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1. If you are addicted or dependent on an opiate type drug, Suboxone therapy will most likely be effective for you. It makes no difference whether you obtain your opiate from a doctor or pharmacy, or buy it on the street. As long as the substance you are dependent on is a mu agonist analgesic (pain reliever), then Suboxone® therapy is likely to be effective for you. The list of such drugs is long. The most common ones are Vicodin® and Lorcet® (hydrocodone), Oxycontin®, oxycodone, morphine, Dilaudid, and heroin.
If you are, you probably already do know it, although you may not be completely honest about admitting it, either with yourself, or especially with others. This should come as no surprise, since addiction of any sort is, at the least, socially unacceptable, and at the worst, the cause of many social, occupational, and legal problems. There are many questionnaires, scales, and published criteria that purport to screen for, or diagnose addiction. In short, if you require more of your drug of choice to get high or even simply to function, you are probably addicted (this is called tolerance). If you spend inordinate amounts of time or money in procuring (buying from the street, doctor shopping, visiting multiple pharmacies), and indulging in your opiate habit, you are most certainly addicted.
1. Unfortunately, not. Suboxone® is specifically designed for treatment of opiate dependence and is not effective with other classes of addictive medication.
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The good news is, virtually overnight. Suboxone®, following a short period known as induction, can make you feel like a newborn baby, freeing you of an expensive and very risky habit. an answer to this item.
Induction is the process, whereby you discontinue your opiate of choice, and deliberately put yourself into a state of opiate withdrawal. If you are dependent on opiates, you are probably well familiar with this state, commonly known as “cold turkey.” However, after you have been evaluated for Suboxone® treatment, you will only have to endure this state of withdrawal for a matter of hours, after which you will take one or more Suboxone® tablets that will literally “rescue” you from this acute abstinence syndrome. Following this, you will take Suboxone® once or twice a day. This will prevent recurrence of the cold turkey syndrome, eliminate any drug cravings, and, in short release you from your opiate addiction prison.Add an answer to this item.
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1. This is probably one of the most difficult questions to answer, since there is so much variability among different patients. Studies show that long term treatment is associated with a lower relapse rate that short term treatment. Because of the cost of the drug itself, many people wish to minimize the length of time they take it, and can be successfully weaned within a matter of months. The trade off is a higher risk of relapse. Others have learned the hard way, that they need essentially indefinite maintenance therapy with relatively low doses of Suboxone®. answer to this item. Please see my blog for an extended discussion of this question.
1. Only if you tell them. While Suboxone® stimulates the mu receptors that cause addiction; it is not associated with am intoxication syndrome. That means that nobody, not even a medical expert can tell that you are taking Suboxone®, except by performing a very specialized drug screen. In short, you can work, interact socially, drive, and function normally while taking Suboxone®.Add an answer to this item.
As a rule, no. Only highly specialized screens that are designed to detect Suboxone will pick it up. These are generally not included in routine drug screens. And even if they were, no action could be taken, since you are taking it legally, under the prescription of a licensed physician dd an answer to this item.
Opiate Cure -- Medical Treatment for Opioid Dependence
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