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84 Comments

  1. Heather
    22 September 2008 @ 12:48 pm

    Demerol usually doesn’t work for me so I ask for Stadol. The ER knows me and my migraines so they are good about listening to me. I also get Phenergan with the Stadol. Demerol usually would make me a bit sleepy but didn’t do anything for the pain and everyone knows it is very hard to sleep during a migraine.

    Reply

  2. Sandy
    22 September 2008 @ 3:32 pm

    I went to urgent care with a 2 day migraine that I could not get rid of and they gave me a shot of demerol. You can feel the drug almost immediately and it worked great. It makes you very sleepy and you cannot drive for awhile. I would definitely take it again. I am very thankful for demerol.
    P.S. If possible bring someone with you so can get a ride home.

    Reply

  3. LIZ BRATCHER CARLEY
    22 September 2008 @ 4:23 pm

    Hi James…oooo I h.ave to say I am so happy you did an article on this.

    I used to use demerol and I was always in a rebound loop.

    I had changed neurologists and he is one of the leading neurologsits in the country for migrianes. I was told NEVER TO USE DEMEROL BECAUSE OF IT’S TOXIC SIDE EFFECT AND IT STAYS IN THE BODY FAR TO LONG!
    The drug that I see most specialist use is Dilaudid. I use this for my migrianes and it does not put me in a migraine loop as I call it.

    There have been studies on this and Dilaudid was the one with less rebound and it is not nearly as toxic. The other name for Dilaudid is HYDROMORPHONE.

    Moriphine is also not as good as Dilaudid, where moriphine will often not get rid of the migraine totally and it comes back.

    Dilaudid is one of the strongest narcotics out on the market so it is only to be used when we have those horrible migraines, the ones that are 7 out of 10 or higher.This would be used when you need to go the ER for relief!
    (REMEMBER THIS IS NOT MEDICAL ADVISE YOU MUST SPEAK TO YOUR DOCTOR)

    James as a matter a fact I live in Southern CA and I don’t know of an ER or urgent care that still has demerol, they have all made the switch to dilaudid.

    I am so happy you brought this to light. So many who are migraineurs and are not in the health care field do not get the information as fast as doctors and such.

    Just and FYI for Dilaudid, when you get it in the ER you have to ask for an anti-nausea because this medication is STRONG and it makes you very nauseas. But if you are given phenergane with it, or something of that nature it will get rid of the nausea and then he dialudid will do its work on stopping your horrible pain.

    Thank you James for speaking abou this…so many do not know that there is something out there to take away those 9 out of 10 migraines.

    I hope you are having a migraine free day today!
    Liz
    http://www.migrainecommunity.blogspot.com

    Reply

  4. LIZ BRATCHER CARLEY
    23 September 2008 @ 3:30 am

    sANDY,
    I understand what you are saying. But as we know meds work differently in all!

    But dilaudid will give you the same ‘sleep’ affect! Which is so nice with a migraine uuuhhh!

    The reason I am not for demerol is the toxicity. It stays in the body. If you use it once a year….well then that is your choice and the er. But when I first used demerol I DID NOT WANT TO CHANGE AT ALL!!!! I WAS AFRAID THE OTHER WOULD NOT WORK (my hubby is a doc would tell me to take the dilauded, i didn’t even believe him), finally I tried the dilaudid and it was different.
    Just a thought
    liz

    Reply

  5. James
    23 September 2008 @ 10:24 pm

    I’m glad to hear that, in your experience, Demerol is being used less. I’m not going to knock it if it works, but if 9/10 times something else works better, we shouldn’t just fall back on tradition!

    There really are a lot of options. What emergency rooms need to know is what works best for most people.

    What you need to know, if possible, is what works best for you.

    Reply

  6. MaxJerz
    29 September 2008 @ 2:56 pm

    Thought I would post this list of IV meds used for Migraine treatment, if you haven’t seen in before:
    http://www.healthcentral.com/migraine/treatment-161484-5.html

    Be well,
    MJ

    Reply

  7. James
    30 September 2008 @ 9:51 am

    Thanks, MJ!

    A little background for everyone else. This links to a study on IV meds given in a certain clinic when the migraine attacks and/or headaches were particularly unresponsive to treatment. A wide variety of meds were used, none of them Demerol, but all given through IV.

    Almost all were “successfully” treated, most having at least a 50% reduction of symptoms, some able to return to normal life.

    It’s good to see investigation being done on a wide variety of treatments via IV.

    Reply

  8. ERp
    2 October 2008 @ 2:28 pm

    As an ER physician, I have virtually stopped giving Demerol all together for any condition. There are several reasons. First, it is very short acting. Second, it has toxic metabolites. Third, it is about as addictive as it gets. Fourth, the people that get it often go into a delirious state for an hour or two afterwards. Fifth, I have accidentally OD’d several people on it – I gave the “usual” dose of 50 or 75mg and in each case they almost stopped breathingI I had to reverse them with Narcan. Sixth, there are better drugs out there – injectable Imitrex, Reglan, Decadron, Depakote, and even Morphine (which is safer, easier to titrate, and less often abused). Finally, it is a drug of choice for drug seekers who exaggerate or fake symptoms. You get the ole’ “The doctor gave me something that begins with D – yeah, that is what I want”. Some hospitals have completely removed Demerol from the formulary and they have noticed a huge drop in visits by the repeat offenders.
    I just posted on a rare Migraine complication on my blog if you are interested.
    http://www.erstories.net

    Reply

  9. James
    2 October 2008 @ 3:05 pm

    Thanks, ERp, it’s good to hear from someone on the “inside” of this issue. It’s not an easy topic, but I do always hope we never get “stuck” on certain kinds of treatment, because there likely are other options on the way.

    Reply

  10. The Big “D”
    4 October 2008 @ 6:06 am

    […] commented on a blog the other day, Headache and Migraine News Blog. I thought I would post it since patients that ask for pain meds that begin with the letter […]

    Reply

  11. Garry
    8 October 2008 @ 4:53 am

    As a D.O. in emergency medicine for aquarter of a century it had gotten to the point where even the word “Demerol” began to make me angry. I think you have to spend some time working in the E.R. to fully understand why. At the hospital where I have worked for the last 4 years it is not even on the formulary. At first this elicited attitudes of absolute disbelief on the part of some patients. “How can that be, some people need it”. For me it is the end of what used to be a small but frustrating part of working in the E.R. Thank god it is gone from my present facility.

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  12. James
    13 October 2008 @ 10:56 pm

    Thanks, Gary. I can imagine it was frustrating! Again, if there’s something that does the job better, great. Then again, I would hate to see emergency get rid of a drug just because some … maybe even most … people abuse it, if it’s still a help to some.

    Reply

  13. Barbara
    15 November 2008 @ 7:12 pm

    That’s an interesting theory, but by the time I am at the point of suicide from a status migraine I have used far more triptan/DHE type drugs than are safe. I have a 4 day “suicide danger limit” at which I can no longer tolerate the level 8 headache. It is only at that point where I am willing to ride in a bumpy car with bright lights to a bright noisy emergency room which could possibly be staffed by physicians like the one who posted about drug seekers.

    Migraneurs are some of the most easy people to differentiate from drug addicts in my humble opinion, and some of the most dreadfully treated. Addicts tend to be thin with bad skin, teeth, and hair, bad veins, (though our veins do shirk with dehydration), and they simply act different than a sick person.

    The instant the er physician has established the patient can’t tolerate further ergots/triptans, and established migraine history via patient and neurologist an IV should be started (assuming status h/a) an anti-emetic, then enough narcotic and I could care less what letter it starts with “doctor”, then corticosteroid if the sufferers’ migraine typically returns.

    Personally I think anyone who claims a comment on headache should be a lifelong sufferer or at least have lived with a parent who was a lifelong sufferer of debilitating migraine. Otherwise, you just don’t have a clue.

    Reply

    • Cheryle Keller
      22 August 2017 @ 6:36 pm

      Thank you for your clear concise information. Here are my thoughts and experiences with fat headed, idiotic, holy than thou “physicians”. The words used from pissed off desensitized PHYSICIAN make me sick!!! Just because we are not bleeding out every hole or cut open with our organs falling out, apparently “THE ER PHYSICIAN” should not be a physician, he should be shoveling crap, because that is what his idiotic words mean. I do wish that every person that said the words you did would have a dry heave once a week migraine. And if you are so brilliant, why do people get migraines? Obviously if their blood pressure is sky rocketed, rolling in pain, and want the drug that starts with a “D”, give it to them! If you kill someone because of your complete stupidity of NARCS, and pain, you think you are god. And only a mentally sick person likes to watch pain, then go home and drink all your alcohol. Just because you can buy it at a store does not make you ANY different from people who need narcotics for pain. Physicians like you have used me for their project, poking, proding, questioned, seeing a therapist who says pain does not exist, you seriously want to kill yourself after the complete rat treatment. I would like to see true pain clinics open. Not the current pain clinics which are a joke. Just another way to take in crazy amounts of money. First visit is 2000.00 dollars. For a PHYSICIAN TO SAY,, yea, go back to your doc, what he is doing is fine. Government stupidity at its best. I would like to start a bill with Congress for migraine sufferers. And completely eliminate STUPID ER PHYSICIANS making us feel suicidal. I have lived with this stigma and pain for 40 years. And somehow paid my son’s way through college, no student loans, who is now continuing with his bio chem PHD. But I guess I am a lowlife because I have pain and migraines.

