Yes, morphine relieves pains. It is very dangerous and addictive.
morphine wont necessarily cause knee pain its made to take pain away... however after using morphine regularly your muscles and bones to ache and hurt real bad when your not on it.
NO
Here are the criteria for when you should have a knee replacement 1) The pain in your knee is affecting your normal daily activities eg walking, stairs etc 2) Your knee pain is affecting your sleep - frequently keeps you awake or wakes you up 3) You have tried exercises to strengthen your knee for a reasonable period with no effect 4) You are in severe pain If your symptoms are not as severe as these, a Knee Joint Replacement is not needed.
i dont' see why you can't, i had knee surgery, shortly after knee surgery I formed a blood clot in my calf, The doctor prescribed me Lovenox, which is a shot I take in my stomach to help thin the blood and he also prescribed Warfarin, which is also a blood thinner, For the pain he prescribed oxycodone. Because he prescribed those drugs i assume it is safe to take with blood thinners
Yes. I'm currently taking both for nerve damage to my knee. 10 mg of both 3x's a day on the methadone only once on the MSContin IR (Instant release morphine)
I'm slightly confused as to if the antibiotic was prescribed by your dentist or if the antibiotic is used in dentistry and was prescribed as a result of a knee replacement. Assuming the latter is the case, antibiotics are not location specific, they're bacteria specific. If you have an infection in your mouth, Penicillin will help to clear it up. That same Penicillin will help to prevent an infection in the knee after surgery.
no he had severe back injuries and some knee surgeries
No. The knee brace is only for SEVERE injuries ONLY.
Your Patellea (that would be your knee!) behind the knee? inside the knee?
I am assuming you mean in the knee as this is a common area for torn cartilage. You may be prescribed anti-inflammatories and physical therapy first, but if that fails the curative treatment is arthroscopic knee surgery.
This is called bone marrow edema. It can cause bleeding in the bone marrow, leading to severe pain. The injury is caused by an impact to the knee area.
You get severe pain in your bone joints especilly in knee