Spideronthewall
Bluelighter
I get the rotten feeling but I think it has to do with my metabolism and digestive system slowing to a crawl then being jacked back up before I take my daily dose of methadone.
What is your routine like prior to dosing?
I can see eating a healthy meal probably helping. Just don't have anything that raises stomach PH or else it will eat that dose up a lot quicker. I metabolize the methadone really fast. I went up as high as 120mg to try and have a full 24 hours of relief. I would probably benefit from a split dose but I dont have the will power to take half a dose in the morning and half at night.I have full carries and will try it one of these days,Eating is very helpful in making your does last better and will in turn will mean you don't require taking much to make it till your next dose. And there is the added benefit you could get by it helping not make your stomach queasy...
When i first switched to methadone I always forced myself to eat before dosing... then as you get farther along in the program it becomes routine, that combined with your body leveling out after a while after the orginal switch from your D.O.C to methadone, you wont even have to force yourself anymore. I found eating before dosing very helpful in making my dose last better and helping my stomach..
I was on a relatively large amount of herion when I started the program and i was experiencing chronic pain. I found that 65 to 75mg was plenty and I never woke up feeling bad, I probably could have (and maybe should have) gotten away with less. When I started to taper down I never ran into any problems at all and never felt the slightest bit of withdrawal and had no problems sleeping at all.. I was surprised cause I heard all these horror story's about how bad it was at certain points for certain people I talked to that did the taper (of course you remember the horror stories not the good stories)..... but i know the longer you stay on it the more routine it becomes and there becomes a huge psychological role involved too. You breaking from the routine is harder the longer your on it. You have a whole mental aspect to get past... I didn't want to experience anything like that very bad so I had a goal - to get on methodone, avoid really bad withdrawals that always sent me back to using and to start to learn to live without drugs, and then to get off methadone in a timely fashion. I didn't want to replace one drug for another and when it came time to quit methadone have to experience what I heard some have experienced.
I know for some it may be necessary to take for long periods and is definitely better than using herion. I met people who had been on it for years and years, some I met had been on it for 10-15 years. What ever it takes and what ever works for you is by far the most important thing, but I had a goal I wanted to stick to.
I went up to something that held me just fine (maybe even a little to high a dose), and was there for less than two months or so and then immediately started to taper myself down somewhere around 1mg a day... total of around 5 months in the program. It worked for me and had no bad withdrawal from the methodone during my whole program..
It worked great for me and I wanted to share my experience incase anyone else may be thinking of trying the methadone program to quit their DOC and was wanting ideas or if someone just wants to taper off... you can do it and don't be afraid
It's definitely the Methadone, guys.
It happend to me A LOT when I was on MMT.
I discussed this with my PCP, he Rx'd me PROMETHAZINE, as an Opiate adjunct. It's FDA approved for this very purpose.
Ever since that day, I never had that problem again.
I highly recommend Promethazine for whoever suffers from Methadone induced Nausea, morning/motion sickness, etc.
Waiting to have coffee until after your morning dose may help as well.
Yes, promethazine and Zofran are what are commonly prescribed to deal with the nausea of daily methadone.
I regularly use the first one (OTC here in UK) but was surprised to see the second mentioned, not aware of ondansetron prescribing for opioid nausea... I have known many people on large prescribed doses of methadone, morphine, oxycodone, fentanyl and others (mostly fellow Brits but also in the US, Canada, Aus/NZ & mainland Europe) ---
and while most find the nausea wears off after months or years of regular use, those who still have it typically get by with first generation antihistamines (like promethazine, cyclizine or cinnarizine.) In the most severe cases I've heard of Metoclopramide being Rx'd for this, but never ondansetron- considered the most "hard core" anti sickness drug and only licensed in most countries for nausea/vomiting caused by cancer treatment or following GI surgery.
Is it really that common in the US?
Man this is an 8 year old thread.Be careful what methadone Doctor do not tell patients that are already at a high dose is that if you are already at 100-120mg a day an dose above that is pointless because your body will normalize the dose in 1-3 weeks an you will need a increase on dosage again. These corrupt methadone Doctors just want to get you on a high dose so you are stuck for life. Currently on 150mg a day for ,9 years. I get really bad stomach pain when I try to sleep at night around 11pm to 4am.
you start at whatever dose you need to be on to be comfortable depending on how big your habit is.Obviously you have no idea what your talking about or your lieing because you can't start MAT at a 100.
Ok, well I can only speak for what happens in Australia where I live.M
My friend any MMT clinic in America is not legally allowed to give you a starting dose over 30-40. It takes weeks to get to 80mg methadone. An on the other not again you are wrong because with any opiate that you take your body will normalize that given dose an you will need more in a month or 2