      Reply

  14. James
    17 November 2008 @ 1:52 pm

    Thanks for the note, Barbara. I certainly agree that people who have dealt with migraine for many years (as you and I have) have a perspective that no one else has. I would be careful about shutting out other people from the conversation, though. Other perspectives are important – we just have to realize that every other perspective has its limitations. Doctors can see things patients don’t – and vice versa.

    From what I’ve heard, I do agree with you that many in emergency rooms could do a lot better differentiating between drug seekers and migraineurs. Let’s face it – it’s a very scary thing to be on the way to the emergency room, in incredible agony, knowing that you may get someone who doesn’t understand or care. At the very place where you should be getting the best care.

    I’m so sorry you’ve had such a challenge – challenges I’m sure I could never understand. But do remember, there is hope. There is hope that better solutions can be found for you. Hope that research today will bring even more solutions tomorrow. There is also hope that you can live a valuable, worthwhile life in the midst of pain.

    For me, my hope comes from all these things, but my ultimate hope comes from God Himself.

    I hope other visitors will read your post and remember the challenges migraineurs face. We need to find ways to make ER a solution, not the shop of horrors it often is. I say this with due respect for many, many ER workers who are compassionate and skilled, and who are doing a great job. Sadly it’s not always that way.

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  15. patsy
    19 November 2008 @ 12:57 am

    Demoral with vist—something to stop the vomiting is the only thing that works on my migraines. ER’s have used tobradol and many other drugs but they do not kill the migrain. The only pill that helps a migrain is zomig 5 and it usually takes 2 of them to work. 15 of them a month costs a minimum of $363.00 per month. I cannot afford. When hedache gets bad my blood pressure shoots up 150/110 and higher. I am trying a beta blocker blood pressure medication to help.
    It does help some but with the stress that I am having at age 61 taking care of 84 yr. old mother–I am nuts half the time with worry and what to do next. I wish we lived in Washington where they now allow a person to die in peace. My mother wants to die, and I kept her alive with open heart surgery when Dr.s said last year to let her go. I love her very much. My brother who is 10 years younger than me will do nothing to help take care of mom. It would be OK, if she would live with me and my husband, but she won’t and the old 85 year old Dr. that she was going to gave her permission to be at home alone, to take care of herself. It is a constant fight to keep track of what she is doing next. She made me her POA long ago which at that time was good. I did not relize that science has made our bodies die before our selves. Her body is crumbling andthey keep putting on bandades, she has in writing the request to be left to die, it is hard. I feel like I am killing her. And yet I have been told by my Dr.s that this stress is killing me. In the last 2 years I have gotten very very old and my own life with my husband has suffered greatly. My husband has been very good, he helps me with everything. My husband and I were the oonly ones to take care of my dad who died in2006 also. He died in a nursing home eventually. But it was real bad. Nursing homes in Central IL. let people die in their own excrement so they can take their homes and what ever the patient has worked for all their lives. Without the stress their have been times that I can go 4 or 5 months without a migrain. But now my husband is getting them too. Don’t ever think when you reach 55 or 60 that you will be in you”GOLDEN YEARS” it never happens. I did not know demoral stayed in my body, till I had to have a test on my colon and stomach and they gave me demoral to keep me under–I had NO PAIN BUT I WATCHED THE OPERATION ON TV AND TRIED TO TALK WHILE THEY HAD A TUBE IN MY STOMACH. The Dr. that I went to for this did not know about my headaches. But there is a question that I have, does Demoral effect the heart as I have angina and must take nitroglycerin at times. Thankyou

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  16. James
    19 November 2008 @ 9:24 am

    Thanks for the comment, Patsy.

    I assume you’re talking about Vistaril for the nausea? Just clarifying for other visitors.

    Thanks for sharing so openly. You’ve brought up a number of issues that are so important, so hard to talk about, and yet so important to talk about. I’m so sorry you’re in such a difficult part of life.

    You’re right – as we get older our bodies do “crumble”. It’s not an easy decision when it comes to prolonging life. I do believe there is hope for those in their later years, and for you too who are younger. I’m encouraged that you are actively pursuing treatment for yourself. That is not an easy thing to keep on doing – so your courage is noteworthy.

    I don’t think Demerol has a direct effect on the heart. However, it can cause blood pressure changes, so I would talk to your doctor about that.

    Reply

  17. Debbie
    25 November 2008 @ 12:53 pm

    James,
    It is amazing that I stumbled across this post. I know ER docs don’t like Demerol and it seems like I am running into them more these days. For years, I got Demerol and Phenergan for my migraine pain. It worked great. It usually took 100-150mg dose, but it worked. I liked the sedation because chances were I had gotten no sleep the night before. Also, by the time I hit the ER, I am not a good candidate for more triptans or DHE.

    I had a neurologist who gave Depakote IV (1gram) in his office. That worked also. That was fine if I happened to have an appointment that day. But the choice of driving less than 5 minutes to the ER or 45 minutes across town was an easy one. The ER won every time. I have received Depakote IV at the ER, but for some reason, it was not effective.

    Just recently I have either been in a facility that didn’t stock Demerol and I received Reglan and Benedryl IV. I can’t say whether it worked because by the time they gave it to me, the head pain was gone.

    Just last Saturday, I ran into a dr who wouldn’t give Demerol. I received Dilaudid (2mg) and Phenergan (??mg). The vertigo was worse that from Demerol; the pain returned within 3 hours, and the nausea was worse than before. My DH suggested a return visit, but I decided to wait it out.

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  18. James
    8 December 2008 @ 6:26 pm

    Thanks for the comment, Debbie. It certainly isn’t easy trying (or being forced to try!) new things. I hope you can at least find some doctors that have done their homework and know what to offer instead that has a good chance of succeeding!

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  19. Troy
    17 March 2009 @ 6:59 pm

    You medical people kill me with your “rid the ER of Demerol” arguments. I have suffered with migraines for nearly 20 years and have had all the latest and greatest drugs to combat migraine. The only effective “rescue” drug that
    works for me is Demerol. I have had many of the alternatives. Morphine, Reglan, Hydromorphone, Stadol, etc,etc. They either don’t work for me or let a rebound occur. It’s pretty easy to weed out the abusers if you are a good doc. Otherwise, SUFFER a migraine and then go to an ER w/o something that works for you!!!!!

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  20. James
    18 March 2009 @ 8:48 pm

    Troy,

    Thanks for your comments. In defence of some of the others who have posted, I think the motive behind removing Demerol is not bad – they’re concerned about it effects and convinced that other treatments will work just as well.

    Of course, that’s the question – will other treatments work as well? And it’s not easy to answer. As someone who has been in ER with a severe migraine, I agree that we should be careful not to get rid of what works!

    But I hope no one who has commented has to have a migraine in order to be convinced.

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  21. Donna
    31 March 2009 @ 6:02 pm

    I am so glad I’ve found this. I was trying to found out more about Stadol that my son used to be given in the ER. He told me it was now in a nasal spray form that would work faster than oral medication if you could get your doctor to prescribe it; I just have been given to understand it is very hard to get that done; do you have any ideas about that? he is now under the care of a neurologist who wants to schedule him for another MRI; he had one done about 5 years ago which is what led to him being diagnosed with the migraines; I believe he was being given the Stadol before when he was going to the ER and “just” being given an injection without anything being done to find out what was actually wrong with him. Then he began to be flagged as one of those “drug seekers” who was just wanting something so then was not even able to get anything; in a way I’m glad because that’s what led to him going to the ER that did the original MRI and told him then he needed to go to a neurologist; the only problem was that he didn’t have the money because he could hardly work because of the migraines (no insurance either); however, thanks to that same hospital; in their clinic they adopted a policy of adhering to the same guidelines as the hospital and began to let you see their doctors at no cost if need be so at least now he is guaranteed 6 months of treatment to try to get to the root of these migraines and treat them. I’m wondering now if they really actually stopped because of the studies saying that Stadol is actually addictive; I’m also wondering if that did contribute to him actually becoming a “drug seeker”; treat the problem by making a druggie then blame them for being one? anyway, I don’t think that is why he wants the Stadol; it’s just that it did work for the migraines – maybe the good stuff is just all addictive.

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  22. Jeff
    6 April 2009 @ 3:31 pm

    On 4-24-99 I was beaten unconcious arresting a suspect (DUI and on Cocaine) and hit 4 times in the left emple.After 1 1/2 yrs later I started to get severe migranes that have now occured sometimes to every 3 – 4 months. I was admitted to local hospital and have been to Johns Hopkins,MD and Penn State Hershey Medical Center,PA for advise and possible treatements or remedies.Mophine , Dilaudid , Regalin,Toradol. Percocet , Vicoden , and may other pain meds don’t have any effect on me at all.

    I am given Demerol 100 mg IV every 2 hours for the pain that is above an 8 on scale.I am no addict at all and have no side effects after they start reducing the amount from 100 mg to 75 mg , then down to 40 mg. Now all the local hospitals have stopped using Demerol and I have looked to Jefferson Medical,Philadelphia for further help.I use steriods , Depakote , Neurontin , Vicoprfen , Cymbalata , and other meds now along with hot showers , heat pads and anything that can reduce the pain. Imitrex and Stadol put me respitory arrest and they have tried Botox injections , other meds,Maxault,Zonogram ,and Methadone and Neubane. Excuse for any spelling of meds.

    Some things work and wish they would not make everyone suffer for others mistakes by misuse of drugs.I’ve been a cop for 35 yrs and know that drug use is bad and what it does but if I soon can’t control this I have to retire.

