Suboxone and Abdominal herniaThis is a study of Abdominal hernia (Lump in the abdomen) among people who take Suboxone. The study analyzes: the time on Suboxone when people have Abdominal hernia, gender and age of these people, the severity of Abdominal hernia, how they recovered, and common conditions and drugs used besides Suboxone. In total 6,171 Suboxone users are studied. The study is created by eHealthMe based on reports from FDA and is updated regularly.
Do you have chronic disease and take multiple drugs? eHealthMe can monitor your drugs and notify you when there are serious drug reactions detected. Our original studies have been used on premier medical publications. The monitor will be personalized to your gender and age. Start now SuboxoneSuboxone has active ingredients of buprenorphine hydrochloride; naloxone hydrochloride. It is used in opiate withdrawal, addiction, drug abuse and dependence, pain, dependence. Commonly reported side effects of Suboxone include insomnia, convulsion, suicidal ideation, stress and anxiety, depression. Abdominal herniaAbdominal hernia has been reported by people with osteoporosis, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, pain, high blood pressure. On May, 10, 2013: 6,171 people reported to have side effects when taking Suboxone. Among them, 4 people (0.06%) have Abdominal Hernia.  Time on Suboxone when people have Abdominal hernia * :
| < 1 month | 1 - 6 months | 6 - 12 months | 1 - 2 years | 2 - 5 years | 5 - 10 years | 10+ years |
| Abdominal hernia | 0.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 0.00% | 0.00% | 0.00% |
Gender of people who have Abdominal hernia when taking Suboxone * :
| Female | Male |
| Abdominal hernia | 50.00% | 50.00% |
Age of people who have Abdominal hernia when taking Suboxone * :
| 0-1 | 2-9 | 10-19 | 20-29 | 30-39 | 40-49 | 50-59 | 60+ |
| Abdominal hernia | 0.00% | 0.00% | 0.00% | 0.00% | 66.67% | 0.00% | 33.33% | 0.00% |
Severity of Abdominal hernia when taking Suboxone ** :
How people recovered from Abdominal hernia ** :
Top conditions involved for these people * :- Anxiety (1 people, 25.00%)
- Drug dependence (1 people, 25.00%)
Login or sign up (it's free) to view more results. Top co-used drugs for these people * :- Xanax (1 people, 25.00%)
- Subutex (1 people, 25.00%)
Login or sign up (it's free) to view more results. * Approximation only. Some reports may have incomplete information. ** Reports from social media are used. How to use the study: print a copy of the study and bring it to your health teams to ensure drug risks and benefits are fully discussed and understood. Next: check whether abdominal hernia is from a drug or a condition You can also:
On eHealthMe, Suboxone (buprenorphine hydrochloride; naloxone hydrochloride) is often used for opiate withdrawal. Find out below the conditions Suboxone is used for, how effective it is, and any alternative drugs that you can use to treat those same conditions. What is Suboxone used for and how effective is it: Other drugs that are used to treat the same conditions: Could it be a symptom from a condition: Browse Suboxone side effects from A to Z:
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Z Drugs in real world that are associated with: Comments from related studies: From this study (3 days ago): I had a baby 6 mo ago and am living with family until we get a place of our on its very stress full! I think the Wellbutrin is making my anger worse bc I forgot my am dose and I felt much better but I took it any way bc I am suppose to and with in an hour I was angry for no real reason. Today I have skipped on purpose and I feel better. I take 150mg twice a day generic sr and I have noticed a slight headache not bad just enough to aggravate me even more! I just want to feel better I love being a new mommy but I get so mad at everyone else! Reply From this study (5 days ago): No one else in family of 9 has dark circles. Only began noticing dark circles about a year after starting Atenolol. Reply From this study (3 weeks ago): began sweating 10 years ago, while up in New England, but it is worse now that we moved to Florida 10 years ago. I can only tolerate temperatures 72 degrees or less with little humidity - 50 % Reply Goku on May, 4, 2013: Actually suboxone withdrawals does not at all last 8 months, i know everyone is different, but the actual withdrawals,(the real bad ones) will not last but around 17 gruesome days, then some time after that you will feel a little weak. I was on opiates for at least 2-3 years before getting on suboxone, then