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'Rapid Detox' Breaks
Drug Habits Quickly
By Jennifer Thomas, HealthScoutNews
Errol Dodson's drug addiction began with a
prescription for Vicodin to help treat pain in
his shoulder, knees, ankles and ribs caused by
weightlifting and wrestling injuries.
A few years later, Dodson
realized he was hooked. He was spending $400 a week
buying Vicodin, Lortabs and OxyContin on the black
market. In the morning, he felt like he had the flu
until he popped a pill.
"I hated myself for letting
this happen," says the 33-year-old industrial
mechanic from Greenwood, Ind. "I was so ashamed. I
was isolating myself from friends and family. I knew
I had to get help."
Dodson checked himself into a
two-week drug detoxification center. A few days
after getting out, he gave into his cravings and
started taking the painkillers again.
In February, Dodson decided
to try a new and controversial drug treatment called
"rapid detox," which promises to get you through
drug withdrawal in a mere 48 hours. It also promises
far less pain and discomfort because you're under
general anesthesia during the worst of it.
Rapid detox is touted as a
way to kick opiates, including heroin, morphine and
methadone, as well as opiate prescription
painkillers such as OxyContin, Percocet, Vicodin and
Lortabs. Practitioners estimate there are about a
dozen rapid detox centers around the country.
"I have detoxed attorneys and
doctors on a Friday and they are back at work on a
Monday and seeing patients or clients on Tuesday,"
says Dr. Rick Sponaugle, chief of anesthesiology at
Helen Ellis Memorial Hospital in Tarpon Springs,
Fla. and director of Florida Detox, located in the
hospital. "We take them through the detox in a more
humane way and what I believe is a less dangerous
way."
While advocates say the
procedure is highly effective, skeptics caution that
little research has been done comparing the
effectiveness of rapid detox versus traditional
methods.
Critics also point out the
high costs of the procedure — Dodson paid about
$10,000 — which is not covered by most insurance
companies, and the risk posed by general anesthesia.
"Rapid detox is providing a
service which has some dangers, so it's kind of hard
to justify something that is so expensive," says Dr.
Michael Miller, medical director of the NewStart
Program at Meriter Hospital Program in Madison, Wisc.
Here's how rapid detox works:
At Florida Detox, the patient
is admitted into the hospital, where they undergo
psychological testing and a urine test to determine
what drugs are in their system.
The client is then given
general anesthesia for about three hours, during
which time he or she is given a dose of Naltrexone,
a non-addictive drug.
When a person takes opiates,
the drug attaches to receptors in the brain, leading
to the feeling of being "high." Naltrexone, known as
a narcotic antagonist, blocks the opiates from
attaching to receptors.
Patients are then given a
sedative intravenously to help them sleep through
the night. By the following afternoon, they are
usually ready to go home, though Sponaugle often
keeps them in the hospital for another day.
After the detox, patients
continue to take Naltrexone tablets daily for
several weeks to two years. Sponaugle highly
recommends that patients get involved with a 12-Step
program or other therapy to help them remain
drug-free.
"Ongoing psychological
treatment is so important," he says. "Unless they
receive that spiritual healing, they will probably
relapse."
During the six years Florida
Detox has been in business, Sponaugle has detoxed
about 400 patients. According to company
information, about 75% of patients stay drug-free
for six months. About 50% to 60% stay clean for one
year or more.
After the rapid detox,
Dodson, like other patients, felt somewhat achy and
nauseous, but the withdrawal symptoms weren't nearly
as severe as in traditional detox.
In traditional detox, a drug
addict often has to endure two to 10 days of
abdominal pain, tremors, vomiting and severe muscle
aches that comes with drug withdrawal.
Dodson recalled two weeks of
sheer agony. "It was a horrible experience," he
says. "It felt like snakes were trying to crawl out
of my body. I had uncontrollable leg movement. I
couldn't get out of bed."
Miller, secretary of the
American Society of Addiction Medicine, says that
not every addict undergoes so much discomfort. There
are new drugs to take the edge off during ordinary
detox — drugs that cost significantly less and are
less risky than Naltrexone.
Naltrexone has been known to
cause side-effects including delirium and confusion
in some people. And there is always some risk when a
person is put under general anesthesia.
But Miller says is the more
important issue is not the detox method, but what
kind of treatment people are able to access
afterwards to help them stay off drugs.
"Detox is only the first
step, and detox in and of itself resolves no cases
of addiction," he says. "The controversies which
surround rapid detoxification methods miss the basic
point, that regardless of the method of
detoxification used, patients with opiate dependence
face great challenges, and they need to have their
addiction treated not simply their withdrawal
treated."
After two days in Florida,
Dodson returned home to Indiana feeling more hopeful
than ever. Since he had the procedure done in early
February, he says he's had no desire to take drugs.
Sponaugle says he would like
to eventually wean him off the Naltrexone, because
the drug interferes with the ability to experience a
"natural" high from the body's own endorphins.
"If you have the willingness
to put the drugs behind you and bury it, then rapid
detox will work for you," Dodson says.
"Rapid detox saved my life."
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