    Everyone has different nero receptors and the right meds that work should be used on individual basis. If anyone else has any ideas I am open for suggestions. Also Johns Hopkins did recommend an natural medication call Migravert but it did not work either but is total natural.

    Reply

    • Jeff
      14 July 2011 @ 5:52 am

      On 7-1-09 I finally had to retire from my Police Dept afte total of 36 yrs because I was in the hospital so much and leaving shifts having to be filled by Officer on overtime and now one DR of 14 that Ins Company has sent me to has said the assault was not the cause of Migranes but Ins wants to continue to pay medical and give lump sum for Workers Comp settlement,what a joke I wish they could expierience the pain of one Migrane like I get only since the 99 assault.

      Reply

  23. Jeff
    6 April 2009 @ 3:40 pm

    By the way now all hospitals in my area no longer use Demerol at all!

    Reply

  24. Barbara
    9 April 2009 @ 8:56 am

    Jeff, I so empathize with your recurring migraines. I can’t imagine how you do your job in that pain. I am an ex-Atlanta cop, and my husband is still there in his 35th year.

    One natural remedy that worked for my chronic severe frequent migraines (at least for a year or so) was the brand name Petadolex, it is the herb buttterbur. It takes about a month to kick in, it probably won’t help you permanently but for the time it helped me, my HA’s reduced in frequency, and intensity. It’s sort of expensive, if you look online you can get a 3 pack for $75 or so.

    It is terrible to be treated as an addict, and those post-trauma can be even more complicated than plain old inherited migraines. You may have mentioned, but have you tried Lyrica? It has been helpful for some. My neurologist still insists Imitrex injections are the “gold standard” for an acute migraine, but I know that doesn’t work for everyone, and other health issues prevent using triptans in some people.

    I am glad you appear to be near Philly, you have access to the best docs in the business there, and hopefully with your health coverage you can get to resources others can’t get to. To stay somewhat on topic, Demerol use even by IV several times per year isn’t going to create or support an addict. To me this fear of narcotics in pain situations is a tragedy and a media creation. Acute pain must be addressed, Demerol and other narcotics are tools for that. Even if you must depend on a narcotic eventually, to improve the quality of your life, that is different from addiction.

    Look at The Robbins (might be Robins) Headache clinic website, it has numerous resources and suggestions. Also, I know you must have considered it but with 35 years in you could take your pension with a decent benefit and just work EJ’s if you need the money. It would put you in a position to work around you migraines. Good Luck.

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  25. marilyn
    6 May 2009 @ 6:26 am

    To Troy and anybody else,
    I understand you stating the ” END DEMEROL” in the ER’s. I have had migraines since I was 8 yrs old. In the 1960’s they knew nothing about it. I am now in my 50’s and they still don’t know anything. I was reading all the blogs about Duiladid, the Triptams, Morphine and everything else ER’s want to give instead of Demerol / Phenergan. I am one of those persons with mutiple heart surguries since my teens. The other meds they have tried on me were worse than the migraines. Everyone who has had one will understand. To hurt for 3 to 5 days then go to the ER and have to wait 6 hrs while people who came in after you seems almost criminal. I happened on this sight looking for a pain mgmt doctor. This lets me know I am not the only one out there.
    I have been to every pain mgmt west of the Mississippi, and still no help.

    hope to hear from someone,
    Bye the novel notionalist

    Reply

    • Nancy
      25 May 2011 @ 4:07 pm

      i have had migraines for 20 years now and the only thing i can suggest after years of all the med and drs experimenting on me everyone is different and the dr think a migraine is a migraine not so i have been getting epiderals this last 6 months and after 4 injections i am getting relief, i also have c2 to t5 all herniated and bulging and so on so if you have tension and discs that are effecting you check out PISA in tucson az DR. BULLOCK IS MY DR they have a very good website for information and could suggest a place by your home good luck and it is hard but keep smiling from someone that definitely relate.

      Reply

  26. Erin
    18 May 2009 @ 1:32 pm

    I went to the ER for the first time last Friday. Fortunately, it only took about an hour before they had me hooked up to an IV. They gave me morphine, which helped with took the migraine down to a tolerable level (tolerable being relative, of course). Afterwards, I itched from the morphine for almost 24 hours. They gave me benadryl in my IV as well for the itching, but it wore off long before the itching stopped. I’m curious if there are any of the other meds that don’t have the itching problem (I know not everyone gets it). I can’t take oxycontin for the same reason. It’s really quite unbearable, and kept me up for almost 20 hours after the ER trip, and I slept fitfully after that. Hopefully, I”ll never have to go again, but the headaches seem to be on the upswing right now, so I want to be prepared. Anyone else have this problem and a solution?

    Reply

  27. Jeff
    19 May 2009 @ 7:52 am

    What about the Imitrex , Treximent , Stadol or others. I have had severeve migranes from a head tramua in 99 and now have found that the pain meds are possibly causing the rebound headache migranes.Thomas Jefferson Headache Center,Philadelphia,PA has said this is common problem. Covering the problem with pain meds and not treating the problem.They now have me on Topamax 150 mg and headches are less and not as severe.

    I had been to John Hopkins,MD and Penn St Med Centers,PA before finding the possible solution. Good luck.

    Reply

  28. Donna
    21 May 2009 @ 7:08 am

    Hi everyone,
    I’ve just come back from a 6 wk. hiatus being around my son seeing his migraines in action; they were so bad the head nurse at the hospital (where we were trying to deal with my 84 yr old mom’s hip surgery) was scared to death, especially since his neurologist had sent him for an angiogram after his MRI seemed to show aneurysms (turned out not to be), that he was going to burst a blood vessel. That same neurologist turned out to be a problem; his nurse finally wanted to talk to him when we called for more Trexamet – again – bad move when you’re in the middle of a migraine – he’s out of his head – and when you have things in your head that shouldn’t be there in the first place they come out at a time like that – suffice it to say he discharged him as a patient – said he was taking too much of the medication – it’s not like it’s a narcotic – by law they would have to treat him if he went to the ER bu not otherwise and he was actually trying to get real help not just a band-aid so back to his primary who when he told her how much and often said it actually sounded more like cluster headaches (so not sure if still need to be here but read on) so put him on oxygen therapy but when went to get it the lady there said she’d had them and went to – hang on – a chiropractor for 3 months and has never had another one. So we found Healthsource – a chain – he was put on a 4 wk. treatment plan and the change has been tremendous. It’s expensive in a sense but much less so than continuing to pay for medication. As far as that, he couldn’t do that but we got him on plans with the manufacturers that allow him to get his meds for free. Check into it! The chiro we paid for but many insurances do cover or they would probably work out a payment plan for you. Worth seeing about!

    Reply

  29. Susan
    21 May 2009 @ 11:42 am

    I have been to urgent care at my HMO about 8 times in the past 6 months for multi-day migraines that refuse to be contained by my regimen of proactive or abortive meds. I’ve found that what works is a combination of Stadol, Toradol, and Phenergan. It has to be all three, as there is some combinatory effect. Of course, by then I’ve taken 3-6 Maxalts over a 2-3 day period, so perhaps I need all four. [sigh] When is someone going to concentrate on a cure?

    Reply

  30. Barbara
    21 May 2009 @ 3:25 pm

    Wouldn’t it be lovely! You and me Susan. Unfortunately migraine operates somewhat like epilepsy, and as we know that is only “controllable” not curable. Preventatives as we have them now do not work for every sufferer. I think this is the secret: If you are identified as a migraine sufferer early in life (due to maternal migraine, and migraine in childhood) preventatives have a much better possibility of working. My 15 yr old daughter had success on her first try with Topamax at 75 mg per day. It has reduced her migraine frequency by at least half. She takes Advil perhaps once per week, Maxalt maybe every other month.On the other hand, my mother suffered migraine which had her hospitalized for weeks at a time throughout her life and no preventative or combination was the slightest bit helpful. The same situation exists with me. By the time you have experienced so many status migraines, your threshold is so low, that the preventatives don’t work. So, you are left with going to urgent care for whatever they will give you for relief. Its very unfair for providers to undertreat this debilitating condition. Any of you sufferers (especially women) with children who are showing frequent migraine indicators should get to a neurologist ASAP to discuss getting the child on preventatives early! It might prevent the 40-50 years of migraine and all these ER visits.

    Reply

  31. Mary
    24 May 2009 @ 12:01 am

    This is an excerpt of one of your posts.
    “On the other hand, my mother suffered migraine which had her hospitalized for weeks at a time throughout her life and no preventative or combination was the slightest bit helpful. The same situation exists with me. By the time you have experienced so many status migraines, your threshold is so low, that the preventatives don’t work. So, you are left with going to urgent care for whatever they will give you for relief.”

    I was wondering what the term “status migraine” means and what you meant about your threshold being low and preventatives don’t work.

    I’ve had migraine since age 7 (possibly longer) but wasn’t diagnosed until my 20’s. My doctor at the time in Toronto prescribed narcotic painkillers. Later, my Vancouver Dr also prescribed narcotics. I didn’t even know about preventatives until I moved to a very small remote town in the FAR north when I was in my 30’s. I feel so lucky because I didn’t expect terrific doctors in such a town. This doctor told me about preventatives. I didn’t have much success but tried everything (maybe 20 different types of migraine preventatives… nothing worked). He did a ton of research for me and told me about everything new that came along. A couple of years ago in my mid 40’s I decided to try preventatives again. I had some luck with Nadolol. It reduced my attacks from 20 – 25 days a month down to 3 – 5… Awesome. Unfortunately it stopped working after about 18 months. I’m not working now so I try to tough it out and use demerol again when I can’t deal with the pain any longer. Sadly my old doctor is trying to retire but the woman who is taking his place is almost as good. They both really listen and I know they care. In major metropolises I couldn’t get a decent doctor but have lucked out twice “north of 60”.

