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Patients were switched to oral narcotics on the 2nd or 3rd post-operative day.
As he grew sicker, the patient was prescribed oral narcotics to be used as necessary for discomfort.
The most common treatments included oral narcotics, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory medication, topical anesthetic patches (i.e., Lidoderm patches), and hot/cold therapy.
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Postoperative pain was managed using multimodal analgesia including oral narcotic pain medication, nonnarcotic pain medication, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory medication (please see Table 1).
Other permitted concomitant medications were one NSAID (including cyclooxygenase 2 [COX-2] inhibitors) at constant dosage, oral corticosteroids at stable doses of not more than 10 mg/day, analgesics without anti-inflammatory action or oral narcotic analgesics and medically acceptable forms of birth control.
Gately, albeit an oral-narcotics man from way back, has committed himself to A.A.
Take oral non-narcotic pain medication such as Celebrex, if allowed by your doctor, the night before and the morning of surgery.
Then it was withdrawn and replaced by two narcotic oral pain medications, which worked pretty well for about five days.
Figure top: transition of oral oxycodone equivalent narcotic dose.
Vertical axis: oral oxycodone equivalent narcotic dose (mg).
Fig. 1 Transition of oral oxycodone equivalent narcotic dose, warfarin dose, and PT-INR.
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