Oxycodone Detox & Addiction Facts
Rapid Drug Detox can help detox you from Oxycodone Addiction also known by a variety of other names (see below)
Oxycodone Addiction
Oxycodone is a powerful and addictive opioid analgesic used for the relief of pain. It is marketed under several different brand names: OxyFast, OxyIR, Percolone, Roxicodone, Eukodal, Dinarkon, Supeudol. When combined with aspirin, it is known as Percodan, Endodan and Roxiprin. When combined with acetaminophen, it is known as Percocet, Endocet, Roxicet and Tylox.
Call us at 1-866-399-2967 or contact us to learn more about how we help with Oxycodone addiction.
Long-term Oxycodone Addiction Effects
Extended use of Oxycodone can lead to increased tolerance and addiction. Overdose remains a pervasive risk for long-term users and can lead to respiratory depression or arrest, skeletal-muscle flaccidity, blood-pressure and heart-rate reduction, coma, and death.
Oxycodone Withdrawal Symptoms
Oxycodone withdrawal is often a painful process particularly after heavy use. Symptoms are similar to heroin withdrawal and may include sweating, heart spasms, body and muscle ache, diarrhea, watery eyes, sneezing, goose bump cool skin, pale and clammy skin, nausea with or without vomiting, chills, trembling, abdominal cramping, convulsions, dehydration, restlessness, leg spasms or kicking, insomnia, and mood disturbances.
Rapid Anesthesia Oxycodone Detox
Rapid anesthesia detoxification (The RDD Method™) is a medical procedure that cleans the Oxycodone drug from the brain’s opiate receptors. The RDD Method™ is very successful to ease the user through the rebound anxiety that accompanies detoxification. Instead of a difficult, several-week withdrawal period, rapid detox eliminates most of withdrawal symptoms.
After the procedure, recovery occurs under direct medical supervision. The patient’s vital signs and overall physical and mental reactions to these medications are closely monitored during the detox procedure. In the days that follow the procedure, the patient often sleeps more than usual. Administered by professionals as part of a long-term drug-addiction recovery strategy, The RDD Method™ has been shown to be significantly more effective than other detoxification methods.
Oxycodone Addiction FAQs
- How do I know if I am addicted to Oxycodone?
A.Because Oxycodone is so addictive even short-term users may require a detox program in order to successfully discontinue use. Addicts typically require higher doses of the drug and experience cravings for Oxycodone between doses. - How long does Oxycodone detox take?
A.The length of the Oxycodone detox process varies depending on the duration and quantity of typical use and on individual differences. The most severe withdrawal symptoms occur during the first several days after discontinuing use making it important to seek immediate professional help from trained Oxycodone detox professionals. - Is Oxycodone addiction recovery painful?
A.While recovery from Oxycodone addiction may be painful; the right procedure can greatly reduce discomfort. Anesthesia Oxycodone detox is a procedure is effective at reducing the pain associated with conventional Oxycodone detox. - How do I choose an Oxycodone detox program?
A.Talking to a trained detox or medical professional is the right first step in choosing the appropriate program. Call us at 1-866-399-2967 or contact us to learn more.
If you are using opiate drugs to control pain and feel you are using more and more to get the same pain relief, you may be suffering from a common condition caused from opiate drug use; read about this condition called Hyperalgesia. Also, read about hormones and how the chronic use of opiate drugs can decrease the body’s ability to produce the proper amount of testosterone and estrogen.
We never use other replacement addicting opiates often prescribed by physicians and detox centers, such as Suboxone®/Subutex (Buprenorphine) or injectable Buprenorphine. These schedule III controlled opiate drugs are routinely and widely used and approved by the FDA for opiate addiction maintenance, like Methadone. Many patients find themselves in the same situation as they were before drug treatment from a doctor or a drug rehabilitation center. We have heard of some in-patient rehab centers also using schedule II controlled liquid Hydrocodone and Dilaudid “cocktails”. Patients soon realize these replacement drugs cause severe withdrawal once they are discharged from these programs. This causes the patient to seek opiates for relief from the severe discomfort of a Buprenorphine withdrawal. The use of these drugs for treatment of opiate addiction is merely switching one opiate drug for another, setting the patient up for failure. This does not solve the patient’s drug addiction problem. As use of these drugs become more common, we are seeing a steady increase of requests for an anesthesia detox from patients addicted to Suboxone®/Subutex (Buprenorphine). With RDD’s Naltrexone Therapy used as a pellet/implant, injectable “IM” shot or the oral pill form, the patient will stay clean and cravings will be eliminated.