    Anyway… I was wondering if the reason I haven’t had much success with preventatives was because I didn’t try them until I’d had migraine for over 25 years?

    Reply

  32. Barbara
    25 May 2009 @ 2:16 pm

    Hey Mary,

    I’m not a healthcare professional, just a life-long migraine sufferer from a family of hereditary migraine sufferers. That being said, I have a level of expertise based on personal experience and nonstop research into the disease we share. “Status migraine” (short for status migrainous) is a migraine lasting longer than 72 hours. Those are usually the migraines that make the docs pay attention because by then the sufferer is so dehydrated, plus there is some evidence that the risk of stroke increases after days of migraine.

    I do not know for a medical certainty that using preventatives early (once diagnosis of migraine is made) prevents severe, lifelong pain. I do know that in older people who have had severe regular migraine,it usually takes many tries or combinations of preventatives to achieve headache improvement. Frequently, as with your try at Nadalol, the medicine will reduce frequency or intensity for some brief time, then poop out.

    A threshold, refers to the amount of stimulus or “trigger” a sufferer can tolerate before symptoms appear. For example, a person with epilepsy left untreated will have increasing seizures. Each seizure lowers his threshold and enables more seizures. Assuming he then is treated successfully with Dilantin or Neurontin, or whatever before he has had dozens of seizures, his seizures are less likely to happen.

    With us, I believe that if all those years of migraines could have been avoided (by early preventative medications) that our migraines wouldn’t have reached these levels of pain, frequency, and duration.
    It’s not anybody’s fault as far as prevention goes; prevention wasn’t really even a mainstay of treatment until pretty recently. In the 1970’s prevention consisted of either Inderal or amytriptaline. Neither of those worked for people in my family, so it was a continual battle against the existing headache.

    I really recommend following Teri Roberts information on migraine, as well as information cited at the Robbins headache clinic website. It will give you lots of information on migraine, new preventatives, theories, medications for acute attacks, etc. I mentioned in an earlier post, but butterbur (which is herbal) worked for me as a preventative for a while and it had no side effects.

    You are certainly not “out of luck” regarding prevention even after decades of migraine. Older sufferers do find things that are effective; I just believe the sooner one gets on a preventative, the easier these things are to control somewhat. My minister was in her 60’s and her first try at Neurontin helped her tremendously. So, you never know!

    Reply

  33. marilyn
    25 May 2009 @ 2:17 pm

    Hi, “status migraine” is a migraine that pounds continuosly without any break regardless of any meds you take. The only way tom stop it is an injection strong enough to put you to sleep. When you wake it will still be there but not as bad. You need to take your home meds every 4 to 6 hrs without missing a dose until it stops. this could take a couple of days. I hope this answers your question.
    write back if you need any more info.

    Bye, the novel notionalist

    Reply

  34. kelly
    29 May 2009 @ 12:02 am

    I have been a life long sufferer of migraines. I remember being a small child and needed to be placed in baths of ice. I have been facing ignorance from doctors all my life. I have a reaction to maxeran every time i go to the hospital and usually by then my migraine has lasted for days and i cannot deal with it, so off i go to the er. I have explained every time that it makes me have a panic attack. I rip out my iv and run from the hospital every time. I cannot explain it really and despite telling them they give it to me anyways, what i have read says that it can interact with my drugs for depression and insomnia. Is this true. What can i do from keeping them from getting it.
    My doctor wants to take me off the only medication that works, maxalt.
    How can i tell her that nothing else works.
    She is a new doctor and actually said that it may be psychological I feel desperate and scared. I have stopped going to the hospitals. please help if you can.
    Kelly

    Reply

    • Nancy
      25 May 2011 @ 4:15 pm

      this last year i have been getting epiderals for discs from c2 to t5 all messed up after 4 injections i am getting some relief hope this helps have had migraines regularly for 20 years and a headache everyday. good luck to all

      Reply

  35. Susan
    29 May 2009 @ 10:54 am

    Kelly,

    Is your doctor a “regular” doctor or a specialist? If possible, you need to be seen every few months by a neurologist or neurosurgeon. They understand better; It may not help, but it sure couldn’t hurt. There are a whole host of preventive meds that you can try before ending up in the ER with a migraine and panic attack. I’m on several prevention meds that at least keep the migraines down to a tolerable level, so I don’t have to face those bright lights and multi-hour waits at the ER.

    Reply

  36. Bill Wray
    5 August 2009 @ 9:44 am

    Demerol doesn’t last long, it also makes a lot of people itch. If you have a REAL Pain Issue here is the BEST Believe me I know pain medicine since I had a cervical fusion in 2000 and as we speak have a prescription for Injectable Pain medicine. Dilaudid is simply the best, taken with Phenergan it s one of the best.I take Nubain everyday, Nubain and phenergan are used in a lot of ER’s for Migraines. Morphine works for some but Morphine usually doesn’t work for SEVERE pain. Any pian Medicine Works better with an Anti Emetic, Like Phenergan,Compazine,Tigan,Vistiril,Personally I like Phenergan best and it is getting hard to get in an ER because, A Woman lost her Arm from some IDIOT giving it to her Un-diluted. If you have severe pain do research on what works best for you, Example, Nubain is NOT a Controlled substance in most states,it doesn’t make you high or loaded like Dilaudid or Demerol. I done research and took it to my Personal DR. I told him it had reallt helped me, He came back into the room and ask if Ineeded syringes. It has almost eliminated my trips to the ER, I feel so fortunate to finally having an MD listen to me and help.

    Reply

  37. Christine
    17 August 2009 @ 5:50 pm

    Just a word about Compazine — some people (turns out I am one) have a *horrible* reaction to Compazine called akathesia. It is defined as “an almost indescribable sense of terror and doom” along with intense restlessness and discomfort. Some people are mis-diagnosed as being psychotic when they come into the ER that way, thank goodness the nurses recognized that my reaction was a result of the Compazine they had given me. I have no idea whether all anti-emetics cause this reaction, but it was the most horrible experience of my life. So I would ask specifically about the properties of the various choices.

    Reply

  38. Syphera
    23 August 2009 @ 1:56 am

    I have migraines for 29 yrs and I’ve tried meds from anti-depressants to anti pshcotics. I have migraines at least 5-7 times a month and the only thing I take at this point is Vicodin. I have a “pain contract” with the hospital, I can go twice a month for shots for my migraines. Found out I’m allergic to most everything they have. I was in the medical field until I had to go on SSDisability at 41, for migraines. The “cocktail” they give me now is Stadol, Promethazine(generic Phenagrin), and Benadryl. The benadryl is for the side affect of the Stadol. Demerol worked tons better for me than anything. I had a migraine for 31 days, so the docs said. I just tried Dilaudid and had an allergic reaction to it while in the ER.
    Sometimes it’s ok to fall back on the old meds, Demerol made me sleep after nights of staying up, never a “hangover” but then the day after I get a shot, I take it very easy. The reason the ERs quit giving Demerol is because if they don’t know you, they can’t tell you have a migraine and allot of people went to get a “high”, messing it up for people like me. Also, if something else is causing your migraine, they like to use Demerol as a first med for surgery. The anestologists are the ones that did the study on residual meds in the system, which are the ones who use it the most. As far as the residual affect, lots of clear fluids can clean Demerol out of your system just as quick as any other pain med, usually 72-84 hrs. So now I’m stuck getting a drug that I have a reaction to and I even need benadryl a couple of days after I get the shot. I’m ready to go to the pain clinic(again) and see if I am a candiate for the electronic stimulation implant. I’ve missed to much of my life due to all of these doctor’s wanting to try different things on me, toxifing my body. I’ve even had surgery, and that didn’t work. Botox just made me look younger, which was a good side affect, but didn’t do anything for my head. I’m at the end of the road basically, if anyone has heard of anything other then prescription or over the counter meds, I would love hear about it.
    Just my situation!

    Reply

  39. Susan
    31 August 2009 @ 7:08 am

    I had Dilaudid the last time I was in the hospital. It made my headache much WORSE, and I couldn’t get anyone to pay attention to give me something else instead. When I was finally released, I asked my neurologist (who wasn’t on call that weekend) to note in my chart not to give me Dilaudid anymore. It’s bad enough to end up in the hospital, but then to have to stay there in pain is just unbelievable.

    Reply

  40. felicia
    12 October 2009 @ 10:34 am

    I’ve used Demerol 100mg IM injections for migraine for 5 years now. Originally I would go to the ER, but once our insurance changed and they deemed a visit to ER as only ‘not breathing’ or ‘bleeding to death’ as the only qualifiying events, my physician and I had to come to new delivery system. The injections are carpuject and you simply use an injector to give shot. I personally was allowed up to 30 injections per month. I have a headache everyday… just never know if it will go down path of migraine or chronic daily headache. The Demerol is used for only HA of 7 or above; migraine specific. I also take Depakote ER, Topamax (400mg daily), propranolol 80mg. Zomig 5 mg is my rescue med however due to crappy insurance. (H). I’m only 3 tablets per MONTH. that’s right, 3 in 31 days. so, my Demerol becomes rescue. I always try to get rid of HA by using 3 ASA and 1 APAP to start. Sometimes it works… my quality of life sucks, i’ve missed a great deal of my children’s life due to try and sleep off a headache. Wish the manufacturers and Doc’s thought about that sometime… I can no longer work a full-time job, and i drive seldom. I’m lucky to get 10 shots now a month. This allows me to work thru some headaches and determine which ones are just not tolerable. I want my life, just not like this! Keep Demerol available for those of us who truly benefit from it and get it from a licensed practioner. Getting it from a pharmacy makes me feel like a criminal, they treat you like less of a person, at least it’s not Oxy and i keep it all for me! let those judging eyes burn a hole in someone else!
    good luck to all of us who suffer. God loves us more than anyone!

