Posts Tagged ‘Opiates’

No Place to Hide continued….

Author: DrugRehab

No Place to Hide: A Historical Perspective of Drug Abuse & Education In America

      The first challenge for any addict wishing to kick his addiction is overcoming the mental and physical cravings for drugs or alcohol. Cravings are strong, uncontrollable urges to use drugs or alcohol that drive the addict to once again use addictive substances.
To get an idea of what drug cravings are like, think of a time when you went for a long time without eating a meal and you were really hungry. Hunger is a mental and physical sensation that is triggered when the body needs food for nutrients and energy.
growling stomach and shakiness due to not having eaten will become so great, making the person so uncomfortable, that they will drop whatever it is they are doing and arrange to get food and eat it. As soon as the food is consumed, the hunger pangs stop and the person feels good about satisfying their hunger.withdrawal symptoms and cravings are caused by poor nutrition and the vitamin depletion that follows substance abuse. When a body lacks certain nutrients, it cannot make some substances it needs for health and energy, causing a person to feel tired and moody. Depletion of certain vitamins and minerals can also cause shakiness and pain.type of drugs were taken. Drug tests detect the presence of any drugs or their metabolites.Drug metabolites are like fingerprints of the drug that was taken. Cocaine produces a cocaine metabolite, opiates produce an opiate metabolite, alcohol produces an alcohol metabolite and so on.drugs and alcohol are metabolized, or broken down, in the liver but all tissues in the body will break down drugs or other foreign substances for elimination. Drugs and metabolites leave the body through urine, feces and sweat but they are not fully eliminated. Since drugs dissolve better in oil than water, they have a natural affinity for fats. Therefore any drug residues or metabolites that are not eliminated have a natural attraction to fat cells and so tend to be stored in one’s fat.L. Ron Hubbard made the revolutionary discovery that drug metabolites and other toxins that were stored in the fat cells had the continuing effect of locking addicts in their addictions, and that eliminating these stored deposits was a key to full recovery. He went on to develop a method of extracting those deposits, resulting in improved mental and physical health. This discovery was a critical step forward in the effort to resolve drug cravings.addictive drugs, they will accumulate a series of memories that contain the pain and discomfort associated with drug withdrawal.

The craving for food, driven at a physical level, stimulates memories of eating food, which is followed by a strong desire or compulsion to consume food. Usually when a person is very hungry, they will think about their favorite foods; if they get hungry enough, they can sometimes even smell and taste certain foods.

If a person goes long enough without food, compelling thoughts of eating plus a

A drug craving is similar, but the desire to use drugs is much stronger and more intense. An addict who is craving drugs will feel like life itself is dependent on getting and taking their preferred drug. They will do and say almost anything to get the drug to handle their intense craving. Once they satisfy the craving, they feel relief until the drug wears off and the craving returns.

Some

Withdrawal symptoms and cravings may also result from the toxins (substances the body sees as poisons) that accumulate after repeated drug use. These toxins stress many of the body’s systems, resulting in fatigue, aches, pains and unclear thinking. The addicted person has learned to medicate their mental or physical problems with drugs; they will continue to use drugs as a solution whenever they feel poorly. Therefore attempting to handle addiction with more drugs only makes the problem worse.

Today it is fairly common for many companies and federal agencies to drug test their employees. Through a common urinalysis test, it can be determined if the employee has taken any one of several drugs. This test of a person’s urine not only detects if they have taken drugs, it also detects what

Metabolites are the products left behind in the body when it has broken down a substance so it can be eliminated.

Most

As an example, the active chemical in marijuana, THC, is so fat-soluble that, when consumed, most of it rapidly leaves the bloodstream and lodges in the fatty tissues of the body. From there, it slowly moves back into the bloodstream over a period of weeks or even longer.

Only recently have scientists discovered that fat is actually a vital organ that produces hormones that affect our moods, energy levels and immunity. Chronic use of drugs or alcohol has been shown to disrupt this function. This disruption is one of the factors that cause cravings, as the body attempts to correct the disturbance by craving what it lacks or a similar substance, such as the drugs that originally caused the disruption.

In the late 1970s, American author and humanitarian

Each time a person consumes drugs or alcohol, they retain a complete recorded memory of that life experience. Whether they were happy or sad or had a good time or a bad time, all emotions, feelings and sensations that were present at the time the drug or alcohol was consumed are filed away in the person’s memory. Even if the person blacks out, the experience is still recorded in the mind.

In the case of those addicted to opiates, alcohol, tranquilizers or any other

The body will metabolize (change energy sources into energy) and burn fat cells any time a person undergoes a situation in life that causes their heart rate to speed up. Stress can do this, as can strenuous exercise or intense emotion. Most of us experience these kinds of stressful situations on a fairly regular basis.
When an addict’s body metabolizes fat, if the fat cells contain metabolites from past alcohol and drug use, those metabolites will activate back into the person’s bloodstream as the fat cells burn.

Keep in mind that each type of drug produces its own metabolite. Therefore, if alcohol metabolites were stored in the fat, once those fat cells are metabolized, the body will be reminded of alcohol at a physical level. If the person has taken cocaine, then cocaine metabolites will be released into the bloodstream and remind the body of earlier cocaine use.

The effect of these metabolites being present in the bloodstream will trigger recorded memories of drug-related experiences and discomforts from the past. The person will remember feeling and thinking like they did in the past when they were under the influence of the drug or alcohol. Or they will remember experiencing the pain and discomfort that occurred when they were coming down from the drug. They are prone to use drugs or alcohol again at these times.

This article was written by Gary W, Smith, C.C.D.C., Executive Director of the Narconon Arrowhead Drug Rehabilitation and Education Center located in Canadian, Oklahoma.


 
Coming next: The Life Cycle and Mechanics of Addiction Part III: “Depression” The Second Barrier to Successful Recovery

Most any addiction professional would agree that addiction to drugs or alcohol is one of the most difficult conditions to overcome. As a result, the medical industry has tried to develop medications, techniques and procedures that try to help. But the industry as a whole has largely given up on a cure for addiction. In fact, in 2004, the president of the National Association of Addiction Treatment Professionals recommended “compliance” rather than “success rate” as the quality indicator of treatment.

Accordingly, various industries develop procedures or devices to try to fix the problem since real solutions to addiction are hard to come by. In 2005, a European company announced the development of a drug-delivery system in the form of a dental appliance that can be permanently affixed to the teeth. It automatically releases medication for addiction treatment. Compliance with a medication schedule is complete and almost unnoticed. In Canada, heroin-addiction treatment is administered to heroin addicts who did not succeed in other forms of treatment. In this program, these addicts are given prescribed heroin as a way to keep them from using illegal heroin, committing crimes or suffering health problems related to heroin usage.

In the U.S., medication assisted treatment uses an opioid drug to help prevent withdrawal symptoms that occur when withdrawing from opiates such as heroin, morphine or prescription opioids like hydrocodone or oxydcodone. In many cases, however, this treatment turns into maintenance as a way to ensure “compliance” – in some cases, for as long as four years.
When existing treatment methods do not result in sobriety, many people may think that sobriety is unattainable.
Much of the addiction treatment industry has settled on substitute medications as a way to prevent the unhealthy lifestyle often experienced by those who are addicted. We have found that it is possible to help a formerly addicted person build a new, drug-free life. It takes longer than 28 days but it can be done.

To find immediate help for someone who is having a problem with drugs or alcohol, contact our free addiction consultation and referral Helpline at 1-877-873-8532, or visit our website at www.successfulrehabservices.org.

We are experienced and knowledgeable regarding the different rehabilitation programs and facilities which are available in the United States and Canada, which programs are most workable, and what the costs are for each one.  We will work with you to find a program that is best suited to your needs, or the needs of your family member or loved one.

We do our best to offer help and a workable solution to each and every person who contacts us, no matter what their circumstances are, and no matter how desperate or hopeless their situation might seem.

It is possible to lead a drug-free life.  We are here to help you, or someone you love, achieve that goal.