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Hydrocodone AddictionQ) What is Hydrocodone? A) Hydrocodone is an effective antitussive (anti-cough) agent, and as an opiate it is also an effective analgesic for mild to moderate pain control. Five mg of Hydrocodone is equivalent to 30 mg of codeine when administered orally. Early comparisons concluded that Hydrocodone and morphine were equivalent for pain control in humans. However, it is now considered that a dose of 15 mg (1/4 gr) of Hydrocodone is equivalent to 10 mg (1/6 gr) of morphine. Hydrocodone is considered to be morphine-like in all respects.
Hydrocodone is abused for its opiate-like effects. It is equivalent to morphine in relieving abstinence symptoms from chronic morphine administration. The Schedule III status of Hydrocodone-containing products has made them available to widespread diversion by "bogus call-in prescriptions" and thefts. Three dosage forms are typically found (5, 7.5, and 10 mg) and their behavioral effects can last up to 5 hours. The drug is most often administered orally. The growing awareness and concern about AIDS and blood-borne pathogens easily transmitted by syringe needle use, has made the oral bioavailability of Hydrocodone attractive to the typical opiate abuser. As
with most opiates, the adverse effects of Hydrocodone abuse are dependence and
tolerance development. Its co-formulation with acetaminophen has also increased
the likelihood of acetaminophen-induced hepatic necrosis with high dose acute
dosing, but slow escalation of dose over time seems to protect the liver during
high dose chronic exposures seen with this drug. Q) How is Hydrocodone used? A) Hydrocodone when abused is taken orally, chewed, crushed (then snorted like cocaine), or crushed (then dissolved in water and injected like heroin). Hydrocodone-containing products are in tablet, capsule and liquid
forms. A variety of colors, markings, and packaging are available. Q) What are the effects of Hydrocodone? A)
Q) Can you overdose on Hydrocodone? A) Yes, overdose of Hydrocodone can be fatal. If you suspect an overdose, seek emergency treatment immediately. Symptoms of a Hydrocodone overdose include:
Q) Is Hydrocodone addictive? A) Yes, there has been an increasing trend of abuse in non-Chronic Pain suffering persons. The abuser of these drugs has been shown not to be the inner city youth, but instead a famous actor, a suburban real estate agent, or your next door neighbor. First time abuse of these drugs has been surging, most commonly with the oxycodone and Hydrocodone type painkillers. The two differ slightly in their chemical makeup but have a similar effect on the body. Every age group has been affected by the relative ease of Hydrocodone availability and the perceived safety of these products by professionals. Sometimes seen as a "white-collar" addiction, Hydrocodone abuse has increased among all ethnic and economic groups. DAWN data demographics suggest that the most likely Hydrocodone abuser is a 20-40 yr. old, white, female, who uses the drug because she is dependent or trying to commit suicide. However, Hydrocodone-related deaths have been reported from every age grouping. Q) What are other medications that include Hydrocodone? A)
BRAND NAMES (of Hydrocodone with Acetaminophen): Hydrocodone w/Acetaminophen; Hydrogesic; Lorcet; Lorcet 10/650; Lorcide Panseals; Lortab; Margesic; Medipain 5; Megagesic; Megamor; Norcet; Oncet; Panacet; Polygesic; Propain Hc; Ro-Codone; Rogesic #3; Senefen III; Stagesic; Tycolet; Ultragesic; Vanacet; Vapocet; Vendone; Vicodin; Vicodin ES; Zydone Hydrocodone w/Ibuprofen; Vicoprofen Q) What are the statistics of Hydrocodone abuse? A) Hydrocodone abuse has been escalating over the last decade. There has been large scale diversion of Hydrocodone. For example, an estimated 7 million dosage units were diverted in 1994 and over 11 million in 1997. In 1998 there were over 56 million new prescriptions written for Hydrocodone products and by 2000 there were over 89 million. From 1990 the average consumption nationwide has increased by 300%. In the same period there has been a 500% increase in the number of Emergency Department visits attributed to Hydrocodone abuse with 19,221 visits estimated in 2000. In 1997, there were over 1.3 million Hydrocodone tablets seized and analyzed by the DEA laboratory system. A recent petition submitted to the DEA has requested a review of the control status of all Hydrocodone-containing products. Painkiller becomes legal drug of choice
