Oxycontin addiction is likely to occur with abuse of the prescription drug Oxycontin, a brand name for the Schedule II restricted drug oxycodone, which has effects similar to morphine. Morphine is named after Morpheus, the Greek God of Sleep and Dreaming. Nothing is more seductive to those in chronic emotional or physical pain, than to slowly subside, into the welcoming arms of Morpheus. Taking slow release oxycontin, strictly as prescribed, is designed for chronic physical pain relief, and when used as prescribed, it is generally effective and safe.
Abuse of Oxycotton can quickly lead to Oxycontin addiction. Addicts will strip the time release covering and take it all in one hit, risking cardiac arrest, due to toxic shock. The addict will feel pain free and relaxed, if not totally euphoric, a dream that for all too many ends up with them being rushed to emergency at the local hospital – if they are so lucky.
Oxycontin addiction is opiate based. With opiates, like heroin or morphine, your brain doesn’t fry, it just simply nods off to sleep. Your body metabolism, heart rate and vital processes slow down, relax and time may feel suspended. You are unlikely to survive oxycontin addiction if faced with a charging bull, but with your mind so free of anxiety, at least it won’t bother you!
This type of substance abuse means that taking higher doses will bring more intense relief. As your body gets used to the habit, so you will need to take even higher doses to get the same ecstatic feeling. Higher doses, with oxycontin addiction, mean that withdrawal symptoms will become increasingly acute. Pain is more intense, depression or anxiety more severe if the drug is not taken regularly. A need to take more of this drug will become more frequent.
Like any other addictions, people can survive oxycontin addiction, provided that they are prepared to acknowledge they have a problem, get help and give the body the time it will need to re-regulate itself. The highs of oxycontin addiction are euphoric. Withdrawal will give you a painful, all time low. Attempts to withdraw from oxycontin addiction are best not attempted alone, and should always be supported, preferably by qualified health professionals in a professional treatment center.
The physical pain of withdrawal from oxycontin addiction is immense if not done properly. Potentially life threatening levels of anxiety or deep depression, sometimes psychotic regression can occur. The addict is simply unable to self regulate their mode of thinking into any form of positive, optimistic frame. The most likely result of an unsupported attempt to beat oxycontin addiction is a despairing return to using Oxycontin again.
People can do more than just survive Oxycontin addiction if they choose their detox facility well.
Many addicts opt for a holistic and entirely natural detox method, with holistic support to reduce the pain and depressive mood as much as possible, so they can be tolerable. The benefits of natural detox are that you remain in control and in touch with your pain. You are aware that the pain is only the downside of euphoria, and that it will cease as the body regains control and achieves natural balance and equilibrium again. With natural de-tox methods you are not condemned to a halfway house of continued chemical dependency.
Other forms of de -tox include rapid de-tox, supported by anesthetic. There is also medically supervised detox with medications substituting for Oxycontin.
Natural de-tox is followed up by suitable support and counseling, such is the case with the Narconon drug & alcohol rehab program. With good counseling and support it is possible to say not merely that someone is in recovery but that they have fully recovered from the perilous path of oxycontin addiction.
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