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3 Things To Know About Detox Methadone Withdrawal

September 20th, 2010 thunder No comments

Anyone addicted to methadone needs to be aware of a few things related to detox methadone withdrawal. These are the withdrawal symptoms, complications of withdrawal and treatment options.

The detox methadone withdrawal symptoms mimic the flu with the associated diarrhea, stomach cramps, nausea, vomiting, runny nose, sweating and muscle aches. Additional symptoms include insomnia, anxiety and agitation.

Aspiration can be a complication for a person going through detox methadone withdrawal. That is when vomit is inhaled into the lungs. The person may also experience dehydration from the diarrhea and vomiting. People who go through detox and then return to methadone use are at risk for overdosing because of their reduced tolerance.

There are various treatment options available to lessen the pains of withdrawal. Medications can be used that reduce the symptoms of withdrawal. Another option is long-term maintenance. This is a weaning process where the methadone dosage is gradually reduced. This procedure lessens the withdrawal symptoms. Some programs include a more controversial method of detox methadone withdrawal. This method involves anesthetizing the person and injecting opiate-blocking drugs. Many specialists deem this procedure a risky option.

Categories: Drug Treatment, Methadone, Withdrawal Tags:

Detox Methadone Withdrawal | Get Help

March 5th, 2010 thunder No comments

Detox4Typically Methadone is used as a substitution therapy in the treatment of an opioid addiction. As this medication is addictive, the users may experience a detox methadone withdrawal. In addition to addiction treatment, this medication can be taken as a pain management treatment, which it often is. This powerful narcotic can be misused and abused. Of course when this happens the patient will be subjected to a detox methadone withdrawal.

How do you know if an addiction to Methadone has started?

Typically the best way to discover an addiction is to stop using the drug or medication. Withdrawal symptoms run the gambit from chills, aches and pains, tremors, depression, delirium.

That sounds frightening. Maybe the person shouldn’t stop, right?

Well, that isn’t the best course of action. A lot of addicts tend to think that way. Long-term use and abuse to any narcotic will create other problems — social, health, economic — to the users. There are treatment options available that allow the person to detox safely, comfortably, and most importantly with results.

Have you had an addiction to Methadone? What did you do to get help?

Categories: Drug Treatment, Methadone, Withdrawal Tags:

Detox Methadone Withdrawal | A Basic Science of Addiction

February 25th, 2010 thunder No comments

In many cases when a person begins using drugs it is their own decision. They might say something like, “Oh, maybe I should try it just this once.” One of these drugs could be an opiate analgesics like heroin, Vicodin, or OxyContin. In some cases, some people can become addicted right from the start, and in a number of drug treatment centers methadone can be used to help alleviate withdrawal symptoms. This drug, however, can be abused and some end up with detox methadone withdrawal symptoms. neuronsAstrocyte

Methadone and other opiate analgesics influence the reward pathway, which is responsible for driving our motivational feelings of reward and behavior. The cells responsible to pass the correct signals to the brain are called neurons, and the information flows from one neuron to the other by crossing a small gap called the synapse. These pathways can become skewed when there is an extended period of opiate abuse.

So, in the end a person’s reward signals are crossed and they find themselves behaving in ways, drug seeking and obsession, completely out of character.