Common drugs

Discuss different Pain Management Options; Medication options including side effects and Worldwide variances in names etc.
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Grammy
Posts: 126
Joined: Thu Oct 14, 2010 8:53 pm

Common drugs

Post by Grammy »

Are there drugs that are used by the majority of pelvic pain sufferers. For instance, for the first time in 25 years I am trying gabapentin. Because our condition is neurological in nature, I was curious if certain drugs have been utilized for years or if newer drugs have also been helpful. I know many have used cymbalta successfully....for me it causes more anxiety and urine hesitation. As pain sufferers we are always looking for some road to relief. Think it would be helpful if we knew the go to drugs to try. Odd that I have never taken gabapentin before. Hoping it will help with both the condition and my nervous reaction to it.
stephanies
Posts: 686
Joined: Mon Oct 25, 2010 3:07 am

Re: Common drugs

Post by stephanies »

Low dose tricycle antidepressants are helpful to some with nerve pain. I took one named Doxepin for several years, but came off of it about a year and a half ago. I was only able to take 10 mg. due to the side effects.
PN started 2004 from fall. Surgery with Filler Nov. 2006, Dr. Campbell April 2007. Pain decreased by 85% in 2008 (rectal and sitting pain resolved completely), pain returned in 12/13. Pain reduced significantly beginning around 11/23.
April
Posts: 629
Joined: Fri Jun 19, 2015 9:59 am

Re: Common drugs

Post by April »

I agree with Stephanies that tricyclic antidepressants are a good choice. I've been on both amitriptyline and nortriptyline (separately), and I think those drugs have done more for me than any of the others. They help me sleep, they reduce bladder frequency, and they reduce the intensity of the burning. And I know they are not hard to go on and off, because I've done it a couple of times. I switched from one to the other when I developed a tolerance to one, so they are different enough to get a benefit from switching and the switch was simple (just taper off one and on to the other).

April
mary jane
Posts: 130
Joined: Sun Nov 03, 2013 4:13 pm
Location: uk

Re: Common drugs

Post by mary jane »

April wrote:I agree with Stephanies that tricyclic antidepressants are a good choice. I've been on both amitriptyline and nortriptyline (separately), and I think those drugs have done more for me than any of the others. They help me sleep, they reduce bladder frequency, and they reduce the intensity of the burning. And I know they are not hard to go on and off, because I've done it a couple of times. I switched from one to the other when I developed a tolerance to one, so they are different enough to get a benefit from switching and the switch was simple (just taper off one and on to the other).

April
Hi April
Thank you for posting this. My amitrptyline stopped working at 50 mg after 2 years and want to try changing .. I know it stopped working because I now have insomnia ..and it is impossible to have insomnia on amitriptyline :D
Have you changed from ami to nortriptyline ? or vice versa?
Thank you
tiny bartholin infection triggered vulvar nerve pain.
Diagnosed vulvodynia Sept '13 (no burning but electric shocks, paresthesia, aching, buzzing)
Feb 14- Taking 50 mg Ami/Elavil
May 14-pain free with 50 mg Amitriptyline and 300 mg Pregabalin. Back to normal
Dec 15- weaned off all medication, pain free, wearing skinny jeans
April 17- pain returned, Amitriptyline 50 mg. Something doesn't make sense in my diagnosis.
Currently treating depression and anxiety
April
Posts: 629
Joined: Fri Jun 19, 2015 9:59 am

Re: Common drugs

Post by April »

Hi Mary Jane,

I was on amitriptyline for a little over a year, went off it for several months, then went on nortriptyline for about 1.5 years, and then switched to amitriptyline. I had clearly developed a tolerance to the nortrip, so that switch to amitrip was very helpful. My wake-ups at night went way down. But, amitriptyline is stronger than nortriptline, and I think I went on the same dose of amitrip as I had been on nortrip (50 mg), so I was getting more medication with the switch too. But, the change was so dramatic that I'm sure it was largely because it was a slightly new drug to my system. So, if you switch to nortrip, I would ask for a slightly higher dose, maybe 60 mg? You could start with 50 mgs of nortrip, and if that's not enough, move to 60 mgs. You'd have to combine the 50 mg pill with a one 10 mg pill (or do some pill cutting). They make amitrip in 10 mg tables, so they probably do that with the nortrip too.

April
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