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It's not too big a deal when you're taking something innocuous every 2 hours. Sooner or other one of the doses will reach the stomach and do some good.
It is a major deal when your teeny, tiny ambien sleeping pill gets sidetracked on its way down. First, because you won't get to sleep tonight, and after all, that is why you took the pill. Second, because sooner or later you'll be driving down the road or working out a problem on the job and that stupid pill that refused to slide into you stomach a little before bedtime will slip into your esophagus just like you wanted it to --12 hours ago!--and render you either asleep or so groggy you'll belong in bed--not driving a car or fighting corporate dragons.
Sometimes, I can wrap up a small pill with some of that soft white bread everybody says you shouldn't eat (but everybody does) and then swallow the bread with the tiny pill smuggled in tool Don't try this with the stone ground 100% whole grain stuff that costs $5 a loaf, though.
The nutritious stuff won't fold over, squish down, and disguise that whiley pill. You need wonder bread or something cheaper.
By the time you roll up your pill, gulp it down, and swallow a cup of water, You'll probably have missed a couple hours of the sleep the pill should have assured you.
So take this poll on actually injesting our correct meds.
s
Take the Poll
- I had more meds, so I just took another one.
- I dissolved it in some liquid and drank it down.
- It would not go down. I'll tell the doctor next week.
- I slipped it into the center of my CANDY, ICE CREAM, MEAT BALL.
- I smashed it to powder. It went on with a spoon.

Poll Results
-
I had more meds, so I just took another one.0% (0)
-
I dissolved it in some liquid and drank it down.0% (0)
-
It would not go down. I'll tell the doctor next week.25% (1)
-
I slipped it into the center of my CANDY, ICE CREAM, MEAT BALL.25% (1)
-
I smashed it to powder. It went on with a spoon.50% (2)
It is interesting since doctors do not always have all of the answers, even though a lot of us think that they do.
My surgery solved my issues.
Take care.
MiMi
My personal exchanges are Vitamin D and Pain and Wrath of the Dragon....if you care to visit..
I just went through this whole swallowing issue and finallyafter 8 weeks was diagnosed with LRP which is largeal spasms of the throat brought on by acid from the stomach .I was unable to eat or swallow pills.I was seen by ENT who diagnosed me. I am now on a diet and taken prilosec 2x a day ,He said it takes a few months for swelling to go down. Also the anixety didnot help either and the MDalso put me on a drug for the fibro and anixety and now I can sleep and the pain decreased.Go to the MD and have that checked out and let us know how you are doing. Hugs Fran
I'm concerned because my sister has Barrett's Esophagus, a pre-cancerous condition that sometimes runs in families. It's also a pain not knowing which words I try to speak will actually come out. This has been going on since May.
It could just be that my throat muscles are saying, "See, we have FM too." But I really want to know what it is.
Again, thanks for your input and concern.
BetteK
Lou
MarFran, I have to take those Tylenol gel capsules when I get a sinus headache. They are so big they hurt my throat, and it's impossible to swallow them. So what I do is put them in my mouth, and in about 30-40 seconds they become soft enough for me to bite, and crush them, then I am able to swallow them no problem with a glass of water. I used to cut them with a knife and squeeze the contents into a little bit of water. But discovered putting them in my mouth, biting, then swallowing is much easier.
Thank you, hisfaithful1, for one more way to get the goods down.
Would you believe the most recent trip to the ENT they never called to tell me the results of the tests they ordered. I hate that. Supposedly, no news is good news.
But what if some clerk in the office doesn't understand the signifigance of a slightly elevated result? The ultrasound and aditional blood tests may have been negative, but I want to KNOW.
Sometimes it seems as if doctors' offices are set up to confound us, not to help us.
BetteK
They are printed and filed by "some clerk" and then the physician reviews each one.
I am a medical assistant trained to perform basic tasks such as vital signs, initial interviews that tell the MD why the patient is at the office, fill out lab test requisitions for the MD to sign, a little documentation , and lots of medical office work.
I am not trained to interpret lab tests and would not assume to know if a patient's lab values, whether or not they are within the lab norms. Some of the labs use different norm and that is not the responsibility of a medical assistant.
If the MD called everyone who had any lab test, he'd be on the phone all day. If he called only the abnormal values as he does, and we had to call everyone with normal values, then we'd be on the phone all day.
If you really need to know your lab results, then call the office and one of us will tell you and check that the MD has signed the result.
Just sign me,
Some Clerk
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