    Reply

  41. Sheila
    12 October 2009 @ 3:32 pm

    I was just in the ER on Friday and the hospital I usually go to in Overland Park, KS does not give Demoral, Toroidal, Stadol, or any of the usual pain meds anymore. They are now giving just Compazine with benadryl. I was a skeptic at first but after suffering with a migraine for many days i was willing to try anything and it worked.

    Reply

  42. Susan
    14 October 2009 @ 6:49 am

    I went to our hospital’s urgent care two days ago with a horrible migraine. The PA offered me Dilaudid. I told her that the last time I was in the hospital for migraines, they gave me Dilaudid, and it made my headache much worse. She said she would check on what else they could use. After awhile, a man came in to give me shots–“pain medicine,” Zofran (for nausea), and Toredol (helps boost the pain medicine). The nausea subsided. The headache, oddly enough, moved from my left eye to my right, and only went from a 9 to an 8. When I got my discharge papers (from yet a third person), I asked what pain medicine I had received. They gave me Dilaudid. I ended up being out another day from work because it didn’t kill the headache. Isn’t that kind of malpractice, to give someone a drug they specified did not work for them?

    Reply

  43. Michelle
    15 October 2009 @ 3:57 pm

    Here where I live in Canada when I go to the ER the usually give me IV Maxeran and if that doesn’t work then they follow that with IV Stemetil. Both need to be run at a very slow drip rate to avoid side effects but usually the Maxeran is most effective. Occasionally they will run it a second time if needed.They also have a protical for migraine sufferers. Usually within 15 Min after you arrive in the ER you are hooked up to the IV – you may have to go back out to the waiting area with it but atleast your getting treated.

    Reply

  44. Tara
    6 January 2010 @ 6:47 pm

    In Canada, I have had maxeran with 2 ibprofren and 2 tylenol(please i could do this at home!) the maxeran made me very sick. I have had a migraine now for 4 days. Tylenol 3 and extra strenght liquid motrin not workng-made me very itchy-i threw up the $20 imitrix, i just tried eating now to see if that helps and having some coke-these are menstrual migraines…i feel like i have been shot in the head-i feel suicidal from the pain. I am reluctant to go to ER because it has never helped in the past. I am thinking demerol may help…again don’t know if they will give it to me at ER…they treat you like a drug addict-I really don’t think i can stand to wait 4-5 hours in the ER and not get any demerol…i will hopefully hang in there until tomorrow and maybe I can get in to my doctor and get some demerol…I cannot take this anymore…why isn’t there more help for people with this disablling condition?

    Reply

  45. Kitty
    7 January 2010 @ 2:19 am

    I have had migraines for 30 years, been to all kinds of neuroligists, even The Midwest Neurological Institute where I had 3 neurologists at the same time. We figured out that my trigger is the weather. Mainly low pressure systems or extreme quick weather changes, also a 25-45 degree change in the weather which happens in the spring and fall seasons more than any other. I have been through sleep studies(I have sleep apnea but the machine made no diffrence in my migraines), have had botox injections, as as the institute concluded, “I’ve had everything in the closet for migraines.” I was in the health field so I know the different drugs that can be used and have tried everything even in the ER. By the way, you should only go to one ER for your migraines so they get to know you, your specific problems, and what does and does not work. Then, you won’t be judged quickly as a “drug seeker”. Docs cannot really tell if a person does have a headache/migraine and for a while, people went to the ER to get Demerol for the “high.” I did check out the residual effects the doctors are claiming now that Demerol has but the other pain meds have the same if not worse effects in the information I have found. Again, that is just me and I am not a doctor. I have had a liver problem before so I do research meds often for new studies. I am allergic to Morphine, thank God I was in the hospital when I got the injection. My allergies include DHE45, this so called new migraine med, made me VERY ill. I am allergic to Codiene, Newbain, Tordol, Vicodin, and Diloded. I have a verbal pain contract with the hospital since I do have to go a couple of time a month to get migraines broke that I cannot at home. I was getting Stadol, along with a large dose of Benedryl because of the side effects it gave me. The doctor that owns the company that contracts for the ER, I am on a first name basis with, came into my room the last time I was there and we discussed everything that I have had, so now I am back to Demerol with Phernagan(sp?) for nausea, and it also has a good side effect that for some reason does help migraines without boosting the effect of Demerol. Through my many different trials of meds, I am to be on pain killers and muscle relaxers daily. I do not take them daily anymore though, it is to hard on your organs and you build up such a tolorance to any kind of pain meds that when you do go to the ER, sometimes it does not help. I have transformed migraines, which basically means I have a head ache every day and if I get over stimulated wether it be positive or negative, it can turn into a migraine. On the onset of a migraine, I do take the pain pills, muscle relaxers, and one sinus pill(ask your doc about the sinus pill first!). I learned of the sinus pill from the Mayo Clinic when my sister went there.
    I live in Missouri and as the old saying goes, “If you don’t like the weather here, wait 15 minutes and it will change.” Germany has studied weather associated with migraines for 60 years and the EDA and docs in North America are finally taking notice that it is very much a problem for some, this is why journaling migraines is important. Write down little notes about the time of day, everything you ingested that day and the day before, what you were doing when it came on, where you were at the time of onset, and the weather.
    Anyway Demerol, not used often,such as a couple of times a month as I do, we have found is much more productive and less harmful to my system.
    Talk to your ER doc, most of them will tell you that they don’t use it in the ER. For someone that is basically allergic to everything but Demerol, then Demerol is used.
    I also save my discharge papers, and I ask the nurse or doctor I want what they gave me and the amounts hand written on them because I do save them. Also, keep them in one place that way if you need to go to the hospital and need something different, you have proof in hand that you have tried what they wanted you to, and you can tell them why you need something else.
    Good Luck!

    Reply

  46. Lacy
    2 October 2010 @ 12:27 am

    I have had the worst headache that I have ever had. I have never suffered from any before. I just spent 3 days in the hospital and 24hrs after I got home it started, I have taken a long hot bath, tried the quiet room thing, demerol 100mg and 10/325 percocet pills. I have tried migrain meds such as excedrin. I have tried caffine. I have tried everything that I can. I am at a total loss because I have never ever had my head hurt so bad. I do not want to go to the ER because I do not want them to think that I am seeking drugs. I do suffer from other chronic pain problems but nothing to do with my head. does anyone have any answers or any comments. my head has been hurting for the past 17 hrs. I can not sleep, I can not seem to hold very much down. I am only getting worse it is on a 9/10 pain scale. can someone please help me?

    Reply

  47. Winter
    15 October 2010 @ 10:45 am

    I had a severe headache that I never experienced before during the past summer and ended up in urgent care. So, at the end of the Dr. visit, the doctor asked me if I wanted an injection of Demerol which I knew nothing of its side effects. The dose was 100mg. After the subcutaneous injection, I walked out of the doctor’s office and went to another area in the building for blood work he wanted me to do. At the rest area I suddenly felt dizziness and almost fainted. So, I was brought back on the wheelchair to the urgent care Dr. and received some IV HYD and other treatment to recover me from the faint. Now I have received the bill, and was charged for all the treatment caused by the side effect of Demerol injection. Am I responsible for the cost? Any information on this will be helpful!!! Thanks.

    Reply

  48. Nat
    21 February 2011 @ 2:44 pm

    I am a longtime migraine sufferer. I’ve been fighting migraines for the past 13 years chronically and just a couple a year before that. I am a female in my mid-30s. I have seen multiple neurologists over the years, mostly in the Kansas City metro area. The couple I really liked eventually moved into in-patient care and pediatric neurology respectively so now I am beginning with a new neurologist. I find this post interesting as I suffer often from migraines compounded by a daily headache that the neurologists can not get rid of, so my migraines are easily triggered (they say because the receptors are already in a heightened state with the daily headache). I’ve been to the ER several different times in the past few years though I try to wait it out and treat the migraines at home with pain meds and abortive meds. This can be severely difficult while holding down a full time job and caring for my family so when they are particularly nasty and last longer than 4-5 days I end up having to seek ER care. DHE shots do not work for me no matter what they are combined with, morphine doesn’t work, demerol may slightly taket the edge off but doesn’t begin to make it tolerable, fioranal has worked once, diuladid worked once, and then there was a mystery drug they gave me for severe chest pain two years ago that stopped both the chest pain and the horrible migraine that I’d had with it but I couldn’t find out the name of that drug (I do know it was a narcotic). At home, I’ve used both Imitrex tablets and injections in every dosage made (they are hit or miss – sometimes work, sometimes don’t – and make my throat burn and swell so I have to be careful as I know that is an allergic reaction), every approved abortive migraine drug (none of which worked), preventative therapies have ranged from the natural variations (butterbur, feverfew, etc) to ace inhibitors, beta-blockers, anti-seizures, and others. I have a running list of meds because there have been so many.

