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Flexeril and back pain. How can it help?

Where you go for information on back pain affects the quality of the information you find. Many sites have a specific agenda to sell a particular drug or treatment. This will bias the information. In that sense, this site is no exception. These articles are in support of a particular drug, but we prefer to put that drug into context and give you as rounded a picture as possible. Although we cannot claim to be independent and therefore offer completely unbiased advice, we hope you will find balance here and a freedom to make up your own minds.

Medical research indicates that up to 80% of adult Americans will experience back pain at some point during their lives. In surveys, the respondents consistently report that pain in the lower back is the most disruptive, not only interfering directly with the ability to work and so earn a living, but also affecting the quality of life by:

  • disturbing sleep;
  • encouraging inactivity and weight gain; and
  • even preventing the enjoyment of sex.

When serious pain strikes, the first reaction is usually a consultation with the primary care doctor. At this point, the bad news is received. Although it is always useful to have the possibility of serious underlying diseases and disorders ruled out, even dedicated specialists using the latest in technology, find it difficult to diagnose a specific cause for every case. This is dissatisfying. But doctors are nevertheless able to offer some help in listing treatment options. If a specific cause for the pain has been identified, the treatment can target that cause and, within the limits of technology and surgical skill, produce an improvement if not a cure. Where the cause is not certain, the choices come down to:

  • medication – there are a wide range of drugs available both on prescription and over-the-counter to control the pain and relieve tense muscles;
  • physical therapy to analyze movement problems and encourage greater mobility through the manipulation of the spine and joints, and the training of muscles;
  • cognitive behavioral therapy to teach coping strategies to improve the quality of life, i.e. to help people achieve the maximum within their physical limitations;
  • complementary and alternative therapies such as chiropractic and acupuncture – more controversial but nevertheless found effective by many people; and
  • specialist medical care for better diagnosis and possible treatment.

The main research conclusions are that practical and hands-on treatment give the best results. This includes both physical and cognitive behavioral therapies. The reason for this preference is the social bond between patient and therapist which improves the mood and encourages a more positive outlook on life. The difficulty, of course, is financial. Many health plans do not include either the professionalized or the alternative therapies. If these cannot be funded out of savings, this forces people into more medical tests and surgical interventions, or restricts them to medications. In this context, flexeril can have an important role. As a drug targeting musculoskeletal disorders, it can relax muscles within the spinal structure and increase mobility. In combination with painkillers and a mixture of rest and exercise, flexeril can often help people recover their quality of life. But if you go down this road, you must commit yourself to exercising. You must maintain muscle tone and build strength. Failing to push yourself into a full range of movement is condemning yourself to stiffen and lose mobility.

Flexeril handed out like sweets in elementary school

One of the more interesting debates that rumbles around bars from time to time (and occasionally ends up in the Supreme Court) is not just whether people should be allowed to own guns. It comes down to the practicality of whether people should be responsible for the safety of these potentially dangerous weapons. We have had an unfortunate number of incidents when young people have picked up guns lying around the house and managed to get off a round or two. Less commonly, they have taken their parents’ guns to school and managed to add a few students and the odd teacher to the trophy wall. For the record, the deadliest peacetime shooting incident took place at Virginia Tech in 2007 when one man killed thirty-two people. The NRA, being the NRA, is against any forms of controls. If a householder is the victim of a house invasion, you cannot ask the invader to wait while you take the gun out of the safe. You want the freedom to offer immediate defense of self and property. But some states have enacted laws requiring varying security measures to prevent their children from becoming a danger to themselves or others. This is where the Supreme Court comes in with arguments over whether these security measures are constitutional.

So, to understand the principles involved, let’s substitute prescription drugs for guns. Many of the standard drugs we have in our homes are routinely abused by others. Suppose our children confuse them for candy and are hooked on painkillers or sedatives. Would we say the parents were at fault in failing to protect their children? Should the drugs have been locked away? Now let’s slightly change the story. The children can be a little older and more knowing. They understand the street value of the drugs so stand on the right corners to sell off their parents “stash”. The children are, of course, committing a criminal offense and this would not be possible if they could not get their hands on the drugs. The lack of security made the crime possible.

