Georgia Lady
Member
- Location
- State of Georgia USA
I am suffering with Sciatica. Pain is in lower back radiating to the hip and left knew. I am taking Mobil and Ramadan for pain. Any advice appreciated.
I am suffering with Sciatica. Pain is in lower back radiating to the hip and left knew. I am taking Mobil and Ramadan for pain. Any advice appreciated.
I am suffering with Sciatica. Pain is in lower back radiating to the hip and left knew. I am taking Mobil and Ramadan for pain. Any advice appreciated.
I had Sciatica for years and being a pilot and sitting for hours just aggravated the hell out of it, to put it mildly. I finally had an MRI and saw that I had a bulged disc and had the surgery. I took all kinds of narcotics for pain, which did give me some temporary relief, but they have a very bad side effect. Addiction and I couldn't fly. Tramadol I found to be worthless. After I had surgery, my wife had just bought a new car and I did not like the way the car had been waxed, so five days post surgery, I waxed the car myself by hand and ruptured the disc, (surgery 2), which was followed by surgery three because when the surgeon repaired the ruptured disc, he also tore a hole in my spine. Today, the sciatica is all gone, but, I have a bent coccyx (tailbone) from an ice hockey accident, so I suffer from that. If you are really hurting, ask the doctor for 5-300 Hydrocodone, but only take it when really needed. This stuff is highly addictive, but your pain will be gone for 4-6 hours. Do yourself a favor and avoid Percocet or Oxycodone, which are one in the same, but even more addictive. If you do decide to go the narcotics route, you will more than likely become constipated. I suggest keeping some Dulcolax with stool softeners or ask for a Rx of Linzess.
I am a certified substance abuse counselor certified by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. I am not telling you this to impress you, but you need to understand that taking narcotics does give you relief and returns your life to some type of normalcy, but they are highly addictive. Although Tramadol is not a narcotic, addicts have found a way to boil it and shoot it to give them a rush, so yes, it does have some narcotic type effect on the neurotransmitters in the brain. I have no problem with people taking these drugs on a short term "OCCASIONAL" therapy. Say, 30 days, no more than twice a day. then, go off for 30 days. Also, some people swear by acupuncture and hand manipulation to move things around a bit like a Chiropractor.
Not to be nosey, but would you mind keeping me informed of your progress and your choice of therapy? It helps me with my case studies that I do. I have found some people doing some interesting things over time.
One cause of sciatica is a ruptured lumbar disc which bulges out from between your vertebrae and irritates the sciatic nerve. This was the diagnosis in my case and the solution was to surgically remove the disc. Since then I have been pain free. There are also a regimens of back exercises which if faithfully performed can improve the problem.
I blew a disc in my lower back when I was about age 40, and opted for therapy, instead of surgery, that time, too. It took weeks to overcome that incident, but I think that was the right decision. Back then, the "standard" surgery seemed to be to remove the disc, and fuse the vertebrate, and the guys who had that never seemed to be able to walk fully upright afterwards. It may not be as quick as surgery, but I think diet, exercise, and perhaps some supplemental vitamins, etc., can overcome many health conditions we run into. It just seems that surgery, and prescription drugs often have consequences that are as bad, or worse, than the original condition.