was on suboxone for 3 whole entire years, (not missing 1 dose the whole time) once i stopped, cold turkey, i felt awful for about 17 days, then weak for 2 weeks, then started getting my energy back, i believe suboxone is a great drug to "trade" for multiple drugs you've been taking, once you feel though you have had enough of the suboxone, or subutex, i encourage anyone that wants to quit (i advise talking to your Dr. but i wouldn't agree with tapering down, that's just me) and just have the will to KNOW you can do it, and go play golf, run, swim, try to work out(lightly), watch movies/shows you love, have some music (a perfect circle - the 13th step helped me more than ANYTHING) and drink and eat healthy, and keep you some chocolate milk handy (chocolate releases endorphins in your brain) and just fight through it, i know you can do it, just do it for you and only you, and have faith in yourself, also i recommend some isolation, i really hope this helps someone, i seen this comment on here, and had to reply, god bless the addicts Reply Krakow on Apr, 30, 2013: The suboxone I believe will be impossible to get off. The withdrawals last 8 months over, and then comes the post acute phase which can last all your life. The suboxone damages seronitin and dopamine permanently, this is a fact. So many have said its a death sentence coming off it as well as staying on it. I promise you there is no way out. Reply Robert on Feb, 26, 2013: I had the exact opposite with the us of Soboxone vs. Methadone.
When I tried Methadone it was just like taking heroin. Then we all learned that we could also get the Meth off the street from people selling there take homes. My friends and I just replaced the Heroin for the Methadone. At this time all the people that got on the Methadone program are still taking there methadone or they are now dead. When I got off the Meth it was just like getting off heroin all the physical symptoms and mental ones.
I then went to try the Suboxone. I started with the full 8mg then dropping down to the 4mg and ending up being very happy with 2 mg for the rest of my life.This time I wanted to be clean so getting off the 2 mg of suboxone was 90% mental and 10% physical withdrawal. Had 3 days physical pain everyday got much better after the 3rd day. Then there was the depression and the lack of energy that does come back. Reply Robert on Feb, 26, 2013: Can you tell me if you or your husband did any kind of experimenting with hallucinogens? Reply subregret on Feb, 23, 2013: suboxone is a nightmare and should never be used unless you are a hopeless heroin addict. People who call it a miracle drug are either ignorant or have not been on it long. I say this becuase when you stop suboxone YOU WILL SUFFER!! not only will you suffer but you will suffer for a long long time. Regualar opiate withdrawal lasts 7-10 days. Suboxone withdrawal lasts 60-90 days. I would honestly pick methadone if I had the choice to do it again. Because I quit 80 mg methadone before and it sucked but have been trying to stop suboxone now for years at only 1/2 milligram. My doctor is of no help and tells me he dosent know what to do as he hands me another prescription. YOU ALL HAVE BEEN WARNED..this crap is poison!! Reply Mrs Kathy Houy on Dec, 26, 2012: you mean I get to sweat for years!!!!!!!!!!!!! OMG Reply Mrs. Kathy Houy on Dec, 26, 2012: I'm so sorry about your husband God bless you both I cried when I read your post Kathy Reply Karen on Dec, 24, 2012: Sorry. I travel to Ireland quite frequently and it often gets much warmer than 65 degrees in the summer. It IS infinitely cooler than Florida but the humidity is just as high, if not higher. Reply Jacqueline on Dec, 23, 2012: I am very concerned with Enbrel my husband was diagnosed with Glioblastoma Stage 4 brain cancer. My husband has RA and Sjogrens and started to take Enbrel about a 1 1/2years ago. I am concerned that Enbrel might have played a part with his brain tumor. My husband had brain surgery and 2 weeks later chemo and radiation. We completed radiation and chemo just 2 weeks ago, we now have to wait for a scan for about another 3 weeks to see how the treatment is taking for his tumor. This drug makes me wonder if there might be a correlation between the two! Reply Interested party on Dec, 21, 2012: If you need temperatures less than 72 degrees it may be beneficial to move to Ireland. It only gets to 65 degrees in the summertime. Perhaps you would be more comfortable there, Florida is one of the worst places you could live for your condition.
