Home     Contact Us    
Main Board Job Seeker's Board Job Wanted Board Resume Bank Company Board Word Help Medquist New MTs Classifieds Offshore Concerns VR/Speech Recognition Tech Help Coding/Medical Billing
Gab Board Politics Comedy Stop Health Issues
ADVERTISEMENT




Serving Over 20,000 US Medical Transcriptionists

Is it ibuprofen or acetaminophen that can cause elevated BP?

Posted By: can't remember on 2006-04-10
In Reply to:

 


Complete Discussion Below: marks the location of current message within thread

The messages you are viewing are archived/old.
To view latest messages and participate in discussions, select the boards given in left menu


Other related messages found in our database

wheelchair with leg elevated

Have fractured my tib/fib and ankle all at once, had a wheelchair that would slide underneath my keyboard drawer with my leg elevated and could still type pretty well.  Also worked when I fx my knee cap ten years later.  Have a keyboard drawer that pulls out and can elevate in about 20 different directions and so it was high enough to fit over the wheelchair arms.  Worked good for me.  Good luck.


Patti


s/l hal elavil elevated
This is a patient in for mid upper gastric pain.  Doc gives last menstrual period date then what s/l "hal elavil elevated" while patient has no known history of peptic ulcer disease, gall bladder disease.  Any ideas?
It's ibuprofen, I'm pretty sure. nm
xxx
a handful of ibuprofen??

well......if you don't start vomiting blood (j/k)......


i would stretch it out, if it is muscular.  stretch just until you feel it and hold the stretch.  DONT bounce or ease in and out of it.  gently stretch.


if it is more from a disk, lay on your side in the fetal position, knees as close to your chest as you can get.


good luck.  hate to see anyone have to back out of a shopping trip for ANY reason. 


Ibuprofen, 3 tabs every 4 to 6 sm
hours with food, faithfully for a few days. You may need a short oral steroid pack to calm things down. Cranky Beach is right about keeping your wrists absolutely straight. Try raising your chair or sitting on a big book. Use a chair without arm rests. The problem most likely is in your elbow or shoulder and not just your wrist. I spent a lot of time with neurologists, orthopedists, and physical therapy. I finally went to a chiropractor who did a few manipulations and taught me some stretching exercises which helped a lot. I go once a month and lay on a nice heated roller bed. I have bad insurance and the chiro. just charges me a flat rate. My sympathies go out to you.
I take ibuprofen usually on a daily basis
although really should not. I have this in the bilateral wrists so it cannot be just the mouse use alone. A certain movement with the wrists elicits such excruciating pain, you probably know though. Am glad not doing anything real serious, like brain surgery or the like, when this pain hits.
Gentle stretching and ibuprofen initially,
then as it gets bearable, take up walking AT LEAST twice a week. Walk at a good speed with good posture, about 2 miles/45 minutes. The most logical way to keep a back working right when you sit in a chair all day is to walk regularly.

I'm 44, and thankfully all I get are muscle aches. At times there will be actual point tenderness in one of those (2) little dimples on your sacrum, you know, right in that area where a lot of tattoos are put? If you get that, you can massage that spot. It indicates a muscular problem, which is good, and it means you are too tight and need more exercise and especially stretching. The most important direction to stretch (since we are curled up in a C position so much of the day) is exercises that arch the back, so learn safe and effective stretches for that direction. What trainers are saying about stretching lately is stretch after exercise, not so much before, and hold each stretch longer. There are some muscles that don't even engage in the stretch until you've held it 30 seconds. I think piriformis is an important stretch.

It's very relaxing and restorative to stretch the right way.

Hope you are feeling better soon.