After a complicated orthopedic surgery, the anesthesiologist gave me intranasal fentanyl for breakthrough pain before the IV morphine PCA was set up. She sprayed a measured dose into my nostril — clinical, controlled, nothing like street use.
T+0:00 slight burning sensation in my nose. T+0:02 warmth spreading through my body. T+0:05 the surgical pain that had been a solid 9/10 dropped to a manageable 3/10. The relief was almost immediate and profound.
The mental effects were minimal at this dose — slight drowsiness and a feeling of calm wellbeing. No euphoria, no nodding, nothing recreational. Just effective pain management during an acute crisis. I was lucid enough to talk to the surgeon about my recovery plan.
The effect lasted about 30-45 minutes before the PCA took over. This gave me an interesting clinical reference point for understanding fentanyl. In a controlled medical setting with precise dosing and monitoring, it's a remarkably effective analgesic. The problem is entirely with uncontrolled dosing, unknown concentrations, and lack of medical supervision.
This experience actually deepened my understanding of why fentanyl is so dangerous on the street — something this potent absolutely cannot be eyeballed or estimated.