View Dana Point Harbor, CA while you recover from alcoholism and drug addiction.
 

Solutions For Recovery "Painless" Opiate Detox - 7 to 10 days Maximum

How does this therapy differ from other Addiction Treatments?

Now approved for the treatment of opioid addiction in the USA, Buprenorphine (Subutex/ Suboxone) is another medication being used as a treatment for heroin addiction. Buprenorphine does not produce the same level of physical dependence as other opiate medications, such as methadone. Discontinuing buprenorphine is easier than stopping methadone treatment because there are fewer withdrawal symptoms.  Because Bupernorphine does not produce the same pleasure sensations that traditional opiates do, there has been a rise in bupernorphine related overdoses in recent years. In a search to try and push this medications effect , which does not typically produce a pleasure sensation or "rush" like Heroin does, the user will ingest a high amount of Bupernorphine. When this happens the user will not feel a physical pleasure based high but will indeed begin to shut down the breathing patterns in the body sometimes resulting in death.

Another important consideration with use of Subutex & Suboxone is the complete "out-patient" nature of the medicine itself. As of this update (February 2003) Subutex & Suboxone are still relatively rare medications and finding physicians willing to dispense the medicine can be even more difficult. OBOT- an anagram for Office Based Opiate Treatment is a brand new Federal designation allowing physicians to treat addicts legally for the first time in nearly 90 years. OBOT provides a new option to help those afflicted with an addiction problem, but as history has shown us with addiction it is a physical and emotional problem, only so much help can be provided in a simple office-visit. It should also be noted that there tends to be a knee-jerk reaction whenever a new form of treatment arises with a particular problem in that it may provide the "easy cure".

With opiate addiction Subutex & Suboxone represent the first new medications to be introduced specifically for opiate addiction in nearly 30 years. The reality is these medications are a reasonably safer substitute to Methadone, but they provide no element beyond working with the opiate receptors in the brain. Unfortunately, the "street" level gossip surrounding Buprenorphine has not been incredibly encouraging in relation to more "hard-core" type Heroin and prescription opiate abusers. Buprenorphine in the " judge & jury" of street drug users seems to have a very light effect, typically leaving the user wanting to use more opiates on top of it. We shall see in the years to come what impact Bupernorphine will make upon the addiction community in the USA, and much of that is dependent on how many physicians choose to carry the special certification necessary to dispense this drug to known addicts.

Is a "live in" treatment program needed after a Subutex & Suboxone assisted withdrawal?

The answer is yes. These medications only deal with that initial "first step" of getting the active opiate abuser withdrawn from daily use. Some will choose to stay on the second medication for maintenance medication.

In either scenario these drugs do not treat the reason why that person began to abuse opiates in the first place. Furthermore, there are studies that indicate that Nalaxone (an co-ingredient in Suboxone) can actually produce a reverse tolerance to strong opiates like heroin which can often end up with the user overdosing if they were to relapse and use street Heroin.

What are Subutex & Suboxone?

Subutex and Suboxone are medications approved for the treatment of opiate dependence. Both medicines contain the active ingredient, buprenorphine hydrochloride. This drug which works to reduce the symptoms of opiate dependence.

Why are there two medications?

Subutex contains only buprenorphine hydrochloride. This formulation was developed as the initial product. The second medication, Suboxone contains an additional ingredient called naloxone to guard against misuse. Subutex is given during the first few days of treatment, while Suboxone is used during the maintenance phase of treatment.

 What are the effects of these medications?

The most common reported side effect of Subutex and Suboxone include: cold or flu-like symptoms headaches sweating sleeping difficulties nausea mood swings. Like other opioids Subutex and Suboxone have been associated with respiratory depression (difficulty breathing) especially when combined with other depressants.

What are some Treatment Alternatives to Subutex & Suboxone?

If you are considering attempting Buprenorphine "Maintenance" or you have tried this therapy and are still abusing prescription opiates like Vicodin, Lortab, Oxy-Contin, Hydrocodone, Morphine, Demerol, Darvon, or Heroin, contact Solutions For Recovery. The Alternative to "medicated" addiction therapy for opiate abuse like Methadone and Suboxone is Solutions For Recovery. The Solutions For Recovery program utilizes unique therapeutic approaches which address the underlying causes of addiction in an intensive manner and from many different angles. The result is a person who has dealt with the sense of hopelessness which causes a person to get on drugs in the first place. This individual, in most cases, no longer feels the need to use drugs.

More Information about Subutex & Suboxone at  the following link:

http://www.fda.gov/cder/drug/infopage/subutex_suboxone/default.htm

Solutions4Recovery | Our Location | Detox Specialist | Intervention | Sober Living Programs | Stages and Symptoms | S4R Services
Alcoholism Screening Test | Women and Alcoholism | Prescription Drugs | Drug Screening Test | Meth & Club Drugs | Narcotics
Online Evaluation | Outpatient Programs | Christian Track Programs | Contact Us