I have had fibromyalgia for 40+ years and find that it can wax and wane. I hope this is the case for you.
I hope so too. I felt the pain before at different points but it wasn't bad, I just thought it was from exercising. Now it has flared up until it is not possible to pretend like it is not there.
The sleep doc had me purchase magnesium citramate and take at bedtime. Plus he mentioned taking cold showers around 4 hours before bedtime. Also my regular doctor had me start taking Acetaminophen Arthritis Pain extended in morning and evening.
EEfall - When you wake up from “breakthrough” symptoms, what is it like? Do you get the urge to move or does it just suddenly wake you up from sleep?
Hello. I'm not sure what you are referring too in the quote above but I looked at some of your previous posts and I took methadone for several years and it quit working. I have now been on Suboxone for 9 years and it still works better than anything I have taken over the past 20+ years.
Even Suboxone is not perfect. I tend to shake my feet while sitting in my lounge chair and wake up sometimes but I thought my life was over until I started taking Suboxone. I have no idea why it works. I think that RLS spans from mild symptoms for some people to insanely bad for others and it is the ones who have insanely bad like me that benefit from Suboxone. Probably because RLS is really a group of illnesses that are clumped together.
My breakthroughs symptoms occur differently. I don’t get an urge to move, i just wake up. It’s very unusual and I was trying the determine if you also may have experienced this, but I think not.
Did you escalate your dose of methadone prior to going on buprenorphine? Although both are opioids, buprenorphine works very differently than methadone which likely explains why it is likely effective. I’m using it now after experiencing methadone tolerance and it’s much more effective at lower equivalent doses. However, it gives me the worst insomnia and my sleep quality is horrible. I’m hoping this will pass with time.
My breakthroughs symptoms occur differently. I don’t get an urge to move, i just wake up. It’s very unusual and I was trying the determine if you also may have experienced this, but I think not.
Did you escalate your dose of methadone prior to going on buprenorphine? Although both are opioids, buprenorphine works very differently than methadone which likely explains why it is likely effective. I’m using it now after experiencing methadone tolerance and it’s much more effective at lower equivalent doses. However, it gives me the worst insomnia and my sleep quality is horrible. I’m hoping this will pass with time.
I didn’t take larger doses of methadone but doctor kept adding drugs to it until I was taking 5 meds a night. When it stopped working a new doctor took me off all 5 and put me on Suboxone. I sleep but it is very light. I wake easily. Now I am getting up early by an hour or so but I am now hurting all over including the small of my back. At least I can sleep. I actually feel lucky that it works at all.
In the past year an old tooth root canal I had from around 10 years ago came back. I ended up going to an Endodontics doctor and he fixed it up. A month later it came back. Went again and now I am waiting another 2 weeks to see if it will be fixed but I can feel it so I doubt it. Even though I have dental insurance they only pay half. I wish now that I should have had it pulled.
Yes, we make the decision at the time trying to avoid the dreaded denture or the expense of an implant.
Hindsight gives us a different view. Perhaps the time has come.
I went back to dentist (actually a doctor) and he has tried to fix my tooth again but he says my body is not allowing my gums and tooth to adhere to each other. He doesn’t know why but now I wonder if it isn’t RLS or Suboxone related (or both).
Suboxone has been reported to be implicated to dental issues. RLS itself shouldn't be involved, but the use of Suboxone for your RLS could be.
Steve
https://www.mayoclinicproceedings.org/a ... 0/fulltext
Opinions presented by Discussion Board Moderators are personal in nature and do not, in any way, represent the opinion of the RLS Foundation, and are not medical advice.
Suboxone has been reported to be implicated to dental issues. RLS itself shouldn't be involved, but the use of Suboxone for your RLS could be.
Thanks for looking into it for me. Nothing I can really do about it as Suboxone is the last med that works after having RLS for at least 24 years. I always wonder if there might be a cure someday.