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Acupuncture is an Eastern medicine technique that has been utilized for centuries. It has been used for various physiological issues in Asian culture but only more recently has entered the United States. Since it’s induction into popular culture, use of acupuncture has been broadening to treatment for many different health problems. Some of which include: back and neck pain, sports injuries, knee injuries, fibromyalgia, headaches, digestive and gynecological problems, among other things. One of the uses that surprises most people, is acupuncture as a method to treat symptoms of substance abuse withdrawal.

 

A Treatment Found by Mistake

 

It was 1970 and a neurosurgeon by the name of H.L. Wen, the only one in all of South China, was getting ready to use electro-acupuncture as a method of surgical analgesia. The patient who happened to be withdrawing from opium, reported a relief in symptoms of withdrawal. Wen immediately canceled the surgery and went looking for patients who were also experiencing symptoms of withdrawal. Wen utilized the same acupuncture treatment and found that these patients also experienced a reduction in symptoms. It was at this moment that acupuncture as treatment for substance abuse withdrawal came into fruition.

 

How Can Acupuncture Reduce Withdrawal Symptoms?

 

• Physical withdrawal symptoms are reduced.
• Relieves: depression, anxiety, and insomnia brought on by withdrawal.
• Specific withdrawal symptoms include:
o cravings
o body aches
o headache
o nausea
o sweating
o muscle cramping

 

What exactly is Qi?

 

Qi, pronounced chee, is achieved by inserting needles into routes underneath the skin which are called ‘meridias’. The only translation for the word Qi, which is not exact, is ‘vital energy’. If Qi is working properly it protects the body and makes the transition from one body state to another smooth. Chinese medicine works under the assumption that sickness occurs when energy cannot flow through the meridas freely. The needles utilized in acupuncture work by unblocking the meridias and allowing Qi to flow freely.

 

How Does Acupuncture Treatment Work?

 

There are points in the ears that pertain to specific organs in relation to detoxification treatment. To be more specific, this includes: the liver, kidneys, lungs, and the nervous system. Needles are placed in each ear, which relate to each organ mentioned prior. The entire treatment takes approximately forty five minutes. This is a good time for the patient to relax, meditate and take this time to think about changes that need to occur in one’s life. One of the reasons that acupuncture helps to relieve symptoms, is because endorphins, a natural body chemical, are released. Endorphins can be called the ‘happy hormones’. Endorphins tend to reduce cravings, ease symptoms of withdrawal and also tend to increase feelings of relaxation.

 

How Do They Know Where to Stick Those Needles?

 

The Chinese have been utilizing the proper acupuncture points for years; however, it wasn’t until 1955 that Paul Nogier, a French doctor completed research on these positions. Dr. Nogier, when testing for electrical activity on the surface of the skin, found that all the traditional acupuncture points on the body had a parallel point on the human ear. From that point on, needle stimulation of the ear, otherwise known as auricular acupuncture has been used. This type of stimulation has particular benefit in substance abuse treatment as it allows for several treatments to take place simultaneously thus eliminating the need for privacy.

 

What Does the Treatment Feel Like?

 

When needles are placed in the individual’s ears, they may begin to feel warm or start to tingle. Some people do not feel anything and others may even fall asleep. Regardless of which response the person has, they are all natural and normal. Acupuncture is a treatment which will not reap immediate results. It is only after treatments taking place over time, that a true benefit will be felt. The important thing to remember is that it takes time for the treatments to show results.

 

What is the Detoxification Process?

 

The purpose of detoxification is to remove toxins from the blood stream that have been building up due to substance use. Your body is able to filter out the toxins that have been stored up. This improves the circulation of blood throughout the body. It is possible to feel out of sorts during this period. One may have aches and pains and may not be sleeping well. Some people have even reported dreaming about substance use. If any of these symptoms occur, it is advisable to let the acupuncturist know in order to alter the pressure points utilized or add additional points in.

