Wednesday, June 22, 2016

The Right Meth Addiction Treatment

Meth addiction treatment is one of the most difficult things an addicted person can go through in their lifetime. Meth can change the structure of the brain after just one use. If a person wants treatment, they can expect a long process and the severity of the withdrawal symptoms will depend on a few things. First, the treatment will be harsher for people who've used it for a very long time. People who inject meth into their veins via needles often have more severe withdrawal symptoms than those that do not.


Meth addiction treatment is broken in phases:

1) For the first few days withdrawal will set in. The person stops using meth altogether. Withdrawal is the body's way of trying to regulate itself and flush the meth out of it's system. People who are in this stage are often extremely tired, nauseous, and they can become severely depressed.

2) After the meth leaves the body the treatment continues and the person will feel achy, sick with flu-like symptoms, and have a horrible urge to use meth. Normally the second part of the treatment cycle includes feelings of hopelessness, depression and often times hallucinations. The hallucinations normally go away after a couple of weeks.

3) After the first couple of weeks, people in meth addiction treatment centers will have difficulty adjusting to being sober. They will have problems sleeping and it will be hard for their bodies to recover and find 'normal' again.



4) After a month the person may start to feel better.

During Meth addiction treatment a person will likely be prescribed an antidepressant like Wellbutrin or buproprion. The reason this particular medication is used is itmoderates the levels and activity of the neurotransmitters norepinephrine, and dopamine which are extremely out of whack because of the meth use. Meth addicts should take in-patient treatment if at all possible because the chances of recovering in-patient are much higher than out-patient. In-patient therapy involves the monitoring of an addict by a doctor, as well as psychological help and encouragement.

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