Buprenorphine
Detox
Buprenorphine detox can be difficult because there are both mental and physical aspects of opiate addiction. Opiates travel rapidly through the bloodstream to the brain, where they stimulate opiate receptors, triggering intense feelings of pleasure and reward. This quick high is followed a state of relaxation and contentment that lasts for several hours. Concurrently, opiates act directly on the respiratory center in the brainstem, causing a decrease in the breathing rate of the user. When Buprenorphine and/or other opiate-derivative drugs are used incorrectly, this breathing slow-down can be dangerous and even fatal.
Traditional methods of treatment for Buprenorphine
addiction (or Suboxone
addiction)—talk therapy along with medicinal treatment to lessen the pain of withdrawal—often have low success rates (less than 10% after the first year) due to the drug’s powerful, physically addictive properties.
A newer and quicker method of Buprenorphine detox (or Suboxone detox) is Accelerated Neuro-Regulation (ANR), a rapid drug treatment that is being used with increasing success for opiate dependency. ANR, also known as the Waismann Methodsm of rapid
detox, treats Buprenorphine addiction as a physical disease that can be overcome with advanced medical techniques. ANR eliminates the cravings that often accompany traditional opiate
detox treatments. The Waismann Methodsm has been clinically proven to be effective for Buprenorphine addiction or Suboxone addiction.
During Buprenorphine detox using
ANR or the Waismann Methodsm,
the body’s opiate receptors
are cleansed of opiates while
the patient is anaesthetized and
asleep. The goal is to rid the
body of physical addiction: the
patient literally sleeps through
physical withdrawal. The Waismann
Methodsm reports higher
success rates in treating opiate
addiction than do clinics
utilizing more traditional techniques.
>> Buprenorphine
Addiction
>> Get Help Now
|