Can oxycontin/codone/anti-nausea meds effect noticable body twitches?

So my girlfriend just broke her knee cap falling sour a cliff. They did some surgery and sent her home after a few days on an oxycontin/codone regime. And on top of that for her nausea they gave her some pills that help and also put you to sleep. Since she have been back she has be having weird twitches randomly when she sleeps or is basically on the verge of sleeping. She has always have these a little but since she has been subsidise its pretty bad and some times I will walk into the room and she will say her body is twitching and she is far-reaching awake. This is kind of alarming but I don't know her doctors number nor do i want to take her in for a false alarm. Any one own experience with this sort of thing?
Answers:
I am pretty confident that what is happening here is particular as a myoclonic jerk. Most people experience these when moving from the upper level stages of sleep to the more deeper stages of sleep such as REM and stage 4 sleep surrounded by a quicker pace than typical, and it is usually nothing to be concerned about and is simply indicative of someone being very tired and falling asleep very hurried.

Since she is on these drugs, one being an opiate and the other being an anti-emetic (both cause drowsiness, among other side effects that effect the receptors surrounded by your brain and thus change the way your brain is functioning-to an extent) then she is probably simply experiencing thise myoclonic jerk more frequently or just more prevelantly than usual, and that is adjectives. Just because the drug combo is speeding up her shifts into the deeper sleep stages.

If you begin to notice any issues with her breathing rate while she is alseep, or if you awareness that she is having these twitches while being fully awake, then you obligation to go ahead and call the doctor because it could be a sign of an intolerance to one of the drugs, probably the ocycodone. Also, if you are very concerned, afterwards go ahead and take a small flash light and check her pupils. See how they act in response to the light. You want to see whether they are both reactive (constrict/get smaller) and do so in an equal manner (constrict at alike rate and to the same size). If they do not, then I would suggest calling the doctor ASAP or if you cannot reach him next go to the ER or a 24 hour urgent care center.

Oh, and she may think that these are occuring when she is fully awake, when within fact it may not be the case. Many times when being right touching on going down hard to sleep, a strong myoclonic jerk will occur and it will startle the party that they will snap out of the "falling alseep" part, and will think that they had be awake the whole time, because at that point in the rythm you can still hear and even see external stimuli, even though you are not fully awake. Source(s): Toxicologist
hell ya!! cut down on that **** or stop. thats **** killin the **** out off u

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