Hey guys,
I have been reading all day about various countries' policies on opiate addiction treatment and am starting to feel there is some slow progress being made (mainly with the heroin trials).
That is not entirely the main point of this thread, though.
What started to come to me today was a few thoughts about the futures of those that like to/need to/will use opiates regularly for a lot of their adult lives.
Are long acting opiates just setting us up for a long period of maintained miserableness? And will shorter acting opiates (in constant supply) potentially allow a slightly better quality of life for the long term user?
Even though they are good on paper, having a long acting opiate in your system stops the regular ups and downs (of opiate saturation in the brain).
With constant saturation, every time a person tries to get high on methadone (which tell me is not almost inevitable) their overall saturation is bumped up by a significant amount, for a significant amount of time - leading to more upregulation of receptors (less chance to get high when still saturated and greater addiction).
Constantly using shorter acting opiates might allow the very start of withdrawal to set in quite regularly (allowing some receptor down regulation), while the user is not really in any significant discomfort?
Then by the next time the person wants to use their short acting opiate, they will more likely feel a measurable bit of enjoyment (perhaps not high but at least happy enough), because they have had less up regulation than had they been using long acting drugs.
Is it more hypothetically plausible that you could maintain a better quality of life on shorter acting opiates in constant supply, than by longer acting opiates in sparser supply?
This is probably common theory for those knowledgeable in this area, but it just dawned on me today.
Anyonne have experience/thoughts?
I find that when i use morphine alone quite regularly i feel fairly good, and if i wait a little while between doses (12 hours or so) i often don't have to sky rocket my dose to feel fine
I have been reading all day about various countries' policies on opiate addiction treatment and am starting to feel there is some slow progress being made (mainly with the heroin trials).
That is not entirely the main point of this thread, though.
What started to come to me today was a few thoughts about the futures of those that like to/need to/will use opiates regularly for a lot of their adult lives.
Are long acting opiates just setting us up for a long period of maintained miserableness? And will shorter acting opiates (in constant supply) potentially allow a slightly better quality of life for the long term user?
Even though they are good on paper, having a long acting opiate in your system stops the regular ups and downs (of opiate saturation in the brain).
With constant saturation, every time a person tries to get high on methadone (which tell me is not almost inevitable) their overall saturation is bumped up by a significant amount, for a significant amount of time - leading to more upregulation of receptors (less chance to get high when still saturated and greater addiction).
Constantly using shorter acting opiates might allow the very start of withdrawal to set in quite regularly (allowing some receptor down regulation), while the user is not really in any significant discomfort?
Then by the next time the person wants to use their short acting opiate, they will more likely feel a measurable bit of enjoyment (perhaps not high but at least happy enough), because they have had less up regulation than had they been using long acting drugs.
Is it more hypothetically plausible that you could maintain a better quality of life on shorter acting opiates in constant supply, than by longer acting opiates in sparser supply?
This is probably common theory for those knowledgeable in this area, but it just dawned on me today.
Anyonne have experience/thoughts?
I find that when i use morphine alone quite regularly i feel fairly good, and if i wait a little while between doses (12 hours or so) i often don't have to sky rocket my dose to feel fine