actually was. The timing was always approximate because I didn't use the reminder feature on my phone as I have a pretty good memory when it comes to taking medicine.
I have an appointment Tuesday to try and get another script for neurontin strictly for pain, but from a GP. The lyrica I have prescribed to me is for anxiety by a psychiatrist, but helps muscle and nerve pain as well (as well as the 2mg klonopin on top of that).
I'll be adding capsaicin to the mix and I'll respond with the results once achieved.
Lastly, and this is for AE, how would one upregulate your L-type Amino Acid Transporters? I'm curious.
I'll try and find some of his papers on the topic but the capsaicin thing looks promising in vitro, not sure if orally or topically applied would work depending on your situation. I do know that capsaicin patches are given out for postherpeic neuralgia, so it might be worth a shot if your pain is more towards the surface of the body. But, for those of you who don't know what capsaicin is its the active ingredient in hot sauce so it may burn like a motherfucker if you dose it wrong (wish I could help more on that front).
I remember megadoses of essential amino acid's upregulated L-type Amino Acid Transporters in muscle, but I have no clue on what would be the effects on nerves.
Dr. Smith seemed fairly personable at the conference, so it might be worth emailing him to see if there are any human trials going on right now on this approach.