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12/17/2012    John F. Swaim, DPM

Efficacy of "Pain" Creams (Tip Sullivan, DPM)

I too became frustrated early in my career over
the lack of a reasonable alternative for my
patients with painful neuropathy who did not
gain benefit from Neurontin and its sister
medications. If you read the labels, most all of
these rely mostly on the effects of menthol. The
only alternative at the time was to have the
local compounding pharmacy make and dispense a 2
oz jar containing a mixture of clonidine,
lidocaine, and ketamine and it cost $70 out-of-
pocket and worked about 33% of the time.


My frustration with this void in treatment
options for symptomatic neuropathy led me into
extensive research and the development of my own
product. I use all natural ingredients
formulated into a hemp/soy/emu base cream and I
include several natural anti-inflammatory herbal
tinctures and it works 75% of the time and costs
$20 tax included.


Additionally, patients share this with their
relatives and friends--they use it for back,
knee, shoulder, and hip pain. Most recently I've
had two different nurses buying it for their
cancer stricken relatives to relieve bone pain--
they claim this is the only thing that helps.
The challenge of course is getting the actives
through the dermis and my formula does that.


I do not guarantee that this product works for
everyone, but when you have a neuropathic
patient who struggles to initiate sleep due to
neuropathy pain, this can be life changing
product. Any time you can reduce a chronic pain
patient's narcotic intake by using a topical
pain cream as an adjunct, that is a win-win
situation.


John F. Swaim, DPM, Red Bluff, CA,
podtexdoc@aol.com


Other messages in this thread:


12/17/2012    Allen Jacobs, DPM

Efficacy of "Pain" Creams (Tip Sullivan, DPM)

I have utilized compounded medications
increasingly over the past 3-4 years, including
those from Total Pain Solutions, Trilogy, and
Bellevue Pharmacy for whom I am a consultant and
do clinical research.


Compounding offers many advantages to patient
care. In the case of topical pain management, I
am able to prescribe anti-inflammatories for the
patient in whom the use of an anti-inflammatory
might otherwise be either contra-indicated or of
concern, such as the patient with CHF,
hypertension, renal dysfuction, or GI concerns,
since these medications are typically associated
with plasma levels 1% or less of the same
medications administered orally. This is
particularly helpful for the patient requiring
chronic use, such as the patient with Achilles
tendinosis, plantar fasciitis, hallux limitus.


Additionally, the topical application of an anti-
inflammatory is associated with up to 100X
increased concentration of the medication at the
site of pathology, when compared to the same
medication administered orally. Topically
applied medications will penetrate to muscle and
synovial fluid in clinically effective
concentration


With regard to symptomatic neuropathy with
parasthesia and/or dysesthesia, I frequently
combine topical management with remittive agents
such as Metanx or alpha lipoic acid. The use of
agents topically such as gabapentin, ketamine,
clonidine, imiprimine, allows me to treat
patients with anti-depressants, anti-
convulsants, or analgesics, without the worry of
neuropsychiatric, anti-cholinergic, or other
very concerning side-effects and sequellae.


In the case of wound care, compounding allows me
to treat the patient without have to "select a
product". For example, I can compound a
debridement agent with for example, phenytoin to
increase fibroblast production, with say
nifedipine to increase vascular perfusion, with
say,metronidazole or other antibiotics. I can
look at a wound, determine what the needs are,
and achive multiple effects at one time.


In addition, I can combine analgesics such as
lidocaine, tetracaine, bupivacaine to offer pain
relief for the painful ulcer, for neuropathy
pain, for arthritic pain, and so on.


For common dermatologic disorders, compounding
may be utilized to increase effective
management. For example, I can combine topical
anti-fungals with tea tree oil, keratolytics,
emollients, or add ibuprofen (which has a
synergystic effect with azole ant-fungals) for
treatment of tinea pedis or onychomycosis.


The safety and efficacy of topical compounded
medications are well established and literature
on the subject available to anyone wishing to be
informed on the subject.


Finally, the use of compounding offers the
podiatric physicians to use medications in
combinations and strengths determined to be
appropriate for each patient, rather than be
restricted to the components of premade standard
formulations.


Disclosure: I lecture for and research for
Bellevue pharmacy, a compounding company.


Allen Jacobs, DPM, St. Louis, MO,
allenthepod@sbcglobal.net

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