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4 Comments

  1. HH
    17 November 2014 @ 11:46 pm

    Curious if you have ever tried a migraine drug in a self-administered nasal spray form. I did, about 11 years ago, and according to the doctor who prescribed it to me, I was not alone in finding it an iffy/hit or miss system. In my case, the drug was lidocaine. Perhaps much has changed since 2003, or that the issues were exclusive to the actions or properties of lidocaine nasal spray, but the drawbacks were: 1) you had to position yourself and the sprayer just right to get enough of the dose as far up in the nostril as possible, 2) once in, the drug irritated the tissues, and 3) if there was a slight “misfire,” you simply had to wait it out until you could dose again. But by that time, the migraine was intractable. (I assume intranasal drugs that are not self-administered might work better.) Before I started this comment, I read several user reviews of the nasal spray form of Zomax and some users experienced the same issues I had with the lidocaine spray. The web page on which I am posting this comment has an article/ad for OptiNose. After clicking on it reading it, I visited their website. They address the issues I have expressed. Perhaps they have designed a better nasal delivery system, but it appears it is not on the market yet. Pure speculation: could the delay in the nasal spray form of prochlorperazine have to do with the drawbacks of a foolproof delivery system?

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  2. Amazonite
    19 November 2014 @ 2:45 pm

    Years ago I was prescribed Stadol nasal spray for severe headache / migraine / cluster headache / chronic daily headache / whatever the heck kind of headaches I get. To date, it’s the only thing I’ve ever taken that will stop a severe headache; however, the side effects are something to be reckoned with (visual hallucinations, for one thing; extreme dizziness; and respiratory depression). I used to have to wait until I was actually already lying in bed to use it. As bad as it made me feel otherwise, it would get rid of the headache; however, I used it only as a last resort.

    There are times I wish I had some more nowadays. My regular meds don’t work well anymore.

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  3. NS
    24 December 2014 @ 3:53 am

    I currently use the generic stadol.its difficult to gauge a correct dose and side effects are being stoned, slur words tiered but can’t sleep, groggy not steady on feet, extreame nausea . The side effects have to be carefully weighd against possible pain relief for a couple of hours but your too stoned to do anything productive.

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  4. Hanne Pinkava
    3 March 2017 @ 6:29 pm

    I’m trying out Ausanil homeopathic nasal spray. It can sting in the beginning since it’s cayenne pepper in it. But it works!

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