Go to a pain management specialist. Ask them for Botox. Relaxes the muscles so they dont spasm. Buprenorhine. Morphine angst that sets on the back receptors with drug effects. I took Fentanyl for years and lost thousands. I finally had to quit playing until I got the morphine.
I was not opioid-tolerant and was prescribed Fentanyl (brand name DURAGESIC ) the very 1st time I went in to try and get some help. I tried the lowest dose they had. Fentanyl is given in the form of a patch that you're to wear for 3 days at a time which slowly releases the meds over that time frame.
Fentanyl is the most powerful pain med there is, being 100 times more stronger then morphine. Of course people looking to get high figured out that by cutting it up and getting at the gel in the there, they could smoke it or just chew it. Needless to say, there were many a user looking for a high, that died of respiratory depression. That is one drug you don't mess around with. Throw in the fact that they actually had a recall on a batch of them, because it had a defect that released more of the drug then it was supposed to.
It was too damn scary of a drug for me, but the main reason I gave up on it early on, was that it knocked me out. I could barely keep awake at work on that stuff. Plus you can forget about having a few beers once in awhile. Since you have to wear it constantly, you always have the stuff in your system and the last thing a person wants to worry about is to die in their sleep because their respiratory system shuts down.
The lowest dose is 12.5 µg/hr. Hard to imagine the people that take 100 µg/hr. Anyone new to this drug, I encourage to do some serious reading up about it. It is not a drug to take lightly and if you're one of those people trying to find some way to get high, I suggest you look elsewhere.
Anyone going to pain dr, they're going to be prescribed Ultram (Tramadol) and/or Gabapentin (Neurontin) first. These did absolutely nothing for me. Ultram is not a Schedule II drug, so they want to push that stuff on you first.
It's a damn shame that people decided to use pain meds to abuse as a way to catch some kind of buzz. This has resulted in the entire medical industry scared to death to prescribe pain meds to patients that truly need them. Everyone now is labelled a drug seeker right off the bat. You need to convince them you're not. That is the reason I held off for so many years, because I didn't want to go thru all that.
The whole process is made to make the legitiate patient feel shame for asking for relief. Everyone from the Dr. to the nurses, to the pharmacies, all look at you as if you're a drug seeker. That is the stigma attached now to a patient in chronic pain.