For some people with severe back pain, pain medication becomes necessary. Pain medications may be administered to people with acute (short-term) pain in order to make functioning possible, or to people with chronic pain to make pain manageable while pursuing other forms of treatment to address the cause of pain.

That is the ideal situation. Unfortunately, many people suffer from what is called non-specific back pain, meaning that no cause is identified. People with acute back pain can quickly become chronic pain sufferers. Chronic back pain sufferers can quickly fall into the trap of being “treated” solely by drugs that mask the pain.

Many people trust their doctors to treat them in the best way possible, and would not question their prescriptions. However, an increasingly problematic phenomenon exists in the prescription of short-acting opioid medications for chronic pain management. Short-acting opioids are narcotic medications that provide pain relief for a brief period of time and require frequent re-dosing and, over time, higher doses in order to deliver the same pain-relieving effect.

Short-acting opioids are more habit-forming than long-acting medications and have unpleasant withdrawal symptoms, such as diarrhea, tremors and flu-like symptoms. They also act psychologically on the pain sufferer as the pain returns during withdrawal. Long-acting opioids are preferred to short-acting forms for chronic pain. Why, then, are internet forums full of people asking how to wean themselves off of percocet, a short-acting opioid comprised of oxycodone and acetaminophen? Continue reading »

 

If you have been paying even the remotest amount of attention you probably know that high cholesterol is bad for you and can lead to all sorts of unsavory health problems. No doubt the word cholesterol leaves your mind filled with plaque covered arteries and gross goo which can lead to stroke; well if it didn’t it probably does now.

What people don’t know is that there are two kind of cholesterol and only one of them is actually bad for you. Low density lipoprotein, or LDL, is the “bad” kind of cholesterol. This is the stuff that builds up in your arteries and slowly floats around in your blood steam looking for a nice and comfortable place to shack up.

The good news is there is a lot of information on how to decease LDL cholesterol naturally. What this really means is that you can take control of your cholesterol health and make the best choices for you that don’t have to involve prescription drugs. Continue reading »

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