OxyContin is legitimately prescribed
as a timed-release tablet, providing
as many as 12 hours of relief from
chronic pain. It is often prescribed
for cancer patients or those with
chronic, long-lasting back pain,
with a goal of decreasing pain and
improving function. Generally, pain
sufferers need to take the pill only
twice a day, whereas a dosage of
another medication would require
more frequent use to control the
pain.
Abuse of OxyContin®
OxyContin abuse has increased dramatically
in recent years. On the street, OxyContin
is also referred to as oxy, O.C.,
OxyCotton, Oxy 80 (for the 80 mg
dose), and killer.
OxyContin abusers may crush the tablet
and ingest or snort it - or they may
dilute it in water and inject it. Crushing
or diluting the tablet disarms the
timed-release action of the medication
and causes a quick, powerful high.
This practice can lead to overdose
on the active ingredient in OxyContin,
oxycodone, releasing too much of the
medication into the bloodstream too
quickly.
When an OxyContin abuser bypasses
the time-release structure, they experience
a rush. Abusers have compared this
feeling to the euphoria of heroin.
In fact, in some areas, abuse of OxyContin
is more prevalent than the use of heroin.
OxyContin is highly addictive. An
OxyContin abuser can easily become
obsessed with this pleasurable rush
and develop a physical craving. Addiction
to OxyContin manifests through chronic
use and increasing tolerance so a user
needs more and more of it to feel the
same effects.
OxyContin and other opioids like heroin
block pain messengers to the brain
and central nervous system. They increase
dopamine in the brain, which causes
pleasure and euphoria. As the body
seeks a balance, compensating for the
increased dopamine and pleasurable
feelings, tolerance develops. That’s
why the body soon needs more and more
OxyContin to get the same feelings.
OxyContin addiction can creep up on
someone until acquiring the drug occupies
the abuser’s mind full time,
affecting friends, family, career,
finances and the law.
Short-term Effects of OxyContin® Abuse
Respiratory depression is the most
serious risk associated with OxyContin.
OxyContin should not be combined
with other substances that slow down
breathing, including alcohol, antihistamines
(cold or allergy medication), barbiturates,
or benzodiazepines.
Other common side effects include:
1. OxyContin is a powerful drug that
contains a much larger amount of the
active ingredient, oxycodone, than
other prescription pain relievers.
By crushing the tablet and either ingesting
or snorting it, or by injecting diluted
OxyContin, abusers feel the powerful
effects of the opioid in a short time,
rather than over a 12-hour span.
2. Great profits can be made in the
illegal sale of OxyContin. A 40 mg
pill costs approximately $4 by prescription,
yet it may sell for $20-40 on the street,
depending on the area of the country.
OxyContin can be comparatively inexpensive
if it is legitimately prescribed and
covered by insurance. But the National
Drug Intelligence Center reports that
OxyContin abusers may turn to heroin
if their insurance will no longer pay
for their OxyContin prescription, because
heroin is less expensive than OxyContin
purchased illegally.
Crimes Associated with OxyContin® Abuse
Abuse, crime and fatal overdoses have
all been linked to OxyContin addiction.
Many reports of OxyContin abuse occur
in rural, economically depressed areas
with labor-intensive industries, such
as logging or coal mining. Because
of the temptation to make extra income,
people may sell their OxyContin prescriptions
for profit.
Also, those addicted to OxyContin
become so driven to get more of it
that they will go to great lengths
to get the drug, including robbing
pharmacies and writing false prescriptions.
Likelihood of OxyContin® Addiction
from Prescription
Most people who take OxyContin
as prescribed do not become addicted.
The National
Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
reports: "With
prolonged use of opiates and opioids,
individuals become tolerant…require
larger doses, and can become physically
dependent on the drugs... Studies
indicate that most patients who
receive opioids
for pain, even those undergoing
long-term therapy, do not become
addicted to
these drugs."
One NIDA-sponsored study found that "only
four out of more than 12,000 patients
who were given opioids for acute pain
actually became addicted to the drugs….
