Pain Recovery. Robert Hunter
tempted to substitute one opioid for another, which may temporarily delay the process.
We have treated hundreds of people with pain who are tolerant to and dependent on opioids. The withdrawal process is best done under medical supervision and temporarily, you are likely to feel worse. But on the other side, when the opioids have left your system for a week or two, your pain will diminish and you will start to feel better. The discomfort of withdrawal may continue for a while, even for several months in some, but eventually your nervous system will readjust to the absence of opioids and you will return to a state of well-being that has escaped you for years.
Addiction is a chronic disease similar to other chronic diseases such as type II diabetes, cancer, and cardiovascular disease. –National Institute on Drug Abuse
Four Stages of Addiction
As with many illnesses, to understand the progressive nature of the disease of addiction, we have broken it down into stages. People who have addiction started in stage I and will inevitably end up in stage IV if not treated. The progression from stage I to IV may occur rapidly or may take years or decades. Stopping drug use might halt the disease process, but treatment is still necessary. Further, if use is restarted, the disease process will pick up where it left off. Like a passenger on a train traveling from New York to California, if you get off in Chicago (stage II), you will “reboard” in Chicago and continue west, heading inevitably toward stage IV, disability, and eventually death. Here are the stages in further detail:
STAGE I
Stage I addiction begins with the first ingestion of a mood-altering drug. The feelings that occur are related to mood change. This is often a sense of “normalizing” the world, euphoria, or an energized sense of well-being. This sensation may be especially true of the first use of opioid painkillers. The pain goes away—both the physical and the emotional pain. Although there may be no outward behavioral changes yet, such drug use cannot be considered “safe” because in persons with the neurobiological risk for developing addiction, subsequent use may result in substance abuse and life changes beyond the person’s control.
At this stage, family members generally have a greater awareness of the problematic use of substances than the addict. The developing addict may have an uneasy sense that there is something wrong, but denies it to him- or herself and others. The addict in stage I may cut down or even quit using for periods of time, but without recovery or treatment, typically he or she eventually resumes use and the problems recur and escalate.
A person with chronic pain and addiction may be defensive about drug use and answer any criticism or questions about it by rationalizing, for example:
Other characteristics of stage I may include:
This stage usually occurs in individuals who haven’t had chronic pain for very long but are beginning to develop problems with opioids.
STAGE II
In stage II, the addict begins to experience the negative consequences of drug use. This stage is characterized by problems in one of the following major functional areas: family or home life, job or school function, social function, legal status, or health. In stage II you experience problems in one of these areas, although several areas may be affected as time goes on. Examples of stage II problems include:
This stage usually occurs in individuals who have been dealing with chronic pain for some time, and though they may appear okay on the outside, they are beginning to experience deterioration of function.
STAGE III
In this stage, there is intense preoccupation with the desire to experience mood-changing effects of the drug(s). Daily drug use, depression, and thoughts of suicide are common. Family troubles increase. Legal problems may ensue. Stage III is characterized by any one of the following major consequences in any one major functional area. If family function is the problem area, these consequences include:
If