The reason for all this speculation is a story that comes out of East Tulsa. It seems a fifth grader made herself popular by standing out in the playground during recess, and giving away flexeril and painkillers to her fellow students. So far, we do not know why the parents had these drugs around the house. Flexeril is a highly effective muscle relaxant but, particularly among younger users, there are adverse side effects on the heart rate with the possibility of seizures. Ten children took the pills and four went to hospital for a check-up. There have been no adverse effects reported. But what all this comes back to is whether the parents should be liable for allowing their daughter to take medication from the house. The child could be treated as a juvenile offender for being in possession of drugs without a prescription and distributing them. Her age, between 10 and 11, will not save her. But this could not have happened without her parents’ failure to keep the drugs safely locked away. As a matter of policy, do we want to make parents responsible for the dangerous “things” they keep in their homes? There are some interesting policy decisions here and we might learn something about America by watching what happens in East Tulsa over the next week or so.

Flexeril is a standard treatment for fibromyalgia

The law is often considered difficult to understand – a myth put about by attorneys who want to keep the profitable business for themselves. Yet, when the judges are in full stream, even the simplest of legal principles can come out sounding complicated. That makes this another of those conspiracies we love to moan about as the system stacks the deck against all the players. To illustrate the point, let’s take a quick look at an appeal case heard this February. It’s really a very simple point, but you might not think so after staggering through the judgment. At issue is whether an Administrative Law Judge properly denied disability benefits to a woman suffering from fibromyalgia, restless leg syndrome and other disorders. The evidence seemed to show a natural progression of the disorder starting in 1986 with minor paralysis of her fingers and muscle weakness. She reported flu-like symptoms and increasing pain “everywhere”. This steadily worsened over the years and made it impossible for her to continue working after 2002. Needless to say, she has seen many doctors, with one regular general practitioner from 2000 who has referred the patient to a rheumatologist and neurologist for treatment. Yet, the Judge denied her disability benefits.

Underlying this refusal is an obvious skepticism that fibromyalgia is a real disorder that prevents people from doing some paid work. The judge accepted there was some evidence of fibromyalgia, restless leg syndrome, lumbar scoliosis and degenerative disc disease, but found the evidence that the claimant was suffering intense pain and limitations on movement “not entirely credible”. The judge was of the view that the pain suffered by those with fibromyalgia is subjective, i.e. there is no evidence of it. Since there were no intellectual difficulties and some mobility, the claimant was therefore able to earn a living wage.

The appeal was dismissed and it took a reference to the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals to overturn this Judge’s dismissal of the contemporary medical evidence from three doctors. Ignoring all the detail of the Court of Appeals’ ruling, it comes down to a simple rule. It’s always open to a judge to ignore medical evidence, but there has to be a good reason for doing so and that reason must be carefully explained in the judgment. In this case, the patient had been through substantial diagnostic testing and, among other drugs, she had been prescribed flexeril and physical therapy to treat both the weakness in her hips and knees caused by the fibromyalgia and the restless leg syndrome. A specialist rheumatologist is not going to prescribe a drug like flexeril if he is not satisfied there is a patient with a real need. More importantly, if that specialist and two other doctors of experience write reports to a court considering an application for disability benefits, their evidence cannot simply be ignored. No matter what the judge’s private views may be, a proper legally acceptable reason for discrediting the medical evidence must be identified. This decision is good news for the many who suffer from fibromyalgia. The Administrative Law Judges have been generally reluctant to support applications for disability benefits. Unlike a broken bone, fibromyalgia is not easily diagnosed. To some extent, it must always depend on the patient to describe how he or she feels. Despite this lack of an obvious cause for the pain and fatigue, the Court of Appeals has now affirmed the need for judges to show some deference to the medical profession. If eminent specialists confirm the existence of disability, the Judge is now more likely to agree and allow benefits.