 

Is Acupuncture Treatment a Sufficient Form of Substance Abuse Treatment?

 

No. Acupuncture is a wonderful complementary treatment to add on to traditional for substance abuse management. In order for substance abuse to be effectively dealt with, a whole team of professionals need to be incorporated. If an individual is interested in natural treatments such as acupuncture, it is advisable to locate a program that specializes in Holistic addiction treatments.

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Utah — “Methamphetamine addiction has the worst long-range organic effect on the brain of any drug,” said Glen Hanson, University of Utah Addiction Center director.

 

Hanson’s blunt comment defines extent of the the public health problem in meth-damage control in Utah.

He was speaking at an all-day meth workshop before 30 participants; family members, caregivers and health care professionals in Roosevelt on June 21.

Addiction of any kind is a learned repetitive behavior, but meth is the worst, ” explained Hanson, “It alters the brain biology in ways similar to Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s disease.”

Why would anyone choose to damage their brain to such a degree? The answer, because “it feels good,” may be the best an addict can offer after treatment.

Simplistic as it sounds, it is not wrong. Meth over-stimulates the “feel-good” portion of the brain and can severely damage a person’s cognitive abilities.

“The brain is a network of 100 billion cells that transmit information by making 2,000 connections individually,” Hanson said, telling the group why an addict’s ability to communicate has been compromised.

“Stimulated brain cells respond by releasing dopamine to anything that feels good” he continued. “Over-stimulated brains release too much dopamine. Then the free radicals that are chemically abundant in dopamine will eventually destroy portions of the brain.”

 

Meth stimulates the release of dopamine in excess. The more an addict uses the more they crave. It affects the cognition system in the brain by “turning-off” the prefrontal cortex.

As a consequence, meth addicts loose inhibitory control, tending to act on impulse rather than reason. They overreact to situations, tending toward rage.

This is partly due part to the “damage to the orbitofrontal cortex which ultimately inhibits saliency,” said Hanson. “The addict becomes motivated most by getting and using meth over anything else.”

It fouls up the meth addict’s ability to appreciate consequences like taking care of their children, themselves or being cognizant of others.

“Meth addicts may steal from or abuse their family members with little conscience,” the researcher explains. “All they think of is the drug, because the reward portion of their brain is on all the time.”

Hanson referred to the amygdala reward-region of the brain, which processes memory and emotional control. Damage to the region and the adjacent hippocampus region leaves the addict agitated and often aggressive.

Once these areas are damaged the memory portion of the addict’s brain often fails to recover even with treatment.

“Rehabilitating cognitive systems requires exercise,” explained the researcher. “Sometimes that means establishing new pathways in the brain around damaged portions that will never return.”

“Treatment is lengthy,” he continued, “requiring five to seven months for brain function to stabilize and restore saliency. It’s hardest for meth addicts because their familial support systems are often irreparably damaged. They’ve hurt the very people they need most.”

In the end, there are successful treatments to re-develop cognitive skills through mental exercise. One way, Hanson explained is through literacy education, which seems to help re-establish cognitive functions.

So, why with all this wreckage would anyone choose to use meth? Hanson’s research suggests that there is a strong sociocultural component contributing to the meth scourge in Utah.

“Meth abuse demographics indicate that it is the primary drug of choice among women,” he explained. “Thirty-seven percent of all women in treatment are addicted to meth. Men use it too, but represent fewer addicts in treatment than women.”

Some women are attracted to meth as it is readily available, cheap and long-lasting in effect. Others discover more energy, weight loss or help with social inhibitions through meth abuse.

“In Utah, there’s a sociocultural tendency of women toward perfection,” said Paul Smith, eastern Regional Director of the Division of Child and Family Services. “Perfect wife. Perfect mother. Perfect beauty. Too much pressure toward perfection drives the social component of meth abuse.”

“Whatever the cause, abuse is only part of addiction,” Hanson said. “Only 15 percent of users become severely addicted, which means 85 percent of users are out there managing their drug use.”

