Drug
Information: OxyContin
What
is OxyContin?
OxyContin is the brand name for an opioid analgesic containing
the active ingredient Oxycodone (also found in Percoset
and Percodan). OxyContin is a legal narcotic (or a controlled
substance) that is available, by prescription, to treat
severe pain. OxyContin is one of several OPIUM derivatives
available by prescription. It is a high potency pain killer
that comes in time release tablets that last for 12 hours.
OxyContin is a controlled-release medication that, when
used correctly, provides extended relief of pain associated
with cancer, back pain, or arthritis. However, often when
the drug is abused, the tablets are crushed and snorted,
chewed, or mixed with water and injected- eliminating the
time-release factor and allowing for a quick and intense
rush to the brain. This practice can lead to overdosing
on OxyContin's active ingredient, oxycodone, by releasing
too much of the medication into the bloodstream too quickly.
OxyContin is highly addictive - so higher doses of the drug
must be taken when a tolerance develops. Illicit users of
the drug have risen drastically and steadily over the last
few years.
What
are the street names?
OxyContin is also known as Oxy, OxyCotton, Oxy 80 (for the
80mg dose), or OC, Oxies, Killers, Oceans, O's, OxyCoffins,
Hillbilly Heroin
What
does OxyContin look like?
OxyContin
most commonly exists in tablet form. These round pills come
in 10mg, 20mg, 40mg, and 80mg dosages. OxyContin also comes
in capsule of liquid form.
How
is it taken?
When
used correctly, prescribed patients take the pill orally
every 12 hours as needed (most pain relievers last only
3-6 hours). Those who abuse OxyContin remove the time-release
coating on the pills. Often the pills are crushed and the
powder is snorted, chewed, or cooked to inject.
Why
is it a problem?
People
have figured out that if you chew/crush or snort the tablet
that you bypass the time release feature and it will give
you a high much like high grade heroin but with worse consequences.
Most people are actually not aware of the heroin link and
do not realize how dangerous this drug is; 5mg of Oxy has
has as much active ingredient (oxycodone) as one percocet.
Chewing/snorting a 40mg OXY is like taking 8 percocets at
once or a 80mg Oxy is like taking 16 percocets all at once
but worse because percocets dissolve over 4 hours, but crushing
an Oxy immediately puts all of the narcotic in your system.
Again people just don't realize what they are putting into
their system from one little pill.
Can
a person legally prescribed OxyContin become addicted?
Any
narcotic/opiate used legally has the potential to lead to
addiction. The CT Attorney General has stated the addiction
rate is around 13%, for more information on this please
see the following Message Board -- BrainTalk Communities
- Neurology Support Groups Search Page.
How
do you kick an OxyContin addiction?
Just
like heroin it is almost impossible to do alone as the withdrawal
symptoms are worse than heroin and last longer. Professional
help from a heroin detox center is the best and safest way
to do this, see Detox Specialist.
How
much will cause an overdose?
Everyone's
body is different but as little as half a pill when combined
with alcohol or other depressants can lower your respiratory
system enough to kill you. Taken in high doses OxyContin
alone can kill you.
Short-term
effects?
The
most serious risk associated with OxyContin, is respiratory
depression. Because of this, OxyContin should not be combined
with other substances that slow down breathing, such as
alcohol, antihistamines (like some cold or allergy medication),
barbiturates, or benzodiazepines. Other common side effects
include constipation, nausea, sedation, dizziness, vomiting,
headache, dry mouth, sweating, and weakness. Toxic overdose
and/or death can occur by taking the tablet broken, chewed,
or crushed. People who abuse the drug (by removing the time-release
coating) will experience effects for up to 5 hours. The
high that is felt is opiate-like - a sedate, euphoric feeling.
Long-term
Effects?
Using
OxyContin chronically can result in increased tolerance
to the drug in which higher doses of the medication must
be taken to receive the initial effect. Over time, OxyContin
will be come physically addictive, causing a person to experience
withdrawal symptoms when the drug is not present. Symptoms
of withdrawal include restlessness, muscle and bone pain,
insomnia, diarrhea, vomiting, cold flashes with goose bumps,
and involuntary leg movements.
For
more information, contact us or
call 800-338-0899.
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