Walking with pain

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Re: Walking with pain

Postby Gadgetgeek » Thu 03 Apr, 2014 5:41 pm

With any drug you have an effective range, and a half life. So you need to get a bunch of drug into the system to get into the effective range, then you just need to top-up. So if you had 4 tablets of painkiller that a normal dose was 2 tablets, you might get better relief from taking three off the top, and the other one at the normal dose interval. Also I'm not a doctor. But just for arguments sake, My EDC first aid kit usually has 10-20 painkiller tablets, usually ibuprofen 200mg. thats enough to get me through a few days if needed. I don't understand having only a few tablets unless they are a 24 hour drug. If you need it, you need enough to get you through a period of time.

Now different drugs do different things, so finding which one does what you need it to do is important. your chronic/long acting drugs are great for stuff like normal pain, or allergies, but not as good for the acute stuff. Unfortunately most of the drugs I prefer are unavailable in Oz so I'm learning new ones, and figuring out how they work. Ibuprofen and acetaminophen are the same, so thats easy.
I've even had injuries which required me to stack them in alternating doses, but one has to be careful with that, as you hit the dose limits pretty fast. But for me it was worth being able to sleep for a few hours at a time.
I've seen some first aid kits with all manner of goodies in them, but knowing how you will react is important. Codeine is not great for me, makes my brain fluffy and blocks up my guts. (although that can have its uses too) I wouldn't want to take it in a solo situation, but if someone else was there to do the thinking, I'd be okay with it if needed.
Splinting and wrapping also helps, but I'm of the general opinion that if you need to wrap it, you should stay off it, but in an emergency, it could give you that edge.

Again, I'm no doctor, just have a few nurses in my immediate family, and some emergency/sport med training. But there is a lot of bad info around when it comes to soft-tissue type injuries, even among those who should know better. So my info may be wrong, as I only have a test sample of 1, but for me it works.
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Re: Walking with pain

Postby icefest » Thu 03 Apr, 2014 6:10 pm

Gadgetgeek wrote: Unfortunately most of the drugs I prefer are unavailable in Oz so I'm learning new ones, and figuring out how they work. Ibuprofen and acetaminophen are the same, so thats easy.

What medications are you used to getting in the US that are not available here?
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Re: Walking with pain

Postby GPSGuided » Thu 03 Apr, 2014 8:15 pm

Good point MD55. Good pain management can make a world of difference.
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Re: Walking with pain

Postby corvus » Thu 03 Apr, 2014 8:54 pm

I have bad Arthritis in several joints an as yet undiagnosed knee problem,Plantar Facitis in both feet and am recovering slowly from a tear in an ankle ligament so no extended walks(just small 30 min strolls) for me at present however fortunately I don't need surgery and my pain is being managed with six "Panadol Osteo" daily and ligament recovery pending I will head out again very soon so will be interested to see how I manage my pain :?:
Sorry to read of others unresolved problems.


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Re: Walking with pain

Postby Gadgetgeek » Fri 04 Apr, 2014 11:39 am

Diphenhydramine is available off the shelf in Canada, and its my preferred acute antihistamine, as it doesn't make me as drowsy as it does some people, and it works better for some things than the 12 or 24 hour types do, at least in my experience. my other one is a muscle relaxant methocarbamol which is also off the shelf at home, but not available readily here. I occasionally get back spasms, which if I treat quickly greatly improve, but if I leave them, tend to just lock up and deteriorate. Muscle relaxants don't seem to be too popular in Aus from what I've read.
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Re: Walking with pain

Postby walkerchris77 » Fri 09 May, 2014 5:22 pm

If it was me and I thought that if I keep going im going to do some real damage then id call for help. You could alway let sar know its not urgent and u have shelter, food and water. That way they can attend to other serious life threatening incidents if need be. If you pay for ambulance cover then use it. No point in walking on a damaged leg and making the injury worse. Your the most important person in your life. Look after yourself
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