The Scottish Mail on Sunday

How do I get more sleeping pills now GP has cut mine?

Star Wars’ Daisy Ridley joins a whole galaxy of celebritie­s for the charity Bake Off spectacula­r

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I WAS first prescribed zopiclone, a sleeping pill, about 16 years ago and still take them to this day. I couldn’t cope without them.

However, my GP now says I can have only 14 per month, starting next month. I’m absolutely dreading this. One night without the tablets and I suffer terrible nightmares, sweats and panic attacks. I’ve been searching the internet to see if I can buy them, but it’s so expensive. I’m desperate.

SEVERE insomnia and addiction to sleeping tablets is sadly a very common problem that I see in clinic. Often it’s related to untreated significan­t mental health problems such as depression, anxiety or posttrauma­tic stress disorder.

Not being able to sleep in itself is traumatisi­ng and torturous. And it perpetuate­s a cycle of mental health symptoms which is hard to break. For this reason patients – and their doctors – often resort to sleeping tablets.

Zopiclone is one of the more modern sleeping tablets, but just like more old-fashioned types, it is known to be addictive – and it’s been a controlled drug in the UK since 2014. That means doctors can’t normally prescribe more than a certain amount in one go.

Patients who become dependent on sleeping medication often say they feel they cannot cope without it. But medical studies show that people who come off zopiclone feel vastly better in terms of mood, concentrat­ion and even sleeping.

That said, quitting the drug is not easy. Withdrawal symptoms are, unfortunat­ely, likely. These can include anxiety, panic and even paranoia and anger. For this reason we advise patients to withdraw zopiclone very slowly as advised by NICE, reducing the amount taken each night over a period of four to six weeks.

A GP should be able to help and support this, but there are also many specialist support services nationwide for patients trying to come off sleeping tablets safely. As well as withdrawal advice, the services can offer access to psychology, support groups, counsellin­g and insomnia clinics to aid recovery.

It’s vital not to buy medicines online, or in any other way. It’s illegal to sell controlled drugs to people in the UK, and so you’re buying them from criminals, no matter how legitimate their website might appear. There is a significan­t risk you’ll get tainted medicines, containing all sorts of harmful substances. This is shown time and again, when tablets bought online are tested.

FOR some years now I have been affected by a burning sensation in my upper back. It comes on after I have spent time standing or walking, and I have to sit or lie down in order to recover, which usually happens quite quickly. GP tests came back negative. I am 69-years-old and in good health otherwise.

THIS sounds like what we call neuropathi­c pain – pain that originates within a nerve, rather than a typical pain when the body is reacting to an injury, such as a cut or broken bone.

Our nerves are responsibl­e for all the sensations we feel in our skin, such as pain, heat and touch. When they are functionin­g normally, they carry signals to the brain which we feel as those senses. If the nerves are damaged or not functionin­g properly, these senses become abnormal.

And so heat, pain, tingling or numbness can be felt even when, in fact, there’s no stimulatio­n. This is neuropathi­c pain.

It happens for many reasons: for example, the nerve can become trapped if there’s a problem in a joint. It can also be triggered by diseases such as diabetes or even Vitamin

B12 deficiency. Recurring infections like shingles or herpes may cause recurrent nerve pain, but these would be unlikely to pass just by changing position.

A pain that is fleeting is hard to treat: taking a painkiller at the time of pain is likely to be worthless if the pain passes before the analgesia works. But a regular painkiller that targets neuropathi­c pain and is taken every day pre-emptively may be worthwhile.

Discuss this with your doctor – it may only be worth it if the pain is distressin­g enough to warrant a regular tablet and potential side effects.

I READ online that testing your own urine at home, using a dipstick kit, is a good idea as it helps monitor for health problems such as diabetes. I bought tests from an internet pharmacy and was worried to discover there were high levels of leukocytes in my sample. What does this mean?

THIS is a great example of why we don’t advise healthy people to test their urine at home. Doctors often carry out dipstick tests – mainly because it’s a quick and easy way to flag if something’s up. But results can be very variable, and they’re not considered a diagnostic test by any stretch. It’s also not a way to screen for diabetes, whatever certain websites might suggest. If a dipstick result was of concern, we might repeat the test, send a sample to a lab and maybe start other investigat­ions.

Leukocytes are white blood cells. If a patient has pain in the pelvis or when urinating, and we find leukocytes, it might indicate an infection. But high levels of leukocytes can also be found in healthy people. I’d advise discussing any seemingly abnormal results with a GP – and also point out that urine-testing strips can become inaccurate if not stored correctly or if kept beyond their expiry date.

THE GREAT CELEBRITY BAKE OFF FOR SU2C Tuesday, Channel 4, 8pm

It’s all well and good mastering Jedi powers and leading your band of rebels to victory against a galaxyspan­ning empire of evil. But having played Rey in a trilogy of Star Wars movies, Daisy Ridley must now face a new and altogether more terrifying prospect: testing out her baking skills inside the tent where winners feast on glory – but losers are left with humble pie.

Though you’d hardly bracket genteel Prue Leith and plain-speaking but everdepend­able Paul Hollywood with the villains on the Dark Side, the two judges’ withering verdicts can feel just as deadly.

Ridley forms part of a sensationa­l line-up of personalit­ies who have been drawn by the Stand Up To Cancer (SU2C) campaign to take part in this year’s Great Celebrity Bake Off. In the opening episode she is joined by chart-topping singer Alexandra Burke and comedians Rob Beckett and Tom

Allen, who will be nervously putting his reputation on the line after fronting The Great British Bake Off: An Extra Slice and Bake Off: The Profession­als.

Each episode consists of three rounds. The contestant­s get going with a signature bake, follow up with the technical challenge and then attempt to seal the deal – or at least salvage a modicum of pride – with the showstoppe­r.

This week the menu is millionair­e shortbread, followed by a fruity tart and, finally, a creation inspired by each baker’s pet hates.

In future episodes we can look forward to seeing Anneka Rice and Stacey Dooley, as well as comedians Katherine Ryan, John

RISING STARS: (from left) Daisy Ridley, Prue Leith, Rob Beckett, Matt Lucas, Alexandra Burke, Paul Hollywood and Tom Allen

Bishop and David Baddiel, and from the world of music Dizzee Rascal and Girls Aloud’s Nadine Coyle, plus Olympian Dame Kelly Holmes and actor James McAvoy. Only the foolish would hazard a guess as to who’ll win.

One face you won’t see this time is Noel Fielding: the show’s resident jester was off on paternity leave at the time of filming. So watch out as Matt Lucas has his own intimidati­ng challenge – providing the laughs as part of a double act that’s one man down.

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