to help with acute withdrawal symptoms you might a beta androgenic antagonist like propanolol or alpha agonist like clonidine.
I think you mean adrenergic... you don't want to antagonizethe sex hormones

It's my understanding that compared to clonidine though, beta blockers have limited use in opioids withdrawal.
This topic was actually discussed quite a bit in my addiction's counseling classes (which, if it isn't clear, I am NOT yet professionally certified so take it for what it's worth).
Nearly everyone will display psychiatric symptoms coming off of most drugs, especially opioids, and it's important to give it time so proper diagnosis can be made before treatment is started. Nearly everyone will experience depression during acute and/or post-acute withdrawals but if the
addiction issues are addressed, pharmaceutical management of issues such as depression are rarely necessary and often contraindicated because people will rely on that instead of doing the necessary work to address their addiction issues. Everyone wants a magic pill but this mentality is typically what gets people INTO addiction, not out of it.
Generally people are advised to get proper assessment for their addiction issues and follow the treatment recommendations based on ASAM patient placement criteria. Often this corresponds with consultation with a general practitioner and/or a psychiatrist but typically it's better to hold off on psychiatric diagnosis and treatment until you're far enough along in your recovery to be able to appropriately differentiate what is from the drug use, what is organic, etc.
In some cases, the symptoms are debilitating enough and/or obviously independent enough that pharmaceutical symptom-management
is necessary.
Nearly completely unrelated to everything above are medications prescribed specifically for mitigation of withdrawal symptoms... many good examples are mentioned in previous posts such as clonidine, benzodiazepines, muscle relaxers, sedatives/hypnotics, atypical antipsychotics, etc. There has been a lot of discussion on this in threads on withdrawal/detox (primarily in Other Drugs) so if you search around you can find a lot more information.