    The reason for my post, is to say thanks to those who have posted, and because it was mentioned in a post above let anyone reading this know that I had an allergic reaction to Reglan, an anti-nausea medicine commonly given now in hospitals (ER or regular stay), that caused me to twitch uncontrollably for hours and made me very hyper-alert to where I couldn’t fall asleep no matter how tired I got until the medicine wore off. I was dosed with Reglan several times before I was able to figure out that it was that medicine that was causing it. They switched me to Zofran which didn’t help with the nausea, but the Reglan wasn’t either. The hospital I went to no longer like to prescribe Phenergan (promethazine) for nausea which is what works for me so I had a difficult time. But, I want people to be aware of the potential for an allergic reaction from Reglan (anti-nausea med). It has just recently come under fire for such side effects (from lawsuits), after the first couple times I received it, so if it works for you and you don’t have side effects that is great just be aware if you haven’t taken it before.

    Last, if someone knows of medicine that would be used to treat severe chest pain (they didn’t determine why, but my BP was in the 180/120 range, yes I know that is extremely high and it is a symptom of a whole other physical problem separate from my migraines and my BP is being treated and monitored) in the ER that might also get rid of a migraine, I would know the name if I hear it so a post naming possibilities might be helpful for me if anyone knows. Thank you and good luck to all of the migraine sufferers.

    Reply

  49. Cordelia
    12 July 2011 @ 3:46 pm

    I have suffered from headaches and migraines my entire life so when this one started I didn’t think much of it. I do not believe in taking drugs of any type, however this migraine is so intense and has lasted for over a month straight, I nearly lost it and took an entire bottle of migraine relief pills as the regular dosage obviously had no effect. My body never has any reaction to medicine. My family and doctors never believe me when I tell them it will not have any effect. Luckily I thought twice and only took the regular dosage my point here is that I have been in so much pain this past month which has gotten steadily worse that I am becoming very irrational. I have a high pain tolerance, I mean I do not take any pain relief for illness or injury not even the times when doctors have needed to slice open infected wounds. If I can tolerate being stabbed with a sharp knife without flinching there must be something majorly wrong with my brain right now. I am writing this to find out if anyone has any advice. I cannot function normally right now and it continuous to grow more intense daily recently. I am going to see a doctor tomorrow as in a few more days I have a family camping trip to attend and I cannot move without being tortured right now. I need something that can hopefully remove but at least suppress this agony for a few days while I am away that will not cause fatigue. I am searching for a medication that is strong enough to work but also as healthy as possible. Right now I really do not care however I just want to be able to move without dieing. Thanks in advance.

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  50. Jeff
    14 July 2011 @ 5:37 am

    Cordelia,my Neurologist atThomas Jefferson,Philly has found a way of treatment when I get the Status Migrane,one which won’t release and its non-narcotic. They give an injection of Benadryl and Phenigrin(not sure of spelling) then 1/2 hr later another and then a third 1/2 hr later. Now I am in the hospital due to these Migranes but after three days of that cocktail I feel totally relived from the pain.If you want more info I can ask the dosages of medications aforementioned. I only can use Demerol for pain and all the hospitals have gone Demerol free in PA. However they have it but Dr has to ask for special permission from Pharmacy, Even then though my Hospital(Holy Spirit,Camp Hill,PA) still won’t give me any so I have to use heat and cold packs for pain until they get the Phenigrin in from supply house.Apparently it was an outdated anti-nausea medication. I’m on daily doses of Topamax and an anti-immflamitory Innomiacin(Speeling again not sure) but that is a proactive attempt of getting the Status Migrane(which is a migrane that locks in and won’t release which causes the brain to swell) Also they use a steriod when in hospital to help the swelling(Depamedrasol,spelling again). Mine are caused by an injury to head in 99. Imitrex, Stadol(which cause respitory arrest), Dilaudid, Codiene, Percocet, Vicodin or any other pain med has no effect on me.Also have had tempular injection of Botox 6 yrs ago and that did’nt help either. I wish you luck and pain free,I found also that it is always right side and I use a heat pack at onset of a bad headache to area of pain and that does help along with hot showers directed on my head.!Good Luck

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  51. Linda
    12 September 2011 @ 8:56 am

    I’ve read all of the posts, looking for something that I haven’t tried or something that I’ve tried and know doesn’t work. I have had migraines since I was in my teens and still have them in my mid-fifties. I was recently told by an ER Doc that they will no longer be using Demerol and Vistaril for migraines. I have a great doctor who had worked out a pain contract for me. Since they aren’t going to be giving that, I have to live with it. I highly DOUBT that I will have any withdrawal because I only was allowed up to three times per month. I get an average of 4-6 migraines per month. At one time I was getting them every day. I have Fibromyalgia. Diagnosed by the top neurologists in the country. I DON’T LIKE being classified as a druggie because someone looks at me and says that i must be one because I have either bad teeth, bad hair, bad skin, or small veins!!! How dare someone make that assumption without even knowing me. As it turns out, I do have bad teeth because of being on many medications for the myriad of problems that come with Fibromyalgia. I won’t list all of the drugs here, but I do HATE being on them. Any medication that gives you dry mouth will eventually ruin your teeth. I don’t have bad skin or bad hair. I’ve always had small miserable veins so I don’t want to go the ER for my migraines or take any medication that requires an IV. I’ve tried just about every drug out there for migraine – toradol, depakote, imitrex,dilaudid, topamax, morphine, all that make me want to climb the walls! I was also on fioricet, Vicodin and Methadone all at different times. I did not like it!! I have been through withdrawal and it was voluntary. Especially Methadone — it makes me suicidal and I am just not that way. I’m generally happy and feel that I have much to live for. I think it’s terrible that because of people who abuse their medication, the ones who really need a particular medication have to suffer. I do not look forward to trying more drugs, I’m SICK of drugs! Except for those that help me, such as my blood pressure meds, and cholesteral medication. When I get a migraine, my blood pressure shoots up to anywhere from 180/105 to 230/125 or so. I try to get to the doctor asap when this comes on and the demerol is the only thing that will put me to sleep and then and ONLY then is when my BP comes down. I guess I’m going to be feeling like a walking stroke about to happen when i get a migraine. =(

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  52. wanda
    15 February 2012 @ 4:31 pm

    I have found that Demerol doesn;t work for headaches, as a person who has suffered with chronic pancreatities, confirmed by specialists, Demerol works for organ pain, never helps bone pain or headaches. I recently had my first migraine ( i hope my last ) and i had Demerol, never touches any form of a headache. Its best to try other meds first or even a little heat at the neck sometimes its arthritis. I have had to take Demerol daily for 16 years now..i have been strict and stable with dosages. I highly recommend not giving iv Demerol to people, as it gives you a rush, that is what becomes addictive to people, there is no rush in pill form..

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  53. Barbara Byrd
    16 February 2012 @ 7:19 am

    I think it is important not to make overly broad and often inaccurate statements about any specific drug and it’s efficacy in severe status migraine. Demerol and other IV narcotics are not the first choice to break a dangerous status migraine in many ER’s. However, narcotics together with the migraine cocktail currently used can be very effective in reducing the nightmarish pain of a 4 day migraine. It may not be correct for a person who has experienced a single migraine in a lifetime to demonize medications used on occasion by other sufferers. Neither Demerol or any other narcotic drug given in an IV gives a “rush” to those of us in that kind of pain. It sometimes simply relieves the pain slightly while the Decadron, Pherergan, and Benedryl start to work.

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  54. V
    22 April 2012 @ 10:00 pm

    I am on disability for severe, frequent migraines for over 2 decades. After years of testing for triggers, none were found. Over the years, I went through numerous trials with medications to find out what did or did not work for me. Whenever I went to the ER for treatment, I was given a Demerol injection. Beta blockers and other “preventive” measures have not worked. I am having a terrible time now because after having found a combination of medicines that gave me the best results, my insurance (Medicare & Medigap) will no longer cover those medications. Those two medications combined cost under $500 a month maximum for the insurance company. The only medication they will cover now, costs $1500 a month. I used it for the first time today, and I am very upset about being forced to abandon what worked for these results. It took over an hour for there to be an improvement in my pain, and then it put me to sleep. I did not want to sleep long, because I knew if that happened I wouldn’t be able to get to sleep at night. I wound up sleeping through both alarms I’d set and slept straight through for 5 hours. Now it is nearly midnight and I cannot fall asleep,and have to be up at 7 AM for work. I have battled with doctors, pharmacy, insurance more than once over the years and now to the point of emotional/mental exhaustion. I am trying to re-enter the workforce and I simply can NOT use a medication that is going to put me to sleep! I have also tried alternative methods such as chiropractic, herbals, etc., but the insurance covers none of these either. I do not know what else to do or try.