LAS VEGAS (September 16, 2001 1:48 p.m. EDT) - When she needed a fix,
Helene would flip through the yellow pages, looking for a doctor she had not
yet fooled. Addicted to hydrocodone, a powerful prescription painkiller, Helene
became an expert at "doctor shopping" - visiting numerous physicians to obtain
multiple prescriptions. "You go to the doctor and say your back hurts, that was always good
for a few refills," said the Las Vegas woman, whose name has been changed to
protect her privacy. "Supply was never a problem." The state Board of Pharmacy's prescription drug-abuse task force,
which monitors drug prescriptions, eventually caught on. The board sent warning
letters to all of the pharmacies and doctors that Helene had visited, along
with a printout of her prescription history. Hydrocodone - a mix of synthetic codeine and acetaminophen - is the
most abused prescription drug in the United States, according to the Drug
Enforcement Administration. The painkiller tops the list of abused pharmaceuticals in El Paso,
Texas; New York City; San Diego; St. Louis; Atlanta; Chicago; Dallas; and
Miami. It's known as Vicodin, Percocet, Lortab or Lorcet, and the roster of
celebrities who have admitted addictions includes Green Bay Packers quarterback
and three-time NFL Most Valuable Player Brett Favre, actor Matthew Perry and
model Niki Taylor. Nevada doctors in 2000 wrote prescriptions for more than 42 million
doses of hydrocodone - or about 17 pills for every adult in the state. "There's no question hydrocodone is effective, when properly
prescribed, and can provide immediate relief," said Dr. Godwin Maduka, a
pain-management specialist and anesthesiologist at University Medical Center.
"But we also know there's a tremendous level of abuse occurring." There's a difference between developing a tolerance for a drug and
physical addiction, Maduka said. Tolerance occurs when a medication is no
longer effective at reducing pain, even when a patient increases the dosage.
Physical addiction occurs when a patient has been on a certain medication for
such a lengthy period that they go through symptoms of withdrawal if they stop
taking it. Maduka, also a pharmacist, said by the time most patients arrive at
his Las Vegas Pain Institute, they've visited a long list of primary-care
doctors. Most pain patients are not abusers, but have simply developed a
tolerance for medications and need additional help, he said. "We have no real way of knowing how many doctors a patient has seen
before us, how many other prescriptions they have in their pocket," Maduka
said. Helene was introduced to prescription painkillers through legitimate
means. After dental surgery in the mid-1980s, her dentist prescribed a
painkiller. She discovered the pills numbed her physical pain and gave her a
sense of well-being. For the next 15 years, she struggled to get out of the
drug's grasp. When her husband said he worried about how many pain pills she
was taking, Helene cut back. She even tried quitting, but the night sweats,
nausea and chills - symptoms of her withdrawal - always won out. "You think of drug addicts as being out on street corners," Helene
said. "I'm a housewife." "Hydrocodone is a very good medicine if you're having pain, but no one
realized it would have such a high potential for abuse," said Dr. Caroline
Riely, associate medical director of the American Liver Foundation. "It's the
codeine portion of the drug that's addictive, but it's the acetaminophen that's
destroying peoples' livers." Experts say adults should not take more than four grams of
acetaminophen each day; just 10 grams can cause lifelong liver problems or even
death. Most hydrocodone pills come in either 2.5, 5 or 7.5 milligrams of
synthetic codeine, each mixed with 500 milligrams of acetaminophen. McNeil Consumer Products Co., a subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson,
the company that manufactures Tylenol, has added new warning labels about
acetaminophen's potential for damaging the liver, especially when the drug is
mixed with alcohol. The DEA's prescription-drug classification system is based on the
potential for abuse. Schedule I drugs include heroin and Ecstasy, which are
both illegal in the United States. Schedule II drugs include powerful
painkillers, such as codeine, morphine and Demerol. Cocaine is a Schedule II
drug because it has some legitimate medical applications in hospital settings.