Why people become addicted may, in part, be genetic. For example, researchers found that many women in treatment suffer from other repetitive disorders like smoking or alcoholism.

The most interesting connection was re-occurrence of attention deficient-hyperactivity disorder. The familial connection of ADHD or alcoholism may include a predisposition toward drug addiction among family members.

There’s also the social aspect of addiction. Meth tends to stay in the family. A documentary shown at Saturday’s seminar showed women frankly admitting that, “My daughter introduced me to meth and then I gave it to my sister, and so on.”

Hanson notes that addictions like alcoholism re-occurs in families, but there is hope. Children removed from addictive families show no greater addiction rates than children from non-drug abuse families.

However, children left in addictive families are almost certainly going to experiment with drugs. Addictions, particularly those with long-term treatment requirements like meth are a burden on Utah society.

“Forty-seven percent of women in treatment for meth addiction have children,” Hanson continued. “Worse still, 45 percent of female meth addicts end up in prison. Incarcerated women cost the state $30,000 each and an additional $33,000 for each child placed in foster care. All totaled, jailed addicts cost the state about $100,000 a year.”

Treatment, on the other hand, costs the state about $15,000 per person. More recently, the treatment alternative has become policy in the criminal justice system of Utah. The effort is to stop the revolving door of prison addicts.

“New strategies for treatment are highly successful, but the addict must remain in rehabilitation,” said Hanson. “Judges are learning that success requires mandated, long-term compulsory treatment. I guess they figured that success means more taxpaying Utahns.”

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Sure, exercise is good for your waistline, your heart, your bones — but might it also help prevent addiction to drugs or alcohol?

 

There are some tantalizing clues that physical activity might spur changes in the brain to do just that.

 

Now the government is beginning a push for hard research to prove it.

 

This is not about getting average people to achieve the so-called runner’s high, a feat of pretty intense athletics.

 

Instead, the question is just how regular physical activity of varying intensity — dancing, bicycling, swimming, tae kwan do — might affect mood, academic performance, even the very reward systems in the brain that can get hijacked by substance abuse.

 

What first caught the attention of National Institute on Drug Abuse chief Dr. Nora Volkow: A study found tweens and teens who reported exercising daily were half as likely to smoke as their sedentary counterparts, and 40 percent less likely to experiment with marijuana.

 

Volkow knows — from her own 6-mile daily runs and from her scientific experiments — that the brain literally likes physical activity. Exercise seems to invigorate neurochemicals that sense and reinforce pleasure.

 

"In children, it’s innate," she notes. "Children want to move."

 

But the nation’s children are becoming more sedentary, as illustrated by the obesity epidemic, "screen time" replacing outdoor play and a drop in school P.E. And as youngsters approach adolescence, the run around the yard that used to be fun too often becomes a chore — the dreaded jog around the school track or the nagging to get off the couch. The sedentary teen turns into the sedentary adult.

 

"Why do we lose the ability to experience pleasure from physical activity?" asks Volkow.

 

Last week she brought more than 100 specialists in exercise and neurobiology to a two-day conference to explore physical activity’s potential in fighting substance abuse, and announced $4 million in new research grants to help.

 

Drug treatment programs often include exercise, partly to keep people distracted from their cravings, but there’s been little formal research on the effects.

 

The best evidence: Brown University took smokers to the gym three times a week and found adding the exercise to a smoking-cessation program doubled women’s chances of successfully kicking the habit. The quitters who worked out got an extra benefit: They gained half as much weight as women who managed to quit without exercising, says lead researcher Dr. Bess Marcus.

 

She now is working with the YMCA on a larger, NIDA-funded study to prove the benefit.

 

Marcus cautions that people trying to kick an addiction have a powerful incentive to exercise. Could that possibly translate into prevention? Among the clues:

 

– Rats were less likely to ingest amphetamines if their cages had running wheels, suggesting exercise stimulated a reward pathway in the brain to leave them less vulnerable to the drug’s rush.