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  55. cleve
    6 September 2012 @ 6:16 pm

    it is said that people have insurance and when you need it, they cant come through for you, i know how it is having migraines and it is a pain you cant sleep eat your constantly vomiting. can’t stand noises or bright light nor movement. demerol is a good drug but everyone is diffrent thats why we have somay drugs out there. now for me benadryl doesnt work dhe makes me sick and i vomite all the time steroid will just mask the symptoms it didnt do anything and i still go to the emergency room. now at my dr office they dont carry demerol nor toradol so i have to go to the ER SO THATS A BIGGER BILL I HAVE TO PAY SO WHAT GOOD IS IT TO GO TO THE DR. AND MOST ER THINK THAT YOU ARE SEEKING DRUGS BECAUSE YOU ARE IN PAIN WHERE IS THE JUSTICE OR THE COMPASSION

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  56. Wanda
    7 September 2012 @ 12:32 pm

    Cleve, I feel for you.. I have been adamant with my family doctor, I didn’t want to be treated thru an ER, they tend to see it one way and that’s gets frustrating and very costly. I mean do u have a family doctor that will give let’s say a monthly dosage, u stay within the allowed time, for usage. I had an advantage here in Canada , being we don’t pay for ers or doctors, it’s cheaper on the system to have a family doctor to treat me! I recently found out that people can have my condition and never get fixed, to dangerous with the pancreas , now I am taking my self off meds due to liver issues, so be careful, it’s been 22 years for me.. Hang in there, keep reading..

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  57. Jacquie
    9 September 2012 @ 11:48 pm

    After trying three migraine preventatives with no good result and finding myself in a 12-14 day rebound situation on a regular basis I can tell you that Demerol is the ONLY thing to break the cycle for me. Every clinic and urgent care within a 25 mile radius of me has stopped having it on their premises due to security and liability issues. This means the ER and a huge co-pay if I want to find any relief and needless to say I put it off as long as possible. It seems like people who suffer this disease are not taken seriously by the medical profession. I know we certainly aren’t by the insurance companies.

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  58. Wanda
    10 September 2012 @ 12:49 pm

    Hi Jacquie,
    So sorry to here that, bad enough to have these issues, never mind the judgement from staff. I used to have a nurse say when I was in the hospital with idiopathic pancreatitis . ” I don’t believe your pain is that high” your cheeks are too red. Your going to be an addict if u keep taking this??I am like what nursing school did u come from? When u become my doctor, then will talk she gave me my med by iv, I went home for a visit I had to come back early because my pain was sever. Only to have my neighbor say, “Wanda that nurse, cut our pain meds in half” I was floored, but it made sense. We demanded the head nurse look at our charts, sure enough, she DECIDED we didn’t need our pain meds. We all signed a letter telling head nurse that we did NOT want her as our nurse… Never had her again.. It’s tough with judgement as many r healthy and have never experienced SERIOUS pain. Plus they get cold, in different, it’s sad.. I hope things get better and u can find something that works for u!

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  59. DOC mcmakin
    14 November 2012 @ 8:47 pm

    I have found nubane to work if things get that bad no next day hangovers and works fast,

    Reply

  60. Shelli
    15 November 2012 @ 2:13 pm

    Demerol worked great for me…killed the migraine everytime. Unfortionately the doctors had issues with it. Treated me like a druggie. I was allowed to have it three times a month. And I never asked for more than that and one doctor actually tried sending me to detox!! Some of the doctors would not give it to me inspite of the fact I had a pain contract for it. Now my hospital does not carry demerol at all. Totally dropped it. I now get dilauded. The docs still fuss over giving it to me…but not as much as they did over the demerol. Dilaudid does not work quite as well…..it helps…but not the same. But I guess you take what ever help you can get.

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  61. Jeff O'Donnell
    16 November 2012 @ 9:14 pm

    I had headaches when younger but then got 4 blows to left temple. About a year later migranes would not release and was hospitalized
    Demerol was the only mef that would stop pain. Nothing else either worked or put me in seizure or respatory arrest. Imitrex and Stadol put me in arrest. Morphime, Codiene, Dilauded, Nubane,Vicodin,ethadone

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  62. Jeff O'Donnell
    16 November 2012 @ 9:18 pm

    They didnt work. So hospitals ate Demerol free and found hot showers and heat pads help.Pheigran and Benadryl combination work but last Dr said too many red flags. So Im lost!

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  63. Wanda
    17 November 2012 @ 5:39 pm

    Jeff I have had a whopper for a week, nothing is taking it away, heat lessons it a bit..

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  64. Lisa
    18 November 2012 @ 11:26 am

    Wanda, If you have been taking Demerol daily for such a long time, your body has adjusted to your dosage and that is maybe why it does not work for you. Or it simply isn’t the medication that you need. For me, I’m an older woman who has had chronic migraines since I was in my teens. For years I suffered with them, going with the heat pads and all that stuff. Never took the pain away, always just a matter of waiting in a dark room, not being able to sleep and the pain would last for at least 24 hours, sometimes for days on end. Now about 20 years ago, I started trying different meds for my pain. I still try other things but my body is so touchy about most meds for migraines that I have horrible side effects from most migraine medications. I had never tried Demerol all that time. Finally, my doctor decided to give it a try. With that and Vistaril (calms the stomach) I am finally able to get relief. It’s been a good 10 years now that I have been given this. My Dr. agreed on a pain contract for 3 doses (injections) per month, that’s it, no more than that! That’s not a lot when you consider that I get 4-6 headaches a month as opposed to the 20 days of the month that I used to get the headaches. Now the ERs in our area are no longer using demerol. So, I’m back to more suffering if my Dr. is not available or is on vacation. I won’t go anywhere else anymore because it’s useless. And I am not a druggie, because I still suffer. I do take some meds for high blood pressure, Cholesterol and things like that, those are necessary. My triggers are always stress. So there are some people out there, like myself that the druggie people have ruined Demerol for. Those of us with true Migraines who Demerol works for, have to go back to suffering. Makes me so angry, not at the doctors, but at the false patients!

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  65. Wanda
    18 November 2012 @ 6:53 pm

    Lisa, sorry to hear that. Due to chronic Pancreatites I have been on Demerol for that pain. It’s definitely working for that, It does suck to have such brutal headaches. I have been going threw menopause, and recently been suffering thru my worst bout of a headaches ever. Using heat and trying to keep still. I don’t understand why doctors feel such fear prescribing meds, after all they r doctors! I recently learned that absorption is difficult for us with CP, so that and tolerance may be effecting me. I have nothing against it, it’s kept me sane from my CP pain. I hope some how Lisa u can get the meds you need..
    Take care

    Reply

  66. Theresa
    13 December 2013 @ 9:38 pm

    I’m 47.and hadrssince 17. I 1rst tried chrio, little good. Then went to drs, neruo’s.bone & joint Ive been waiting for the neuro to call getme I tey botox sonce Aug. Ive called many times telling them how bad it is. They don’t seemto care. I went er last after having it straight since Mon. Since askin what worked, and I told the demeol w/phenergan, I was Then told they don’t give that. Mentioned dulid. I explained had that while admitted on cardio floor and it didn’t work. Gabe it anyway waited. ..I was worse and a hemiplegix migraine came on. The dr came In & wanted me to try compazine. I expressed my fear of trying another med that I wasnt sure if id have side effects. Again I wanted an explainatiom if its about what’s safe for me then why not give what had been safe sonce my teens instead of risking a new med wnd possible reactions. No answet! After I came & read all of the riskS, side effects and whom shouldn’t take it, then I was really pissed. Im planning on calling the risk manager next , get an appt and go over all of this. This is absurd and makes no common sens. I was told sheet dulild was given& didn’t work that it works for other patients! I corrected her that eBay works for onemaynot workfor another.and if a med doesn’t cause one patient a reaction doesn’t mean it may not on another. . good grief, we have a bunch of idiots our medical field

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  67. Jeff ODonnell
    14 December 2013 @ 10:25 am

    Although Drs and hospitals don’t want to give Demerol I have continued to be treated like a lab rat and nothing works. When I get a status migrane I’m home with heat , showers and Vicophrofin for 2 -3 weeks. Workers Comp still fighting the case and headaches are 2 – 3 a week and are manageable. However when one locks in it’s pure hell and hospitals are useless. Last time in August /11 Neurologist was advised of my reactions to Triptipans and gave me DHE-45 and roommate called after having seizure that I don’t remember. I’ve been everywhere from John Hopkins, Hershey Medical to Thomas Jefferson any many others. Don’t know what to try further.,

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  68. Nancy
    16 December 2013 @ 7:36 pm

    Try medical marijuama it works for all pain without side effects. Good luck 26 yr in pain and migraines till last year with the program. Still bad days but living not crying everyday.

    Reply

  69. Deb
    26 August 2015 @ 11:57 am

    I have ms and 3 bulging disc in neck they pain is unbearable at times.I go to hospital for the shots when my neck gets so stiff it stays to one side .our er Drs give me a shot and they help for a litre while..I get bad headaches and don’t know if benadryl will help I take other meds and don’t want a bad reaction

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  70. Wanda
    28 August 2015 @ 3:52 pm

    Deb, my heart breaks for you. My hubby has 7 discs, 2 others fused( if u go for any type of back surgery, do NOT harvest bone from ur hip, get cadaver bone, my hubby knows 5 men, all got creeped out, did the hip harvesting, more pain in the hips now then the back ) They tell u you can go back to normal, BS, he had L5s1 fused with rods, above and below are deteriorating due to a sever accident in his 20’s.
    As for me, my headaches have been better, how ever I had sever bout with vertigo and slammed my head into the wall, suffered sever concussion. .. It’s 20 years I have been on Demerol maintained dose, livers ok . I hope you all use what ever works for your pain, friends.. No judgement from me, lord knows we get enough at the ER

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  71. Deb
    8 September 2015 @ 4:19 pm

    They think headache is from my neck and sinus.I hope they figure it out living in pain is hard.

