Pubdate: Sat, 11 Oct 2003 Source: Detroit Free Press (MI) Contact: 2003 Detroit Free Press Website: http://www.freep.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/125 Author: Patricia Anstett, Free Press Medical Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain) MANY DESPERATE PATIENTS TURN TO POWERFUL PAINKILLERS FOR RELIEF Failed back surgery syndrome is the term medical science has coined for people who develop even worse pain after an operation to relieve back pain. Equally common is the companion problem of addiction to narcotic painkillers patients take to relieve the pain. The latest to acknowledge the problem is conservative radio commentator Rush Limbaugh. On Friday, he told listeners during his radio program that he is addicted to painkillers and is checking into a rehabilitation center. One of the drugs he reportedly used is OxyContin, a highly abused prescription drug with euphoric effects similar to heroin. Limbaugh started taking narcotic painkillers "some years ago" when a doctor prescribed them after spinal surgery. The pain worsened, and he started taking more pills. "Rush Limbaugh is one of hundreds of thousands of Americans who are addicted to pain medication," said Joseph Califano Jr., chairman and president of the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University. The problem of drug dependence on painkillers after back surgery is not new. U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist, who has a long history of back pain, developed a dependence on a prescription sedative and was in a detoxification program directed by a neurosurgeon at George Washington University Hospital in the 1980s. "Many patients with back surgery have persistent pain and are at risk of addiction," said Dr. Dennis Dobritt, president of Tri-County Pain Consultants, a Farmington Hills facility associated with Providence Hospital. Each year, as many as 150,000 Americans undergo spine fusion procedures to shore up portions of the back that have degenerated because of overuse, age or injury. Surgery may not work. Three or 4 of every 10 people who undergo traditional back operations develop scarring that can contribute to more back and leg pain, experts say. To control escalating pain, people often turn to higher amounts of painkillers. Dr. Michael Boyle, medical director of the Maplegrove Treatment Center, a West Bloomfield program affiliated with the Henry Ford Health System, said painkiller addiction is hard to treat. First, the person must be taken off or weaned from the painkillers. Then, an alternative to narcotics to control the pain should be found, he said. "To get the person off the pain medication is not a major problem," Boyle said. "Keeping them off is the hard part." Dr. Samir Fuleihan, chief of the anesthesiology department at Wayne State University and Harper University Hospital, Detroit, said his clinic requires patients to sign contracts agreeing to random urine and blood tests for narcotics to ensure patients don't get drugs from other sources. Then they try a variety of approaches first to try to reduce pain. A new drug, buprenorphine, promoted as a treatment for heroin addiction, helps when other approaches to prescription painkiller addiction fail, said Dr. Maher Karam-Hage, medical director of the Chelsea Arbor Addiction Treatment Center. Still, rehabilitation typically takes six to eight weeks in the hospital and as long as six months of recovery and weekly doctor visits, he said. Dobritt said several new procedures are helping people with unrelieved back pain. Another new technique, discography, helps determine which patients with pain might benefit from surgery or some other procedure. But despite the advances, many are forced to live with pain. "The problem is we don't have the best treatment for a lot of these spinal conditions," Dobritt said. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk