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Saturday, February 8, 2014

Methadone Chicago - Dispelling The Myths

By Jerri Perry


Methadone Chicago is used in drug recovery clinics to help people stop taking addictive opiates like heroin, codeine and morphine. Also known as Amidone, Methadose, Heptadon or Symaron, it is in the class of drugs known as synthetic opioids. It acts at the same receptors as the opiate drugs. Unlike opiates, it is crafted in the laboratory and is not found in nature. Amidone is also sometimes used to treat refractive pain in people with terminal cancer.

Methadose was originally produced in Germany in the late 1930s. The reason for its development was to produce a stable internal source of drugs to interact with opiate receptors. The drug was introduced in the United States ten years later. Methadose is available as an oral solution and as 5 mg, 10 mg and 40 mg tablets.

Numerous myths have evolved about the use of Amidone as a treatment for opiate addiction. The general public and opiate addicts both have misconceptions about the drug. Here, we examine a few of these myths and uncover the real truths. Amidone is only one treatment options that are used to help recovering heroin addicts. It can be used successfully and it can also be abused. In many cases, it has provided individuals with a road to recovery of their normal, pre-addiction, productive lives.

The First Myth: "Methadone users are junkies. They are getting high off the state." This is incorrect. In fact, when administered at therapeutic doses, users do not get high. This only occurs when it is given at too high a dose, at which point it exhibits toxic side effects. Among these toxicities is the "high" sought after by addicts. At doses below the therapeutic level, the user goes into withdrawal. The symptoms of withdrawal are so unpleasant, users may be tempted to relapse.

Myth No 2: The second common misconception is that heroin is worse than alcohol. The truth is, alcohol can be every bit as devastating to the addict and everyone around them. Alcohol is at the heart of an overwhelming amount of domestic violence, child abuse and it creates chronic health problems in the abuser. The main difference between alcohol and heroin is that alcohol addicts are not breaking the law.

Myth No 3: Amidone rots your bones. This is untrue. The Drug Policy Alliance of New York announced in 2006 that Amidone does not affect the skeletal system at all. If a client is taking a maintenance dose and feels like their bones are falling apart, then they are on too low a dose. As a matter of fact, one of the symptoms of opiate withdrawal is severe bone pain.

Myth No 4: Amidone makes you fat. While Methadone does indeed lower the metabolic rate, weight gain is not a standard outcome. Don't forget that drug addicts tend not to follow healthy dietary regimes when they are using. Methadose clients can learn how to eat properly.

These are just a few of the many myths about methadone Chicago. It acts by blocking the "high" associated with opiate use and decreases the chance of relapse.




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