for a migraine.I asked the name, but all I can remember is that it started with a C. It was via IV, and worked VERY fast. Was at the ER. From Googling, I know it wasn't compazine. Ideas?
4/30/2007 8:01:24 AM
not to flame or anything because I get migraine (serious ones) at least once a week. I have a prescription for it; it's a pill. But why go to the hospital for a migraineV thats what I was gonna ask, but didn't want her to have to disclose more info[Edited on April 30, 2007 at 8:10 AM. Reason : .]
4/30/2007 8:03:52 AM
^maybe she was there for more than just a migraine. or it was the mother of all migraines.[Edited on April 30, 2007 at 8:10 AM. Reason : celexa?]
4/30/2007 8:08:11 AM
Cyproheptadine?
4/30/2007 8:14:39 AM
was it a general pain killer or a drug specifically for the migraine. If it was a general pain killer, it could have been codeine, but morphine seems to be the pain killer of choice for the ER...
4/30/2007 8:19:30 AM
^Considering that they keep closets full of morphine....yep.
4/30/2007 8:46:26 AM
most of the ED's i've seen use dilaudid/hydromorphone instead of morphine these days.
4/30/2007 8:57:05 AM
Seriously?Dilaudid = hello drug seekers
4/30/2007 8:58:27 AM
4/30/2007 9:34:50 AM
which hospital did you go to? I bet they used sumatriptan (Imitrex).
4/30/2007 9:59:53 AM
Roofie-Colada
4/30/2007 10:02:30 AM
^^Rex.It wasn't Imitrex. The word started with a hard c. I guess it could also have started with a K
4/30/2007 10:09:53 AM
don't they have to list drugs on your patient records?
4/30/2007 10:53:06 AM
The patient records you don't get?I looked through all the literature they sent me home with, and I was a little shocked to see that it wasn't on there. It also wasn't very patient specific, though. Basically, 'we've listed the reason for you visit as this, and the output for the 'come back and visit us if...' field is [list of corresponding symptoms]'. Some of which were the reason I went in the first place.
4/30/2007 10:57:50 AM
was it keppra?
4/30/2007 10:58:48 AM
nah. There was a -io sound in there, and it was three syllables.
4/30/2007 10:59:31 AM
hmm off to the PDR
4/30/2007 11:03:58 AM
the only other drug I could think of is ketorolac.
4/30/2007 11:05:13 AM
I saw leprachauns and heard raspy voices when I took Dilaudid. I even hid under the covers of the bed.
4/30/2007 11:10:35 AM
4/30/2007 11:12:26 AM
Cumfellatio also gets rid of headaches!!
4/30/2007 11:15:29 AM
Chlorpromazine? Generic of thorazine but it helps headaches for sure
4/30/2007 11:18:56 AM
Damn, don't ever take medicine if you don't even know the name of it when you take it.
4/30/2007 11:19:41 AM
^^might just be it. It's mainly used as an anti-psychotic, so I guess it'll work with migraine. [Edited on April 30, 2007 at 11:20 AM. Reason : .]
4/30/2007 11:20:31 AM
^ yeah my husband takes it to calm down, and he told me it works for headaches also
4/30/2007 11:21:25 AM
Migraine can be a disabling condition for the sufferer. For the small number of patients who fail home therapy and seek treatment in an emergency department, there are a number of therapeutic options. This paper reviews the evidence regarding the effectiveness and safety of the following therapies: the phenothiazines, lignocaine (lidocaine), ketorolac, the ergot alkaloids, metoclopramide, the "triptans", haloperidol, pethidine and magnesium. Based on available evidence, the most effective agents seem to be prochlorperazine, chlorpromazine and sumatriptan, each of which have achieved greater then 70% efficacy in a number of studies.any of those sound familiar?call Rex's medical records dept and ask them to look up your meds on the MAR[Edited on April 30, 2007 at 11:30 AM. Reason : .]
4/30/2007 11:28:28 AM
4/30/2007 11:28:34 AM
4/30/2007 11:32:22 AM
the thing with migraines is..............its a crap shoot as to what will be effective. you could have recieved a new med....one that isnt in my 2005 drug guide.
well how did the meds make you feel though?
4/30/2007 11:32:28 AM
a million times better
4/30/2007 11:35:15 AM