Daily News (Los Angeles)

Difference with pain relievers

- Dr. Keith Roach Columnist By Russell Myers Contact Dr. Roach at ToYourGood­Health@med. cornell.edu.

» I have a question about prescripti­on pain relievers. In the past, after getting stitches, I was given Percocet, which made me nauseated. I tolerated Vicodin after my knee surgery. A friend recently had foot surgery and was prescribed Nucynta. I am not familiar with this medicine. Is it similar to Vicodin and Percocet? Is it more effective? How are the side effects compared with other prescripti­on pain relievers?

— L.B.

DEAR READER » Tapentadol (Nucynta) is an opiate, related to natural medicines like opium and morphine, as well as semi-synthetic and synthetic opiates like oxycodone or fentanyl. However, it has an additional pharmacolo­gic effect called noradrener­gic reuptake inhibition. Due to this combinatio­n, it is marketed specifical­ly for diabetic neuropathy, although it’s approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion for treatment of moderate to severe pain in adults. Like all opiates, it carries the risk of overdose, addiction, abuse and misuse.

Nucynta is reported to have less intestinal side effects than other opiates, such as the opiates in Percocet and Vicodin, at similarly effective doses. Experts

feel Nucynta’s overall risks and effectiven­ess are like other opiates. For a person who has had nausea with other opiates, it might be reasonable to try for post-surgical pain.

Surgeons are being much more careful in ensuring that the amount of pain medication given is appropriat­e for the expected duration of pain. Thirty-day (or longer) prescripti­ons for pain expected to last only a few days should no longer be prescribed.

DEAR DR. ROACH » I will have a repeat cholestero­l test in a couple of weeks, as my bad cholestero­l was slightly high on a recent test. If it’s still high, my nurse practition­er will want me to go on a statin.

Many, many years ago, I took Welchol, and it did bring my numbers down. I know that works in the intestine rather than in the liver, like statins. I have COPD and am on oxygen, but I quit smoking six years ago. Is Welchol still an acceptable treatment for a mildly elevated result? I’d prefer to avoid anything related to the liver.

My heart was tested a few weeks ago when I was in the hospital for pneumonia and is in good condition. I’ve never had a heart attack or stroke. Thank you!

— R.W.

DEAR READER » The treatment goal for cholestero­l is not to make numbers look better, it’s to reduce risk of heart attack and stroke. There is abundant evidence that treatment with statins in people at higher risk is effective at reducing risk of heart attack and stroke. In people at very high risk, there is evidence that statins make people live longer.

Without more informatio­n, I can’t estimate how much benefit you are likely to get from a statin. However, people with other medical problems outside the heart generally get less benefit from statins, and it always requires judgment when to recommend treatment.

Colesevela­m (Welchol) works by binding bile acids, which reduces total serum and LDL cholestero­l. However, the evidence that this translates into better outcomes is not as strong as it is with statins. Few people are treated with this type of medication now. I have not prescribed colesevela­m or the closely related cholestyra­mine for treatment of cholestero­l in years. They are pretty safe, and although they can cause abnormalit­ies in liver function tests, they rarely cause serious liver problems.

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