Hope this helps. Reply From this study (3 weeks ago): Just started suboxone yesterday for pain management. About an hour after I took it yesterday I did experience some sweating and nausea. Today however, it caused me to vomit lunch. I went and ate dinner an hour or two later and took a naproxen for a developing migrane. About an hour after taking the naproxen I began vomiting again, once the bulk of dinner was done coming up, I began throwing up blood. Is this because of the suboxone? Reply MJ on May, 2, 2013: Yes it is.I had the same problem. How much are you taking? How long has it been since you had an opiate? You can't mix the two..EVER. You need about a two day (min.) window between the two. It sounds like your body is having a hard time with such a strong drug. Suboxone is VERY strong and lasts VERY long so it is very hard to know if you had too much until it is to late. Try not taking any more until your symptoms go away..then take a little bit and wait for at least an hour and repeat until better. NOTE..I do not know your dosage so please do not take more than your dose..EVER...but try to lower it if able. Reply MJ on May, 2, 2013: "Sweating, nausea, vomiting, and headache are all signs of opiate use" Suboxone is a very confusing drug..My old Dr thought I wasn't getting enough and was going thru withdrawal, so he raised my dose to 32mg.big mistake, but even at only 8mg I feel like I have the flu, now that's withdrawal. I hate this drug because most dr's don't kno jack about it and are destroying peoples lives from it. I haven't been the same since it, and not from abuse. I just can't find the happy medium dose I need to just feel normal again. Any help will help. Reply Snood on May, 1, 2013: Sweating, nausea, vomiting, and headache are all signs of opiate use. Suboxone is a powerful opiate, although it may not feel like one. You will slowly adapt to these symptoms, and faster if you decrease you dose Reply Snoods on May, 1, 2013: I am a 54 year old pysch nurse that uses suboxone in my practice. I think there is confusion regarding the naloxone(Narcan) included in this drug. The Narcan has little to no effect unless you try to inject suboxone. The Narcan is not the main opiate blocker, as it is metabolized by the liver almost immediately. Suboxone is a "mu" agonist (stimulator) and a kappa antagonist (blocker). That is why you get pain relief without much intoxication. Paramedics tend to focus on the 20 or so drugs they carry on an ambulance and do not have the broad knowledge of a complex drug like suboxone. Reply shannon on Apr, 13, 2013: About suboxone...it is a tagonist/antagonist drug, therefore, can cause some rather abrupt withdrawl type effects and the issues you describe can be one of many symptoms you would have if you were NOT taking the suboxone. It works to give narcotic management yet deter overuse by having the drug Naloxone, the same med we carry on the ambulance to reverse narcotics, in it. Too much or even very little of the narcan part of the drug will cause immediate withdrawl type symptoms that can include severe nausea and vomiting, sweats, chills, diarrhea, headaches and many other symptoms. Talk to your prescriber and see what they say is my advice. Reply MJ on Apr, 12, 2013: It very well could be from the Suboxone. I have been on it for the last 6 years. The first 3 were hell. I would vomit several times evry day along with severe abdominal pain. I was taking 32mg a day..high dose..went down to just 12mg a day and problem went away. Best advise is to taper off slowly and try to get off it completly. Reply From this study (1 month ago): Couldn't tolerate stimulants prior to taking an SSRI. Any Long Acting medication does not affect me longer than 2-3 hours. Tests indicated that my serotonin is less than 10. Reply
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