TRENDING NEWS

POPULAR NEWS

Will The Doctor Prescribe Me Percocet Or Vicodin

How can i get vicodin or percocet prescribed to me?

I will try to get off my soapbox, no guarantees, but I will sincerely try. It is getting harder to find a doctor who will give you a prescription, I have a friend with a degenerative muscle disease,so I know. To save yourself some trouble use the phone book and start calling doctors A-Z. Ask the receptionist if the doc is taking new patients. If yes, then tell her you have a very bad chronic pain condition and ask if the doctor prescribes your prescription of choice. This will save you a vast amount of time & money and cut to the chase. You will be surprised at how many doctors won't prescribe pain meds. I just assumed that any and all doctors do that, that's why they went to school, to practice medicine. If you do this you will eventually find a doctor that is new in the area and accepting new patients. I think most doctors will only take so many chronic pain patients at a time, if any. Once a medically needy person finds a doctor, they aren't going to let them go, so no new openings. Good luck and see, no preaching on my soapbox!

Would a doctor ever prescribed morphine,vicodin and percocet for a broken ankle?

Hello,, and no,, a doctor would never prescribe all three of these at one time. Vicodin and percocet are both hydrocodone based. So they wouldn't give both of these, one or the other maybe, but never both. And morphine they may have given a shot when they got to the hospitol to take away the pain,, but it would never be prescribed along with a codine based pain killer. Of course unless the doctor is trying to kill them. So I'd say your friend isn't exactly tellin you the truth. And if she had a broken ankle her foot and half way up her leg would be in a cast and she would be on crutches. Hope this helped

What will a doctor prescribe percocet for?

Percocet..as I imagine you know, is a Schedule ll narcotic indicated for moderate to sever pain. Possible indications are broken ribs and fracture disc and migraines. I have had them prescribed for those conditions. For chronic cancer pain. Also for wisdom teeth pain, rheumatoid arthritis.

Never for stomach pains, sprains, muscle pulls, torn ligaments or muscles or twisted ankles. For sever injuries sustained in a car accident...but not a fender bender.

Basically you have to be in real pain. If you are trying to figure out what to tell the Doctor to get Percocet...it just won't work. You don't know enough anatomy to pass and just saying I broke by back won't work. Any other questions?

You souns like a typiba deug seeker......

What will a doctor prescribe percocet for?

Moderate to severe pain, generally in opiate-tolerant patients. Post surgical pain. Severe chronic pain. Regulations are getting tighter, the pendulum is swinging away from liberal pain control... In nearly 20 years in pain management, I've seen it go from strict control with very little opiate prescribing going on, to very liberal pain control with irresponsible (imho) over-prescribing of narcotic analgesics, and back again, and forth again, and so on. Right now, the trend is definitely toward less prescription of opiate analgesics, with more reliance on NSAIDS and acetaminophen/paracetamol. Both ends of the spectrum are bad, somewhere in the middle is where we ought to be, but as humans, moderation tends to be difficult for us. If you're trying to get a prescription for oxy, and you are young and haven't been through the mill of pain management, with all the physical therapy and interventional treatments, good luck to you. You are likely to have an easier time finding a drug dealer and sourcing that way.But go have a surgery, or deliver a baby, have a painful outpatient procedure like a rhizotomy? Then they will give you the oxycodone. Otherwise, hydrocodone is generally first-choice narcotic analgesic.Oh, I forget the coughs, that's another one. Used to be, codeine is what came in the cough syrup. More often now, I seem to see oxycodone. So, surgery, moderate to severe chronic pain, and deep chest coughs are gonna be the most common situations for oxycodone prescription in my experience. IANAD, just a long term patient.

Can a dentist prescribe percocet or no because he prescribe me 5mg vicodin but doesnt work for pain?

he gave me a script of vicodin couple of days ago but never filled it because i had couple of percocets from hospital thats what they gave me i have an infection in bone and there retreating the 2 teeth now but its at dental school but i was at hospital last night for novacaine shot but the 5mg vicodin dont work and everytime i add more like another half of a vicodin i get sick and sometimes vomit but im in so much pain right now im thinking of calling him and asking him if he can prescribe percocet because when i was getting work done this other patient was getting percocet for abcess infection so idk hes an endonthist so idk if he can prescribe percocet i dont see why not if he gave me vicodin and another student wrote out percocet

Vicodin or Percocet and Plane rides?

I'm taking a long flight about 5 hours and I hate flying. My friend gave me some percocets and vicodin and I'm gonna take it to help me relax. My question is which one should I take that would make me relax more. Also, does any of these meds make you paranoid because that would suck because I'm already scared of flying!
Please don't answer with "it's not a good idea" blah blah blah" Just want to know which one would be better and maybe how you feel on them...or if anyone has taken them when they flew. Thanks for you help!

Can you mix Percocet and Vicodin? If not, what are the consequences of doing so?

You could overdose, or become extremely intoxicated, unless this combination has been prescribed by your doctor.If you're abusing pain medication, be sure and start slow with half a pill and wait at least an hour before taking another one. There is an epidemic of deaths from overdosing on combinations of opiates. In particular, never mix benzodiazepines and opiates.

How does a doctor decide whether to prescribe percocet or percodan?

Presumably it's the oxycodone that does the heavy lifting, for lack of a better phrase. Acetylsalicylic acid and acetaminophen may serve as some aggregate to the effect of an opiate drug, but I can't imagine by too much.

So, what's the real difference between these two things?

BQ: Why does the percodan I took make me itch like crazy and keep me up at night?

It was for a legitimate purpose, not that you actually care.

How can I get a prescription for Percocet?

Seriously? How old are you? Do you have debilitating pain, have you seen a doctor and been evaluated for chronic pain yet? Because you should already know the answer to your question, GO TO YOUR DOCTOR. However, if you are in a lot of pain, the only way you will get it is by seeing a doctor first and he will run some tests on you. Most likely he will refer you to a pain management specialist. If you can't and don't want to do this, just “getting” pain meds is not something that happens. For the record, Percocet is a controlled substance and the doctors and pharmacists are watched closely and audited constantly on controlled meds! And they don't prescribe it easily anymore! In this country the DEA has control of all of these medications. The only other way besides getting it from a doctor, and everyone knows this, is illegally on the street and I DO NOT RECOMMEND THIS unless you want to spend a very long time in jail if you get caught! Trust me, pain medication abuse is rampant in every state, and people are watched, even the ones who really need it and get it legally from their doctors, because they are in the system, their identification and everything. If they sell it or give it to someone, they too and the person getting it, can go to prison! It's not even worth it!

I have severe pain in my leg; Vicodin and Percocet don't work for me. What kind of medicine can I use to reduce my pain?

Without knowing any details about the pain: is it an injury? How long? What makes it worse? Better? Are you allergic to any medications? Are you taking any medications, other than very strong pain meds. So, do you have any health conditions? Are you diabetic? Are you in a clinical trial? How is your family history? Anyone with PVD or PAD? What is your skin appearance? Do you have hypertension? Have you traveled outside of the country? Do you have contacts with similar symptoms? Have you started any new exercise program recently? Any history of feeling a tearing? Do you bruise easily? How does it affect how you walk?Do you see my point? You need eyes on you who can ask appropriate questions and perform an exam. No amount of online advice will replace that. Good luck!

TRENDING NEWS