Schedule III drugs include hydrocodone and anabolic steroids. Schedule III drugs are easier to prescribe and ultimately easier to
get. A doctor is permitted to phone in a Schedule III prescription refill to a
pharmacy. Schedule II refills may only be written after the doctor re-examines
the patient. The DEA also requires more stringent record-keeping of Schedule II
prescriptions, and it tracks how many each doctor writes. Florida, another state battling the hydrocodone epidemic, tried last
year to reclassify the drug as a Schedule II. But the new rules were quickly
derailed by protests from pharmacists, physicians and patients who said it
would make it unreasonably difficult for people to manage day-to-day pain.
Florida's attorney general took the unusual step of passing an emergency
ordinance, restoring hydrocodone's status as a Schedule III drug. Nine years ago the Nevada Board of Pharmacy considered moving
hydrocodone to Schedule II, but ended up voting against the plan, according to
its attorney, Louis Ling. The argument that "carried the day" for the board was doctors'
testimony that moving hydrocodone to Schedule II would make it unreasonably
difficult for patients in rural areas to get refills, Ling said. They call it the Las Vegas Cocktail, but you won't find it served at
hotel bars or table-side in the casinos. A potent mix of hydrocodone and the
muscle relaxer Soma gives the user a heroin-like euphoria without needle marks.
It's also one of the most popular recreational drug combinations in the United
States. The street value of the cocktail's ingredients is high. One former Las
Vegas physician-turned-dealer made as much as $1 million selling the drugs on
the black market, according to federal prosecutors. Luisito Evangelista, banned from practicing medicine in Nevada, used
his Illinois DEA registration to buy more than 500,000 hydrocodone pills.
Evangelista, who pleaded guilty to drug trafficking in 1999, died in a federal
prison last year. Soma is the nation's most abused non-controlled substance, according
to the DEA. Nevada's pharmacy board is considering reclassifying it, making it
more difficult for addicts to gather the cocktail's ingredients. Because Soma isn't a scheduled narcotic, Nevada officials aren't sure
how many prescriptions are being written each year.
Drug
rehabilitation is a multi-phase, multi-faceted, long term process.
Detoxification is only the first step on the road of addiction treatment.
Physical detoxification alone is not sufficient to change the patterns of a
drug addict. Recovery from addiction involves an extended process which usually
requires the help of drug addiction professionals. To make a successful
recovery, the addict needs new tools in order to deal with situations and
problems which arise. Factors such as encountering someone from their days of
using, returning to the same environment and places, or even small things such
as smells and objects trigger memories which can create psychological stress.
This can hinder the addict's goal of complete recovery, thus not allowing the
addict to permanently regain control of his or her life. Almost all addicts tell themselves in the beginning that they can conquer their addiction on their own without the help of outside resources. Unfortunately, this is not usually the case. When an addict makes an attempt at detoxification and to discontinue drug use without the aid of professional help, statistically the results do not last long. Research into the effects of long-term addiction has shown that substantial changes in the way the brain functions are present long after the addict has stopped using drugs. Realizing that a drug addict who wishes to recover from their addiction needs more than just strong will power is the key to a successful recovery. Battling not only cravings for their drug of choice, re-stimulation of their past and changes in the way their brain functions, it is no wonder that quitting drugs without professional help is an uphill battle. As an organization we are dedicated to finding the correct drug rehab for your specific addiction problem. Our referral list contains over 3,000 drug rehabs which encompass the following treatment categories :
You can overcome addiction and we can help. Call (800) 772-5770 for a free consultation today |
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