Today's post from medicalnewstoday.com (see link below) talks about something that is very familiar to many neuropathy sufferers with more severe forms of the disease: addiction to the drug prescribed to help with the pain. Oxycontin (oxycodone) is prescribed by many neurologists and other doctors when all the normal medication routes have led to dead ends and the pain becomes too severe to bear. It is an opioid which was thought to be safer for long term use than other forms of morphine but like all drugs in the family, it can easily lead to addiction. Unfortunately, although the drug undoubtedly helps with the pain, the body gets used to it over time and needs more to achieve the same effect. Oxycontin has also become a recreational drug and is being crushed and snorted for a quick high. This has led to world wide examples of wide spread abuse. Nobody is suggesting that neuropathy patients are drug abusers, far from it but it is important that if you are prescribed this drug, your doctor regularly monitors progress and mentors your Oxycontin use. The problem for many neuropathy patients, is that there sometimes is just no alternative and the pain just has to be suppressed.
Strategy To Stop OxyContin Abuse Is Effective but Ineffective Overall
Article Date: 12 Jul 2012 Written by Rupert Shepherd
New England Journal of Medicine carries an article today, reviewing
strategies that have been put in place to reduce the abuse of OxyContin.
OxyContin (oxycodone) is the brand name of a pain killer medicine
manufactured from thebaine extracted from the opium poppy.
Although
oxcodone was originally synthesized in the early 20th Century, it's only
recently become widely used. OxyContin is manufactured by Purdue Pharama, and
was first FDA approved in 1995. It's popularity has increased rapidly in the
last decade or so, with 11.5 tons produced in 1998, shooting to 51.6 tons in
2007. It's ranked amongst the top three pain killers after morphine.
The
drug is taken orally, as a time release pill, so it's considered safer and less
addictive than morphine injections. Patients can also administer it themselves.
It has become popular for treatment for a wide range of conditions, from back pain to cancer patients.
Unfortunately
oxycodone has also become a focus for recreational and addicted drug users.
Prescription drugs are now more widely abused than the standard street drugs,
such as heroin and cocaine. Supply is easier to come by locally, and quality and
purity are more assured. The pills are commonly crushed so that they can be
snorted or injected to give a faster more intense high.
Theodore J.
Cicero, Ph.D. and Matthew S. Ellis, M.P.E. from Washington University in St.
Louis, St. Louis, MO. conducted the study using data collected quarterly from
July 1, 2009, through March 31, 2012. They gave the 2,566 opioid addicts,
self-administered surveys that were completed anonymously following guidelines
of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. More than 100
patients also agreed to telephone interviews
The results showed that
abuse of OxyContin fell from 35% to just 12.8% twenty-one months after the
formula was introduced to prevent tampering with the product. While some users
indicated that they found ways to circumvent the tamper-proof pills, many
switched to other opiates, with heroin being the most popular.
A common
response ran along the lines of:
"Most people that I know don't use OxyContin to get high anymore.
They have moved on to heroin [because] it is easier to use, much cheaper, and
easily available."
Sadly though, the abusers didn't appear
to reduce or curtail their addictions just because supply of OxyContin became
unusable; they simply switched to other substances, while around a quarter of
users simply found a way to defeat the anti-tamper formulation.
Use of
other opioids have increased in line with the decrease in OxyContin use, with
high-potency fentanyl and hydromorphone rising significantly from 20.1% to
32.3%.
When asked what substances they used to get high on during the
last 30 days, usage of OxyContin fell from close to 50% down to only 30%,
according to the participants' responses.
The researchers concluded that
the overall outcome was not quite what might have been hoped for, when the
manufacturer of OxyContin began producing tamper proof formulas. Although one
specific drug was abused much less, addicts simply switched to other,
potentially more harmful substances, including street heroin, which put the
public at large in far more danger.
As Theodore Cicero of Washington
University in St. Louis, first author of a letter in the New England Journal of
Medicine put it:
"They didn't stop (abusing drugs). They turned to something else ...
We should have asked the question ... If they stop using the most popular drug
out there, what are they going to turn to now?"
We only have
to look back to the 1920s prohibition era to see the disaster of illegal bars,
moonshine alcohol and gangster feuds to understand that people will always want
to get high and will always take risks to create supply, even in the face of
massive government opposition. Despite building a vast government complex that
is now the FBI, prohibition of alcohol as a recreational drug was an abject
failure. Whilst far fewer numbers of people feel the need to take opiates on a
daily basis, the sector of the population that does, will find a way to do so.
Many junkies claim it's easier to give up heroin than tobacco. Tobacco
addiction is certainly
more harmful and damaging to the health than a clean supply of opiate, and with
a day's supply of heroin costing about the same price as a loaf of bread, when
considered from a simple production point of view, the whole concept of banning
opiates and driving them into the black market must seem to many as being about
as relevant today as alcohol prohibition in the 1920s.
Even police and
law enforcement agree, with the Police Chief Constable Richard Brunstrom of the
North Wales Police, UK, stating as far back as 2004 that heroin should be made
legal.
"Heroin is very addictive but it's not very, very dangerous,... It's
perfectly possible to lead a normal life for a full life span and hold down a
job while being addicted to the drug.
The same statement
cannot be made for those using large quantities of marijuana or alcohol on a
daily basis.
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/247779.php
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