In a study of 38 chronic pain patients,
most of whom received opioids for 4
to 7 years, only 2 patients actually
became addicted, and both had a history
of drug abuse."
In short, most individuals who are
prescribed OxyContin, or any other
opioid, will not become addicted,
although they may become dependent
on the drug
and will need to be withdrawn by
a qualified physician. Individuals
who
are taking the drug as prescribed
should continue to do so, as long as
they
and their physician agree that
taking the drug is a medically appropriate
way for them to manage pain.
The Difference between OxyContin® Dependence
and Addiction
When pain patients take a narcotic
analgesic like OxyContin as directed,
or to the point where their pain
is adequately controlled, it is
not abuse.
OxyContin abuse occurs when patients
take more than is needed for pain
control, especially if they take
it to get high.
Patients who take OxyContin in
a manner that grossly differs from
a physician's
directions are probably abusing it.
If a patient continues to seek excessive
OxyContin after pain management is
achieved, the patient may be addicted.
Addiction is characterized by the repeated,
compulsive use of OxyContin despite
adverse social, psychological, and/or
physical consequences. OxyContin addiction
is often (but not always) accompanied
by physical dependence, withdrawal
syndrome, and tolerance.
Physical dependence is defined as
a physiologic state of adaptation to
OxyContin. The absence of this substance
produces symptoms of withdrawal. Withdrawal
syndrome is often characterized by
overactivity of the physiologic functions
that were suppressed by the drug and/or
depression of the functions that were
stimulated by the drug. Opioids often
cause sleepiness, calmness, and constipation,
so OxyContin withdrawal often includes
insomnia, anxiety, and diarrhea.
Pain patients, however, may sometimes
develop a physical dependence during
treatment with opioids. This is not
an addiction. A gradual decrease of
the medication dose over time, as the
pain is resolving, brings the former
pain patient to a drug-free state without
any craving for repeated doses of the
drug.
The opioid-addicted patient continues
to have a severe and uncontrollable
craving that almost always leads to
eventual relapse in the absence of
adequate treatment. It is this uncontrollable
craving that differentiates the OxyContin
addicted patient from the former pain
patient.
Theoretically, an opioid abuser might
develop a physical dependence but
obtain treatment in the first few months
of
abuse, before becoming addicted.
In this case, supervised OxyContin
withdrawal
followed by a few months of abstinence-oriented
treatment might be sufficient for
the nonaddicted patient who abuses
opioids.
If, however, this patient subsequently
relapses to opioid abuse, then
that would support a diagnosis of opioid
addiction. After several relapses
to
OxyContin abuse, it becomes clear
that a patient will require long-term
treatment
for OxyContin addiction.
Drug Treatment for OxyContin®
Transitions Recovery drug treatment
center offers hope for those suffering
from addiction to OxyContin.
Our professional drug
treatment center staff is
experienced in helping youth and
people of all ages recover from drug
and alcohol
abuse. We provide a compassionate,
supportive environment in our North
Miami Beach, Florida, drug treatment
center.
Admissions can
be accepted 7 days a week. Trained
addiction professionals conduct
individual assessments that address
each individual’s
treatment needs. You’ll find
our OxyContin drug treatment programs
offer access to a continuum
of care that provides the intensity
of therapy appropriate throughout
each stage of recovery, from extended
residential
care to lifetime aftercare services.
The individual program incorporates
leading forms of therapy that have
proven effective in addressing
underlying causes of OxyContin
abuse, dual
diagnosis, and issues
with family, employers, school
and the legal
system.
We work with patients individually
as well as in group sessions and
a Family
Program, after OxyContin detoxification.
Emphasis on recovery from OxyContin
addiction
and maintained sobriety helps prepare
the patient for gradual re-entry
into society.
OxyContin treatment does not need
to be voluntary. Often, a family member,
employer, or the court system can be
the motivating factor for an individual
receiving drug treatment for OxyContin.
If you think that you or a loved one
may be addicted to OxyContin, please
contact us right away. We’re
here to help. Call us at 1 (800)
626-1980 or request
more information.