Drug Rehab Center In Texas

rehabilitation

drug rehab           drug rehab facility             drug rehab treatment              drug abuse rehab               

Drug Rehabilitation Article (updated Frequently)

Just How Dangerous Is OxyContin, Anyway?
By: Albert Frantz

OxyContin belongs to a family of drugs called opioids, which are derived from the opium poppy and are among the most common drugs used to address both chronic and acute pain. Due their abuse and addictive potential, they are nearly always prescribed with caution.

Opioids suppress the body's response to pain by acting on what is called the mu receptor, which is a molecule that bonds with the body's natural pain killers. The mu receptor is thus the body's most significant pain gateway. It also bonds with opiate drugs such as heroin and morphine. This receptor affects not only the experience of pain but also of euphoria, which contributes to the addictive potential of these drugs.

Unfortunately, medical textbooks inform us that all opioids have been abused, and there is no way around their high abuse potential.

To control distribution of addictive drugs, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency classifies drugs for regulatory purpose into schedules, of which there are five. Schedule 1 drugs, like raw opium and LSD, are as close to completely prohibited as is possible (they're permitted, for instance, in special laboratory research circumstances), while schedule 5 drugs are common over-the-counter medications that pose extremely little risk of addiction or abuse.

Where do opioids fit into the picture? Oh, they're in with their schedule 2 neighbors heroin, cocaine, morphine, amphetamine and the like. All except oxycodone (the active ingredient in OxyContin), which despite an addictive potential comparable to heroin is in the more "harmless" schedule 3!

OxyContin has been popping up in the news quite a lot lately. It's become the drug of choice among new addicts. In fact, according to the Drug Enforcement Agency, between 50 and 90 percent of new patients admitted to drug rehabilitation programs in the states most severely affected by OxyContin abuse (West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Kentucky and Virginia) list OxyContin as their drug of choice.

To be fair, chronic pain sufferers are seeking relief from their pain, rather than a dangerous high, and medication certainly plays a useful role in pain management in many circumstances. Further, OxyContin becomes most addictive when its long-acting time-release safeguard is circumvented, usually by chewing the pill, thus releasing the active drug oxycodone all at once. Patients using the drug legally, for its intended purpose and under their doctor's supervision are clearly at less risk.

Still, the risk is definite and grows over time, as all opioids are known to diminish in effectiveness over time, mandating either higher doses or opioid rotation (temporarily switching to a new opioid) or both. Further, withdrawal symptoms can be experienced when patients stop taking opioids, making them crave more drugs. In fact, many patients report that their sensation of pain is worse after ceasing treatment than it was before they started! (In some cases, such as cancer, this effect could be attributed to the progression of the disease.) Surely it's best never to get started along this vicious cycle.

Let us understand that even dangerously addictive drugs have their legitimate medical uses, one of which may indeed be to relieve chronic pain sufferers of their plight. Still, regardless of whether or not you and your doctor choose drugs as one means of treatment, never forget that pain is a message that you're doing the wrong thing or you're doing things wrong. Listen to your body. Don't shoot the messenger.

About The Author

Albert Frantz is an American concert pianist living in Vienna, Austria, where he came as a Fulbright Scholar in 1998. Diagnosed with scoliosis in his adolescence, he was told by his doctors "not to worry." Unfortunately, he didn't. It was not until much later, some years following his sudden discovery of the piano and classical music in his upper teens, that round-the-clock unilateral back pain resulting from the curved spine would cripple his playing ability.

Never one to back down from a challenge, despite overwhelming obstacles Albert stubbornly refused to give in to his doctors' prognoses and set about with ferocious determination to restore his body to health once and for all. After years of intensive research and therapies, he is nearly pain-free and is enjoying a gradual comeback to the concert stage.

Albert created http://www.backpaincoach.com to offer fellow back pain sufferers the knowledge, tools, insights and psychological strategies to live healthy and pain-free lives.

Copyright 2005 Albert Frantz / www.backpaincoach.com -- All rights reserved.


Keywords: drug rehab drug, addictive potential, drug of choice, drugs, rehabilitation, drug enforcement, drug rehab, addictive drugs, drug enforcement agency, drug rehabilitation programs

Drug Rehabilitation News



Drug Rehabilitation Links

InfoAwards.com: Top 1 "texas drug rehab" Awards (Family Filtered)
Learn everything you ever wanted to know about texas drug rehab. We found the 20 most useful information sites, which compare the best texas drug rehab web sites. ... texas drug rehab1) drug rehab center texas2) drug rehab in texas3) drug rehab center in texas4) drug rehab ...


Texas Tech Univ Health Sciences Center in Lubbock, TX Drug Rehab
Texas Tech Univ Health Sciences Center in Lubbock, TX Drug Rehab and treatment center Data and Information on Texas Tech Univ Health Sciences Center ... Drug Rehab or Treatment Center Name : Texas Tech Univ Health Sciences Center Dept Neuropsychiatry SW Institute. CLICK HERE FOR MORE DRUG REHAB INFO ...


Christian Drug Rehab - Christian Recovery - Drug Addiction Rehabilitation
Eternal Awakenings Christian Drug Rehab is a faith-based rehab program focusing on rehabilitation from drug and alcohol addiction through Christian Recovery. ... to Eternal Awakenings Christian Drug Rehab. Set in a Gonzales, Texas historic mansion, our Drug Rehab Center provides a ...


Drug Rehab Program - Drug addiction help and advice
Compare drug rehab centres in your city. What is drug detox, drug addiction treatment and how do treatments differ for specific drug addictions?


Drug Rehab Centers
drug rehab center drug treatment drug addiction center offering 12 step programs drug rehabilitation programs detox centers alcoholism resources and aa meetings for those addicted to drugs and alcohol ... Home. Drug Rehab. Alcohol Rehab. Heroin Detox ... Tennessee. Texas. Utah ... The right help. Locate drug rehab, alcoholism treatment that's right for your ...


Additional Links >>

Click here to add your link to our directory >>



Drug Rehab Center Georgia | Drug Rehab Center In Arizona | Drug Rehab Center In California | Drug Rehab Center In Canada | Drug Rehab Center In Florida | Drug Rehab Center In Georgia | Drug Rehab Center In Maryland | Drug Rehab Center In Pennsylvania | Drug Rehab Center In | Drug Rehab Center Los Angeles | Drug Rehab Center Michigan | Drug Rehab Center Northern California | Drug Rehab Center Oklahoma | Drug Rehab Center Texas | Drug Rehab Center Ventura County | Drug Rehab Center Washington

© copyright http://newdrug-rehab-center.com/ a Drug Rehabilitation Programs company