 

– In people, exercise acts as a mild antidepressant and relieves stress. Depression, anxiety and stress increase risk of alcoholism, smoking or drug abuse.

 

– Volkow is intrigued that attention deficit disorder and obesity both involve problems with the brain chemical dopamine, one system that drugs hijack to create addiction.

 

– Baby monkeys who don’t play enough in childhood have problems controlling aggression when they’re older. The most aggressive tend to have defects involving the feel-good brain chemical serotonin — and binge-drink when researchers offer them alcohol.

 

– Back to rats, physical activity increases production of growth factors and stem cells in key brain regions important for learning and mood; increases formation of blood vessels; and strengthens communication networks between brain cells.

 

Together, that’s far too little research to know if exercise really matters for substance abuse, scientists at the National Institutes of Health meeting cautioned.

 

But, a few studies of school-age children suggest physical activity predicts better performance on math, verbal and other tests — and better school performance in turn is linked to lower risk for substance abuse.

 

And getting sedentary seniors moving improves brain function — research aimed at preventing dementia, not drug abuse, although the improvement is in an area that in younger people is linked to risky decision-making.

 

A caveat: If your own youth includes memories of parties with beer-guzzling athletes, well, the research concurs. A major study that tracks adolescent risk behaviors found that by 12th grade, exercise offers no protection against binge-drinking.

 

"Now the kids who exercise the most actually drink the most," says Dr. Lloyd Johnston of the University of Michigan. It may have to do with the celebratory nature of team sports, or getting revved for college — or, other researchers suggested, even that competition is to blame.

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VANCOUVER, British Columbia (CNN) — I didn’t know quite what to expect when I entered the injection room at Insite, the world’s busiest supervised drug clinic.

 

Inside the Vancouver facility, I found more than a dozen people taking illegal drugs, such as heroin and cocaine, under the watchful eye of trained nurses. These drug users were among the more than 700 people who visit the facility every day, bringing their drugs with them. Insite’s goal is to reduce the risk of overdose and limit the spread of diseases like HIV by giving addicts clean needles and a safe place to use them.

 

"People need to be kept alive long enough in order to get treatment," said Liz Evans, a nurse and founder of Insite.

 

The clinic, which is sanctioned by Vancouver’s health department, opens each day at 10 a.m. and stays open until 4 a.m. the following day. Many of the people in the clinic on the day we visited had tattered clothes, missing teeth and glassy eyes. They swayed as they struggled to keep their balance. Video Watch people shoot up in the Vancouver clinic »

 

Outside of the clinic, police patrolled the streets to keep people from buying and selling illegal drugs. Inside, patrons were given access to Insite’s clean needles, injection booths and nurses. Similar facilities can be found at 65 locations in eight different countries. San Francisco health officials recently held a day-long conference on the Vancouver drug clinic, with an eye toward possibly opening a similar one. But San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom said the city is unlikely to do so.

"You had a lot of health officials there that did participate in the pros and cons. But my director of the department of public health doesn’t feel the city should move forward," Newsom said.

 

Defenders of the Vancouver clinic say more than two dozen peer-reviewed studies have shown its benefits. One study found a 45 percent reduction in public drug use as a result of the clinic; another showed 33 percent of addicts are more likely to go to drug detox after using Insite. Dr. Thomas Kerr, a University of British Columbia research scientist who has studied the program, believes Insite benefits the wider community.

 

"In the absence of such a facility, not only would [drug users] be high out on the street, but they would be leaving their syringes in school yards, in parks and on city streets," Kerr said.

 

Dr. David Murray, chief scientist for the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, opposes opening drug injection clinics in the United States. He believes they do little to help addicts overcome their additions.
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"It is a cruel illusion because they are still addicted, trapped, trying to get out and dying by the virtue of the drug itself," he said.

 

Nurses at the Vancouver clinic say they get all kinds of people using their facility, from an old grandma who comes to inject her pain medication to men in business suits hiding their addictions from their families.

