How to not feel pain in ballbusting?
well this is the same question in my mind.i feel very obsessed about doing ballbusting but im only afraid of the severe pain it might cause.. i guess those dominatrix and slave who doing this thing have already done operation to remove the nerve supply to the testicles , its done by cutting the nerve through the inguinal cord, i ve seen scars at some guys having ballbusting in the same area, i gues that's the thing they doing ..
i really feel interested to know more about this . any one has other suggestions?
Cysts
it is the end of ur tail bone it is just longer then most it is nothing to be worried about
Can you have acetaminophen with it?
Acetaminophen is the drug in the brand "Tylenol". It is often combined with Codeine as "Tylenol #3", etc. Codeine is an ineffective pain-reliever according to the latest medical literature.
Acetaminophen is processed by the liver, so anything else you might take that is metabolized/processed/broken-down in the liver risks liver damage. That is why there are prescribed limits to the number and frequency of pain-pill doses you should take.
Nobody wants a Liver Transplant!
Alcohol - even that found in cough syrup - has been shown to increase the extent of liver stress/damage exponentially - when taken at or near the same time as acetaminophen.
So, avoid alcohol + acetaminophen and stick to the prescribed dosage of your pain pills. 8 or 10 a day is too many!
New approaches to pain-relief like "targeted-delivery" with topical pain-relief medications put the pain medicine directly on the painful area for fast-relief. Cochrane Reviews says 35 studies showed "Good" pain-relief is easy with topical pain-relief medication - even for back pain.
Best,
drdanbullock (orthopedics)
Why am I having off and on chest pain for 4 days with pain in left arm?
You are most likely have an MI (myocardial infarction) AKA a heart attack. Go to the hospital!
Someone dyslexic because the saying really goes beauty is pain. Your way makes you sound like a sadist.
How do you know what pain pump is the best for you?
In order to know what pain pump is best for you the most important thing to do would be to consult your doctor. They would be the best help in figuring out which is the best for you. Not all pain pumps are good for everyone.
Where are nerve clusters on the body?
Several are around the head, such as the temple, the hinge of the jaw, and the bottom of the jaw. There are a number around the neck, such as just to the side of the neck, above the collar bone, as well as many other places that are near the esophagus.
Muscles have nerves running through them, such as the biceps, triceps, and much of the forearm. The wrist, the muscle between the thumb and forefinger, and the fingers can all experience great pain.
The solar plexus, the stomach, halfway between the top of the thigh and the knee, the side and back of the shin, and several others are all susceptible to certain pressures.
A HIDA Scan allows the dr. to see the flow of bile from the liver to the intestine. It stands for Hepatobiliary Iminodiacetic Acid Scan. It gives images of the gallbladder, small intestine, biliary tracts, and liver. HIDA scans are sometimes recommended for people w/pancreatic problems when other diagnostic tools are unsuccessful b/c of the pancreas' important role in digestion. It is used to find abnormalities in the structure of these systems/organs, blockages and obstructions, and bile leakage. It also shows gallstones and inflammation. Radioactive isotopes are injected intraveinously. For the procedure you lay still on your back and it can take up to an hour. A special camera is used to take pictures of your abdomen. A HIDA scan is a non-invasive imaging study except for the IV, which is usually placed in the arm. Angie RN
You should check with your doctor. Have you been in an accident or fallen maybe? Sounds like you could have a herniated disk but your doctor would need to diagnose that. In some cases you could just wake up that way. If that is the problem, it won't just go away and the pain may just keep getting worse. Sounds like it's stress related and you are having muscle spasms. When we are under stress our muscles tighten and our shoulder automatically shove upward causing pain in the shoulders and the base of the neck. You could have also slept oddly on your pillow. Humans, while sleeping move many times during sleep. It's still a good idea as the above poster stated to see your doctor. Soak in a hot tub of 1 full cup of Epsom Salts (not like regular salt) and it will help relax the muscles and pull out the soreness. My husband and I use it all the time. Also odorless A535 works wonders on neck pain.
Does requip help with lower back pain and leg pain when taken with 60mg of Cymbalta?
I take Cymbalata total 60mg daily and ropinirole (generic for requip) .25 mg 3 tablets at bedtime. I have found my leg pain to be virtually gone. I do have lower back problems and RLS so these two are helping. I hope it stay this way.
Extreme spinal stenosis pain relief without addictions?
