How To Flush Opiates Out Of Your System

Most treatments for opiate addiction involve taking medication. There are several medicines which are used to flush opiates out of your system , and some information on these medicines will be discussed here.

Detox First

Even before pharmaceutical treatments are given to you, you will first undergo a series of detoxification methods. These are usually done at an accredited rehabilitation institutes. They will teach you how to live without the effects of opiates in your blood stream. Most people do not know this, but the detoxification period is essential to the aided recovery of addicts. Little by little, opiates are flushed out of your system naturally.

This process usually takes about ten days to two weeks at private institutes. You will be kept on an in-patient basis, and are usually not allowed contact with the outside world during this period. Depending on the severity of your drug abuse, doctors may decide to begin pharmaceutical treatment before detox ends. However, it is important for your body to learn how to cope without the presence of opiates before substitution drugs are used to flush opiates out of your system. At least several days without pharmaceutical aid are necessary.

Pharmaceutical Aids

Selected treatments differ for different patients. Doctors must look at your medical history before determining how best to flush your system of opiates . A number of the more successful drugs are listed below.

Methadone

Methadone is an artificial opiate that thwarts the upshots of prolonged addition to heroin. This drug effectively eradicates withdrawal syndrome, which manifests through depression and inexplicable feelings of anger or pain. Withdrawal syndrome is a feared enemy of recovering addicts, but methadone has so far been able to help patients through this stage. So far, methadone has been the most effective way to flush opiates out of a patient's system.

Many cases of opioid addiction have been treated using methadone for about three decades now. When prescribed by a competent professional and taken in the right dosage, methadone is neither sedating nor intoxicating. It is a very latent drug – it does not get in the way of day-to-day activities like driving, for example. Methadone is in tablet form. It works by repressing the symptoms of withdrawal from narcotics for about 36 hours. Methadone dramatically decreases cravings for heroin. This reduction helps prevent relapse or resumed use of the drug even after treatment. The effects of methadone last for a full day. This is as much as six times longer than the euphoric state produced by heroin.

If you and your doctor decide that this is how you can flush opiates out of your system , you will only have to take methadone every day, at least once. Its long history of use shows that methadone is harmless as long as it taken continuously. Some recovering addicts have used methadone for more than 10 years, and have reported no relapses or side effects. When combined with therapy and other related counseling treatments, methadone returns patients to highly productive lives.

To prevent interactions of medication, patients undergoing HIV infection antiviral therapy must be meticulously monitored when they undergo Methadone treatment. The dosages must be controlled very cautiously. Other pharmaceutical approaches, like LAAM (levo-alpha-acetyl-methadol) and buprenorphine, also are used for flushing the system of opiates. However, these are specialized drugs, and are not as universally applicable as methadone.

 

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