
Suggest Dosage For OxyContin

if I increase the OxyContin to 30mg twice daily do you think that I can get to feeling good again?
and yet.....
Detailed Answer:
you will wind up where you are now, but in less time.
Narcotics produce tolerance. You need more to get the same effect.
Narcotics produce dependence and withdrawal. when you do not get them, you feel bad/worse.
Narcotics are associated with addiction. A complex change in thought in which people are focused on obtaining drug, they have cravings and withdrawal, the attentions are focused increasingly on obtaining drug and they progressively do more ridiculous things to get more drug.
These do not seem good to me.
So, ultimately, the answer to "if I increase the OxyContin to 30mg twice daily do you think that I can get to feeling good again?"
would be
"no".
Then the question comes up, what to do instead of increasing dependence on narcotics.
Changing the underlying disorder that causes pain.
Modifying drugs (using non-narcotic pain medication to change pain, the perception of pain or the symptoms from the narcotic withdrawal).
Or modifying relationship to pain.


So your answer doesn't mean much to me in my situation.
I think I gave all the options
Detailed Answer:
if you have other things that could be done please mention them.
Medications,
physical modalities
surgery.
With narcotics not working as well as previously, this is the definition of TOLERANCE to narcotics. At doses at or above 100 mg a day, withdrawal will happen.
if I increase the OxyContin to 30mg twice daily do you think that I can get to feeling good again? and with additionally. It is very unusual to have "7.5 hydrocodone at noon" it would generally be used about 3 to 6 times a day
that gets to 100 mg a day and that is a problem.
If there is tolerance already, it is MORE likely for withdrawal to occur. This is an unpleasant condition to have and would be more likely at higher doses also tolerance will occur at higher doses and the person would NOT get more pain relief at more narcotics.
So, the answer
as given
remains "no".
Not hearing "no" not wanting to hear reasons to limit narcotics, taking more than the doctor ordered, soliciting opinions only in the direction to justify overuse of narcotics are pretty much the definition of addiction.

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