It is a widespread myth (and the reason that millions suffer and go untreated for pain) that a large percentage of true pain sufferers can get addicted, and that's just not true. You can and will likely get Dependent, but Dependence and Addiction are two very different problems.
Addiction is fueled by a psychological need for the drug to escape mental or social pressures - depression, being broke, criminal activity, etc. The list is endless. The difference is the psychological need - patients who are dependent on opiates use them for a valid medical reason that has real physical manifestations. Addicts use opiates to escape their own personal reality, and they're constantly going through highs and lows, while opiate patients are receiving maintenance levels that control their pain.
As a long-term chronic pain patient with over 15 years of dependence myself (you can read my supervisor bio for more detail), as well as a person who has dealt with relatives who have suffered from addiction, I can say with perspective that there is no comparison. Yes, I deal with withdrawal symptoms if I go too long without changing a patch or taking breakthrough meds, but I don't crave it, and I've been able to . I've never felt the need for any drug other than to ease pain, and there are many times I'll use OTC meds rather than breakthrough opiates.
Addiction in opiate patients is less than 1% or 2% if memory serves me right. Research has found over the years that patients who take their meds on schedule rather than wait until the pain is bad enough to warrant taking it, actually use less over time. It took a long time for me to get out of that old habit of waiting until the pain was too bad, but since I've changed I agree with the studies - I use less than I used to years ago before entering formal pain management.
It should be noted that opiate therapy via pain management is not a decision to be taken lightly - it should only be considered if there are no other therapy options that work. It is a Quality of Life decision - once you commit, you can of course stop, but unless you're able to effectively deal with the root cause of the pain, you're back where you started.
There's also the legal aspects, as well as the mental and physical aspects of opiate therapy over the long term. Legally, pain patients are required to sign a contract with their doctor stating that they won't "doctor shop" and only use one pharmacy. Patients who are in real pain don't have an issue with that, and anyone who does doesn't need opiate therapy to begin with. If you're prescribed Schedule 2 opiates (Percocet, Duragesic, OxyContin, Morphine, etc.) then you'll have to see your doctor every month to get new prescriptions - they cannot have refills, and they can't be called in. They can mail them to you, but I like them in my hand.
Physically, opiates cause mood swings and have various other side effects. It's the mood swings that typically alienate friends and family members who aren't educated prior to the patient starting therapy and are thus unprepared for the sudden change in mood. However, having said that, extreme pain 24/7/365 will do the same thing, so it's a 2 way street.
People who aren't knowledgeable about opiate therapy often wonder about being high all the time, and the plain truth is that it just doesn't happen. You might experience it at the outset, but your body becomes tolerant when the drug is in your system all the time. Over the years I've required pretty high doses of opiates, but aside from the pain control, it's like taking aspirin. I WISH I could get a buzz from drinking wine or Jack Daniels, but not to be. Bottom line is that once your body becomes tolerant, aside from the withdrawal tugs if you go too long past your dosage time, you won't really notice any difference other than the pain being relieved. I pretty much have a reasonably normal life - I can drive, work outside, do things I've been able to do for most of my life. The only thing I can't do is go back to my old job, but that's due to the nature of what I used to do.
The attitude in medicine toward opiate therapy has come a long way in the past 10 years, but I still see doctors using the word addiction in place of dependence, and for people like me it's extremely irritating. It does nothing to promote the use of opiates for patients who are in extreme pain and suffering, and there are many who don't come forward for needless fears of becoming addicted.
If you're wondering if it's possible to break dependence after using high levels of opiates, it is. It ain't fun, but it's not as bad as the daily pain. 3 years ago I had another disk collapse at L3/4 (I have Spondylolisthesis, besides stenosis problems and other spinal degeneration issues), and had to increase my opiate levels to the point where I was no longer getting any increased relief, only more side effects. Some of us call it a "ceiling" that you can reach. At that point I was using 2 100mcg Duragesic patches, 100mg Demerol tabs, 30mg MS Contin (morphine timed-release tabs), in addition to my normal breakthrough prescription of Percocet 10/325's. Earlier this year, I'd recovered enough to the point where I spent most of the year lowering my dependence level (incremental dosage lowering), to the point where I was able to stop using anything for a couple of weeks. I did it to assess my true current pain state (which unfortunately isn't as good as I'd hoped), but my point is that I was able to do it using methods I've used for years. It was only the last week of withdrawals that I needed some anti-nausea meds, but other than that it wasn't anything I hadn't experienced before, and I knew what to expect before I started and prepared for it. I've since had to start reusing opiates, and I resigned myself to the possibility that I'd likely be an opiate patient for the rest of my life. But the alternative for me, like many others, is constant agony, and that'll kill your spirit long before your body fails. Again, it's a quality of life decision.
