UROD, a process which detoxifies individuals under anesthesia within four to seven hours, was found to be 100 percent successful in its detoxification rate on the study group of 93 men and 27 women studied.
rapid detox
About Opiate Addiction & Dependency

Opiate addiction, an ever increasing worldwide health problem, impacts all of our lives with enormous economic, personal and public health consequences transcending gender, socio-economic status, race, and age. Whether it is heroin, methadone, pain pills or other opiate-based drugs and medications, the illness and its symptoms are very similar.

Heroin purity and availablity is at an all time high and dependency on prescription narcotic/opiate based painkillers such as: OxyContin®, Vicodin, Codeine, Lorcet, Darvon, Morphine, Demerol, Percodan, Dilaudid, Percocet, and Hydromorphone, has also dramatically increased. More people are in search of OxyContin® addiction treatment.

The incidence of addiction to these types of medications has been identified as a national health hazard by the National Institute of Drug Addiction. Moreover, opiate addiction destroys a person's sense of self. It causes decay, both mentally and physically, bringing on depression, anger and despair. Addiction devastates home life, terminates careers, and threatens health, safety and neighborhoods. Addiction is about denial, isolation, neglected families, abandoned friendships, betrayal, fear and broken promises.

top ::

Addiction and Dependency Defined

Definition - Relationships and Distinctions: Addiction, Physical Dependence & Tolerance Per the most recently published consensus document from AAPM/APS/ASAM

Addiction » A primary, chronic neurobiologic disease, with genetic, psychosocial, and environmental factors influencing its development and manifestations. It is characterized by behaviors that include one or more of the following: impaired control over drug use, compulsive use, continued use despite harm, and craving.

Physical Dependence » A state of adaptation that is manifested by a drug class specific withdrawal syndrome that can be produced by abrupt cessation, rapid dose reduction, decreasing blood level of the drug, and/or administration of an antagonist.

Physical dependency to opiates/narcotics is a physical disease based on underlying psychological, environmental, genetic and biochemical issues. This involves the central nervous system and is caused by long-term opiate intake, changing the normal activity in the brain and neuro-receptors called kappa and mu receptors. Neurons (cells particular to the nervous system) normally produce their own natural opiates (endorphins); continued use of opiates cease the production and function, degenerate, and eventually slow down the natural release of the endorphins which bind to the kappa and mu receptors. These are the naturally occurring endorphins responsible for our general feelings of wellbeing and the ability to overcome pain. Constant administration of external opiates which also bind to the kappa and mu receptors, as is the case in opiate addiction, causes grave changes in neuronal function, greatly decreasing the ability of these cells to produce endorphins.

For the addicted individual, natural endorphins have almost entirely been substituted by outside opiates: the nerve cells decrease their own endorphin production because they have become dependent upon these external sources. Thus, without these external sources, the addicted individual who is slowly withdrawn has no tolerance for pain and so experiences increasing withdrawal discomfort. This is similar to an individual peeling a Band-Aid off very slowly.

Tolerance » A state of adaptation in which exposure to a drug induces changes that result in a diminution of one or more of the drug's effects over time.

"The defining characteristic of addiction is compulsive, out-of-control drug use despite serious negative consequences. . . . "Effective management depends on conceptualizing addiction as a chronic, relapsing medical illness. . . . "Tolerance and dependence are neither necessary nor sufficient for addiction. Indeed, withdrawal symptoms from cessation of addiction drug use tend to resolve within days to weeks and therefore cannot account for the profound persistence of relapse risk, which has been well documented in addicted populations." Nov. 28, 2002, JAMA (vol. 286, No. 20,pp 2586-2594)

top ::

Copyright 2002 Rapid Detox™ - www.rapid-detox.net/contact.html Rapid Detox™ is an affiliate Midwest Rapid Opiate Detoxification Specialists L.L.C (MRODS) Treatment Centers

   
:: Buprenorphine
:: Oxycontin®
:: Vicodin® Addiction
:: Heroin Addiction
:: Cautions
:: Rapid Detox Links
:: info@mrods.com
 
:: Admissions & Treatment
:: MRODS Treatment Process
:: Spirituality
:: In The Media
:: Home
   
:: New Hope Recovery Center
:: MRODS
:: Addiction Treatment Referral
:: Detox Centers
:: Drug Treatment Centers
:: OxyContin® Addiction Tx