Georgia Rehab Treatment
Georgia Drug Treatment
Drug Rehab Articles
- Choosing The Right Rehab
-
Educate yourself when choosing a drug rehab program. There are many different types of drug rehabs, varying in cost, length of stay and philosophy....
- The BioPhysical Drug Rehab
The recovery rate for a biophysical drug rehab program is very often three times higher than most other drug addiction treatments...
- The Pattern Of Drug Addiction
Whether talking about alcohol addiction, cocaine addiction, methamphetamine addiction, or even heroin addiction, the pattern is the same...
- Is Addiction a Disease?
-
There are very specific factors that hold an addiction in place. When these factors are thoroughly addressed, an addict can recover...
OxyContin
OxyContin is the brand name for an opioid analgesic containing the active ingredient oxycodone (also found in Percocet and Percodan). OxyContin is a legal narcotic that is available by prescription to treat severe pain. OxyContin is a controlled-release medication that, when used correctly, provides extended relief of pain associated with cancer, back pain, or arthritis. However, often when the drug is abused, the tablets are crushed and snorted, chewed, or mixed with water and injected. This eliminates the time-release factor and allows for a quick and intense rush of the drug to the brain. This practice can lead to overdosing on OxyContin's active ingredient, oxycodone, by releasing too much of the medication into the bloodstream too quickly. OxyContin is highly addictive which means that higher doses of the drug must be taken when a tolerance develops. Illicit use of the drug has risen drastically and steadily over the last few years.
OxyContin is also known as Oxy, OxyCotton, Oxy 80 (for the 80mg dose), or OC.
What Does OxyContin Look Like?
OxyContin most commonly exists in tablet form. These round pills come in 10mg, 20mg, 40mg, 80mg, and 160mg dosages. OxyContin also comes in capsule or liquid form.
Short-term Effects of Oxycontin
The most serious risk associated with OxyContin is respiratory depression. Because of this, OxyContin should not be combined with other substances that slow down breathing such as alcohol, antihistamines (like some cold or allergy medication), barbiturates, or benzodiazepines. Other common side effects include constipation, nausea, sedation, dizziness, vomiting, headache, dry mouth, sweating, and weakness. Toxic overdose and/or death can occur by taking the tablet broken, chewed, or crushed. People who abuse the drug (by removing the time-release coating) will experience effects for up to 5 hours. The high that is felt is opiate-like and produces a sedate, euphoric feeling.
Long-term Effects of Oxycontin
Using OxyContin chronically can result in increased tolerance to the drug in which higher doses of the medication must be taken to receive the initial effect. Over time, OxyContin will be come physically addictive, causing a person to experience withdrawal symptoms when the drug is not present in their system. Symptoms of withdrawal include restlessness, muscle and bone pain, insomnia, diarrhea, vomiting, cold flashes with goose bumps, and involuntary leg movements.
Fill out the form below and you will receive a response back from a Certified Chemical Dependency Counselor who can answer all your drug rehab and treatment questions. Our counselors are always available to help and are waiting for your call so if you would like to speak to someone right away, don't hesitate to call:
Georgia Drug Rehab Cities
- Atlanta Drug Rehabs
- Columbus Drug Rehabs
- Savannah Drug Rehabs
- Sandy Springs Drug Rehabs
- Macon Drug Rehabs
- Roswell Drug Rehabs
- Albany Drug Rehabs
- Marietta Drug Rehabs
- Warner Robins Drug Rehabs
- Smyrna Drug Rehabs
- Valdosta Drug Rehabs
- North Atlanta Drug Rehabs
- Redan Drug Rehabs
- Dunwoody Drug Rehabs
- Eastpoint Drug Rehabs
- Rome Drug Rehabs
- Alpharetta Drug Rehabs
- Peachtree City Drug Rehabs
- Gainesville Drug Rehabs