 

At the clinic, we met Lorraine Trepanier, 50, a longtime drug user. Trepanier said she used to sell her body for drugs, but now relies on a friend to give her the $20 she uses every day to buy cocaine and heroin.

 

"I get up in the morning and I make sure I have one down or half a down," she said, referring to her heroin fix. Trepanier believes Insite has helped keep her alive by giving her a supervised setting in which she can take drugs.

 

Evans and other operators of Insite say that rather than chase addicts from corner to corner and alley to alley, it is more effective to encourage them to use their drugs in a supervised setting.  In the more than four years Insite has been open, there have been roughly 800 overdoses at the facility, but there have not been any deaths. When someone does overdose, nurses try to revive them. If the drug user is in critical condition, they are sent to a hospital.
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Trepanier doesn’t care what critics have to say about Insite. All she wants is a chance to get her next fix in a clean facility, until the day she finally works up the willpower to kick her drug addiction.

 

"I don’t want to be down here all my life," she said. "I don’t want to be chasing this all my life."

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WASHINGTON (AP) — About 3.1 million people between the ages of 12-25 have used cough and cold medicine to get high, the government reported Wednesday.

 

 The number of young people who abused over-the-counter cold medicines is comparable to use of LSD and much greater than that for methamphetamine among the age group, according to the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.

 

The agency’s 2006 survey on drug abuse and health found that more than 5 percent of teenagers and young adults had misused cough and cold medicines and indicated that these people also had experimented frequently with illicit drugs. Nearly 82 percent also had used marijuana. Slightly less than half also used inhalants or hallucinogens, such as LSD or Ecstasy, the agency said.  The cough suppressant DXM is found in more than 140 cough and cold medications available without a prescription. When taken in large amounts, DXM can cause disorientation, blurred vision, slurred speech and vomiting.

 

Health Library  -  MayoClinic.com: Robotripping — abusing cough medicine

 
Among all persons aged 12 to 25, the rate of past year misuse among whites was 2.1 percent, which was three times higher than the level for blacks, 0.6 percent, and also significantly higher than the level for Hispanics, 1.4 percent.

 

"While increasing attention has been paid to the public health risk of prescription drug abuse, we also need to be aware of the growing dangers of misuse of over-the-counter cough and cold medications, especially among young people," said Terry Cline, the agency’s administrator.

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Lindsay Lohan has checked into rehab, she said in a statement Wednesday. "I have made a proactive decision to take care of my personal health," she said. "I appreciate your well wishes and ask that you please respect my privacy at this time." A source close to the actress tells PEOPLE: "Lindsay is in a very positive frame of mind and is looking forward to making a positive change in her life."

 

Lohan, 20, has been filming the thriller I Know Who Killed Me, and a rep for the movie tells PEOPLE production had already been on hold due to Lohan’s recent appendix surgery. It’s uncertain when filming will resume. "I Know Who Killed Me, like all films, has insurance," says the rep. "In Lindsay’s case, she has a good 13-hour work day. The character she plays requires a good deal of physicality and she’s not yet healed (from her surgery) and not yet ready to return." In December, Lohan’s rep told PEOPLE the actress was attending Alcoholics Anonymous meetings.

 

Later that month, Lohan revealed that she had been in AA for a year, and said she feels better when she’s not drinking. "I was going out too much and I knew that, and I have more to live for than that," she told PEOPLE. But Lohan had previously dismissed critics who said she was going out too much. In November, she told Oprah Winfrey that she is not a party girl, adding, "Is it a crime to go dancing with your friends?" Over the summer, James G. Robinson, CEO of Morgan Creek Productions, blasted her for being absent from the set of her movie Georgia Rule and blamed her "heavy partying" for the behavior. Lohan’s mother Dina quickly shot back, saying Robinson was "way out of line." Lohan was briefly hospitalized at the time for being "overheated and dehydrated," according to her rep.