json_metadata | "{"app":"Musing","appTags":["health","backpain","cure","treatment"],"appCategory":"health","appTitle":"What is the best cure for a back pain?","appBody":"<p>Medication for back pain by prescription</p><p>Your doctor will usually prescribe a back pain medication along with physical therapy or other treatments. These various treatments are generally only to reduce pain, not eliminate the source of the underlying pain. Here are some of the remedies that doctors often prescribe:</p><p>1. Painkillers</p><p>NSAIDs, such as ibuprofen or sodium naproxen can relieve acute low back pain. You can find some pain relievers easily at a drug store without a prescription. However, make sure you consume it according to the instructions on the packaging.</p><p>Using excessive painkillers can cause serious side effects. If a prescription pain reliever does not also relieve your pain, your doctor may give a higher dose of prescription medication.</p><p>2. Topical pain relievers</p><p>If your back pain is mild, using topical painkillers might help. You can stick the patch or apply ointment to the area that is painful.</p><p>This type of painkiller can be easily found in stalls or drug stores without using a prescription.</p><p>3. Muscle relaxants</p><p>Your doctor may also prescribe muscle relaxants as a medicine for back pain if your condition does not improve. Muscle relaxants are usually used in combination with other drugs for back pain associated with muscle spasms.</p><p>4. Antidepressants</p><p>Antidepressants are usually used to treat depression. Even so, this drug can also be used to treat pain by changing chemical compounds in the brain, specifically serotonin and norepinephrine.</p><p>These brain chemical compounds have been shown to affect pain receptors and mood receptors. People with chronic pain conditions that do not respond to other treatments can use this medication to control pain.</p><p>5. Cortisone injections</p><p>If the various back pain medications mentioned above do not make your condition improve, your doctor may inject cortisone around your spinal cord. Cortisone injections help reduce temporary inflammation around nerve roots.</p><p>6. Opioid</p><p>Opioids are more powerful painkillers that are commonly used for more severe pain. This drug requires a prescription from a doctor and regular monitoring.</p><p>Opoid works by blocking pain receptors in the brain. This can also affect heart rate and breathing. Some examples of opioids include morphine, fentanyl, oxycodone, and codeine</p>","appDepth":2,"appParentPermlink":"fke6t87l5","appParentAuthor":"truthsfinder","musingAppId":"aU2p3C3a8N","musingAppVersion":"1.1","musingPostType":"answer"}" |
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