Tramadol Addiction
Tramadol addiction occurs when illicit overuse of the painkiller tramadol begins.
Unable to find enough physicians to write out prescriptions,
patients with tramadol addiction turn to the Internet
to obtain their supply. "That first time I filled
out a form and submitted it and it came back approved,” says
one tramadol patient, “it was like, 'Hey, I got
my meds!'” Then, she admits, she just started taking
more and more.
- One sign of dependency is relying on medication from
more than one, primary physician.
- Then, the patient crosses a line, and tramadol addiction
arises from drug overuse that has not been regulated
or treated medically.
- Tramadol patients do not choose to become drug addicts.
"Without the tramadol,” she states, “I
just wanted to quit everything and collapse.”
The federal government estimates that some 46 million
Americans (age 12 and up), or nearly 20% of the US population,
have abused prescription medication at least once. Yet
no one knows how many people feed addictions anonymously
through the Internet or other sources.
- Patients hope to alleviate their discomfort, often
associated with withdrawal.
- Which, in turn, eventually creates a physical dependency,
and later an addiction.
- Counseling or medical treatment seem ineffective
until the dependency is treated.
- First, the numbing opiates that mask the pain must
be removed.
Dependency that leads to tramadol addiction can be reversed
by medically inducing rapid detoxification, while the
patient is under anesthesia. The hold of opiates is cleansed
from the brain.
The Waismann Method or Rapid Detoxification reverses
tramadol addiction and dependency in a safe,
humane and non-judgmental procedure.
More
about rapid detox for tramadol addiction.
Tramadol Addiction
Abuse and addiction are separate and distinct issues
from physical dependence and tolerance. Though
non-narcotic, tramadol functions similarly in the brain
to opiates, tends to be habit-forming over time, and
produces similar addiction withdrawal. Symptoms include:
- Vomiting
- Uncontrollable diarrhea
- Unbearable pain
- Nausea
- Mounting anxiety
- Distress
- Depression
- Cold sweats
- Cascading bodily reactions
- Aching limbs
More
about withdrawal from tramadol.
Many patients describe themselves as functioning adults
who struggle to maintain jobs and family responsibilities,
while secretly feeding their addictions… despite
the consequences.
The Waismann Method of Rapid Detoxification views
painkiller or opiate dependence as a physical disorder.
This medical problem requires a physical, medical intervention:
rapid detox.
Many tramadol addiction patients come to us after they
have tried stopping by themselves, or through drug
treatment programs. After failing either, or
both, they come to Waismann to be free of all opiate
use through our accelerated rapid detoxification:
- Safe, compassionate, and more advanced than traditional
drug detoxification.
- Effective, documented treatment for thousands of
patients from around the world.
- Over a decade of professional medical and detoxification
experience.
The mom from Virginia said she had no problem to maintain
a steady supply of tramadol-based Ultram delivered to
her door in their nice, middle-class suburb, from a changing
variety of online pharmacies she selected. "It was
humiliating to face reality,” she says. “This
is true. I have a major, major problem.”
The
Waismann Method of Rapid Detoxification offers
a humane treatment without humiliation to patients
who have a physical tramadol dependency or tramadol
addiction.
Learn
more about the Waismann Method.