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  72. AtticusGrinch
    5 March 2017 @ 9:59 am

    I was diagnosed with migraines at age 7 and am now 42, so as you can imagine, I have tried numerous medications, altered my diet and do everything I can to avoid an ER visit. For the past four years I have been able to avoid the ER by abating migraines with ketorolac, rizatriptan and Tiger Balm, but there have been a couple nights when I woke up in such pain I went straight to vomiting, couldn’t see or walk properly and had no way of getting myself to the ER. I had to try to smoke marijuana in between vomit sessions in order to get medication down. My neighbours knocked on the door because of the screaming.
    I dread the day when I cannot successfully combat a “hospital migraine” and must face the loud, brightly lit ER. Why? Because of the lack of demerol. My whole life it has been the only thing that has quelled my migraines, combined injections with dimenhydrinate, and made me able to sleep the rest of the pain away.

    I have been shot up with all the triptan medications, had a DHE prescription, and even been given chlorpromazine, yet demerol still had to be given to me afterwards. There’s something about demerol that acts on the furious projectile vomiting, which aggravates migraines, that works better than other medications. Dimenhydrinate (Gravol/Dramamine in the US) with other medications doesn’t have the same effect.
    I am a chronic pain patient, so have morphine and fentanyl at home, yet neither is effective against my migraines. Demerol addresses migraine pain in a way that other opiods do not and unfortunately, I am not a chemist, so I cannot explain it with scientific reasoning, only primary source evidence. However, those with degrees know the importance of primary source evidence. It’s fine for an ER physician to be hesitant because of a longer half-life, but then again, considering how migraines bleed, isn’t that a good thing? All drugs are toxic in some way. Yet, it isn’t opiods that lead to liver disease, which you’ll see if you look up the list of over 200 medications/classes that are implicated in the disease. It’s anti-malarials, birth control pills, nifedripine, mental health drugs and so on, but nary an opiod on any list.

    Anyone making frequent trips to the ER for migraines should be on a prophylactic medication and have a system set up for breakthrough migraines; triptans, anti-inflammatories, heat/ice/gel/cream etc. ready to take at the first sign. As we know, migraines cost a great deal of time lost from work, and if governments wish to alter this, they must decrease the costs of provenly effective combinations such as ketorolac (Torodol) and triptans, so that ER visits and sick days also decrease. But common sense, governments, budgets, and of course medication manufacturers rarely align.

    I trailed into another issue, but I maintain that demerol is an effective agent against acute migraine, especially when accompanied by vomiting, and think it arrogant of physicians and hospital boards to decide to pull it from ER treatment in favour of less effective medications. When I must resort to the hospital, it means I desperately need help. I can’t see, can’t hear properly, can’t walk without great care and can’t stop vomiting. Please don’t experiment on me when I’m in this condition. Please don’t think you know my migraines better than I do. Just help me (it’s your job) and let me get out of there so I can crawl into bed before the medication wears off and I am back to square one.

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  73. Wanda
    8 March 2017 @ 12:49 pm

    I feel for you all, I have suffered w headaches/migraines since 2010. I’ve been on a maintenance dose of 100mg of Demerol every 6 hours for chronic pancreatic issues SOD, it’s been 27 years of constant Demerol as my main control. I have a fatty liver, but I have no other so called demonized ” SIDE EFFECTS” .. Drs need to put patients needs first what works for them. In 2015 I was diagnosed with a rare acoustic Neroma, basically a brain tumour behind my right eye. Because my health issues its inoperable, I’m awaiting radiation to hopefully stop the growth.
    DOCTORS unless you are 30 years in and have SEEN actually evidence of so called side effects, don’t demonize a MEDICINES that helps. I was preached that Demerol will kill me … No a random brain tumour will.. God bless my fellow pain suffers. Fentanol is an epidemic here in Calgary.. Killing 100’s because we have no pain dr, no one who cares enough about quality of life!! A dr should never be judge and jury, if a patient abuses it then u don’t give it again, but if they are accountable with there meds, then give them what works!!

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  74. Teeka Pickett
    23 March 2017 @ 9:22 am

    I really like how demerol/ phenergan takes care of my migraines. I take Inderal 3 times a day as a preventative and I have Relpax 80mgs that I take it one does come full blown but I can only take 2 within a few hours then if that don’t stop it, it is a trip to the ER department for shots. Demerol is the only thing we have found that does relieve the pain and pressure but it takes 2 shots, 1 to relieve pain then a shot of phenergan so I don’t get sick then 20 minutes later another shot of demerol to relieve the pressure. I was given Stadol and that did not work for me! My blood pressure bottomed out and I finally got to leave the ER with my migraine intact because they couldn’t give me anything else, even after I told the ER Dr. that I couldn’t take Stadol!!! The outsourced ER Dr would not listen to me or check my chart in the computer and that is the only hospital I go to because of my doctor. It makes me sick that doctors don’t listen to the patients anymore and do what they want instead of checking the hospital system!! I will stick with what works for my migraines the best and follow my doctor’s advice. My husband phoned the HR department of the hospital the next business day to file a complain and needless to say we did not receive a bill from that outsourced doctor!

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  75. pkbaker
    28 March 2017 @ 10:53 pm

    I am a 53 year old female, I have a 25+ year history of migraine headache. In the last few years it has become routine that the duration of the headache and the down time is 3-4 days. After years of doctor visits and numerous ER visits, after trials of Just about every migraine medication, beta blockers, and pain medication I can tell you that the only thing that works for me when I get to that point is Demerol 100/Vistaril or Phenergan 50 IM. Not because I choose it but because it works. I have to sleep for several hours to relieve my migraine. Demerol has proven to be the only effective medication for me. There are on occasion times that I will require a 2nd injection 6-8 hours after the first injection, due to episodes of prolonged nausea and vomiting. I’m allergic to Stadol and none of the other Triptan meds seem to get me to relax so I can sleep. the attacks most always happen at the most inconvenient times to go to the doctors office. Then there is the issue of having a driver to take you. If this could be done by me or a loved one in my phone it would certainly help ease this typically complicated illness/ailment. It’s never convient for my husbsnd to leave work to take me or m children to give up 3-4 hours of their time driving me as we live out in the country. They have come to resent my illness that takes up so much time. They don’t realize I’m the one impacted the very most. I’m
    A prisoner to my migraine. Don’t think of me as a drug seeker, think of me as a person thatvis sruggling with frustrating pain that knows no relieve, short of receiving a shot of Demerol to know me out out for 4-6 hours to sleep the pain away. It’s the only alternative to triptans when they fail to work, and that more times than not. Triptans typically work within 20 minutes of taking them. I would love to have input as well as take part in a study in an effort to help others as this is a hereditary illness. Inspite what many others believe and they don’t accept migraine as a real illness. On the contrary It’s a very real condition and nothing like a “typical” headache that other people may have, take a couple Tylenol or Ibuprofen and it’s done and over with.

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  76. Wanda
    5 September 2017 @ 7:19 pm

    Hey friends,
    I was diagnosed w a acoustic Neroma a brain tumour, inoperable. So started taking medical cbdoil, my headaches r 1/4 of what I had. My tumour has shrunk in half in 6months, I’m still very ill with a stomach infection, but my anxiety is 1/2, I’m sleeping better. It’s worth a bottle, because we have a Cannabinoid system in our bodies .
    My warrior friends, as u know I’m fighting a inoperable brain tumour. After seeing radiation dr, he had nothing positive to say. I have been taking CBDOIL, it shrunk my tumour in half. In 6 months ( acoustic Neroma directly behind my right eye )I sleep better. Did u know we have a Cannabinoid system in the human body. The natural healer of this systems, is gods natural gift a herb. Please, if u know ANYONE with, anxiety, cancer, gut, seizures, & sleep issues, IBS, etc. Plants have Cannabinoid in flowers, hemp, are healing properties for our own system. CBDOIL can have THC or minimal CBD. I had no choice, & so if ur suffering from arthritis,colon, really try medical grade, CBD oil, head shop is the same price, but not as pure.
    cannabinoid are found in all plants, their properties r proven healers of our system. I will keep u updated .
    Prayers

    Reply

    • Wanda
      5 September 2017 @ 7:21 pm

      Sorry for the double post

      Reply

    • Jacquie
      6 September 2017 @ 4:48 pm

      Wanda, so glad you have found relief from CBD oil! I used for three months with no reduction in migraines. Also used the Cephaly device for six months with no reduction. Demerol update: ERs in Utah no longer use Demerol at all for migraines and instead came up with a non-narcotic cocktail of toradol, benedryl and phenegrin that doesn’t work at all. They are truly ignorant to the suffering of the true migrainuers.

      Reply

  77. Jacquie
    6 September 2017 @ 4:47 pm

    Wanda, so glad you have found relief from CBD oil! I used for three months with no reduction in migraines. Also used the Cephaly device for six months with no reduction. Demerol update: ERs in Utah no longer use Demerol at all for migraines and instead came up with a non-narcotic cocktail of toradol, benedryl and phenegrin that doesn’t work at all. They are truly ignorant to the suffering of the true migrainuers.

    Reply

  78. Dave
    28 November 2017 @ 6:48 pm

    My doctor has been treating my headache with demoral and phnergan for years until he wasn’t able to get it anymore at his practice. He was however able to give me a script for demoral 75mg for me to inject myself that I get from local pharmacy. Yes I tried many different types of drugs used for migraines over the years but the only one that works for me is demoral. Also went to 2 migraine specialist and they both basic said if that works for you after THEY tried different drugs then as long as your family doctor will give you demoral for migraines they didn’t have any problem with it .I realize not everyone will get the relief with many other drugs they have tried but for me it works

    Reply

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