Mental focus and even meditation shouldn't be discounted for therapy either - believe it or not, gaming is a sanctioned form of therapy for me, and is gaining acceptance in pain circles more recently. It doesn't really matter what activity it is, as long as your mind is focused on something other than the pain. Essentially, you're doing mentally what opiates do chemically, which is alter the brain's perception of the pain. If you're not thinking about it, it's not as bad. It's also how I got to be a WA Supervisor - answering questions keeps the mind focused and off the pain.
I had additional training as well, having trained in and taught Karate for several years before I became too ill. The mental focus I learned, as well as the ability to increase my pain tolerance, helped me significantly when the pain became constant and extreme. I do have a meditation routine that I use and used to teach that I still give to people - if you're interested (or anyone else) feel free to email me at my WA email on my Supervisor bio page at the top.
Only you can really assess your pain level, as all pain is individual and subjective to you alone. What may be nothing to me might be excruciating for you or someone else. But it doesn't mean that you're not suffering or don't require help. If you've exhausted other therapies (that are usually temporary at best) then opiate therapy might be an alternative. Remember too the psychological effect that pain has on us - when it hurts, we don't want to be active. But the body needs to be active to release endorphins to help with the pain. That'll only get you so far though - in reality, if you have physical damage or degeneration to the point where surgery is the only option left (which should only be considered when paralysis or loss of mobility is a factor), or nothing else works for more than a few days, then opiates should be considered, but again, not lightly.
Will alcohol and pain killers kill you?
Yes, they will! Think about it, how does alcohol make you feel when you drink? Everybody should know the answer to that question. Then taking pain killers! Pain killers goes to the source to numb the pain( temporarily). How strong and effective, and then you want to mix it with alcohol this is a bad combination.
Well, if you are pregnant, it is usually the baby's head pushing into your cervix. (I say that she is head butting me)I've been having the same problem for around 3 weeks now. A lot of times it feels like a pinching sensation. I'm due in less than two weeks now. Well, if you are pregnant, it is usually the baby's head pushing into your cervix. (I say that she is head butting me)I've been having the same problem for around 3 weeks now. A lot of times it feels like a pinching sensation. I'm due in less than two weeks now.
Can Vicks vapor rub remove keloid scar pain?
I have never heard of using Vicks; however, I have used Oragel or Ambesol - in the gel form - for several years and it successfully manages the pain in my keloid. It does not, however, do anything for pain "around" my keloid. It has been best for me when the pain is in or underneath the surface of the scar tissue. It does not seem to permeate the skin surrounding in the same way.
Is acetylcholine a pain transmitter?
Activities of the cholinergic system are divided into two main categories: muscarinic and nicotinic. Both actions involve modulation of pain perception. Anything which increases the presence of Acetylcholine in the synaptic space is found to produce analgesia.
Neostigmine and donepezil being cholinesterase inhibitors are used in pain relief because of increasing acetylcholine in synapses through this action. Benzodiazepines act as analgesics through their action of enhancing Ach release.
Which hormone acts as a natural pain killer?
Beta-endorphin. Quote from Wikipedia: "It is used as an analgesic in the body to numb or dull pains. That is the reason why humans start to feel better immediately after an acute physical trauma even though the symptoms are still present. The reason the pain dulls is because it binds to and activates opioid receptors. β-endorphin has approximately 80 times the analgesic potency of morphine."
plulmoary embolism
Bulge in right side below ribcage?
Hiatus hernia or hiatal hernia can cause this.Paraesophageal type hiatus hernia is the cause of a bulge in the right side below ribcage on my body.
What is the Cause of lack of potassium in the body?
There is more than one reason for lack of Potassium in the body. The most common is not getting enough in your diet. Second is your body is not absorbing Potassium when it does get it due to other health reasons. Your body could be flushing out the Potassium too quickly ( urinating frequently) Lack of Potassium can cause Heart Attacks. Serious business. Talk with your Doctor and see if a Potassium supplement ( vitamin) will give you what you need. If not, then the Doctor will have to look for other health reasons.