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Recovery ANR CLINIC?? “Claiming opiate cure”

Gooped

Greenlighter
Joined
Jun 15, 2020
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I am curious if anyone has heard of ANR clinic before I hit the search tab and didn’t find anything about it. Supposedly the procedure helps your receptors go back to the normal rate of regulation without opiates.

I will post a link here- if you don’t trust it just google anr clinic opiate addiction even YouTube it and watch a video. Would just like some people’s thoughts and feedback. Thanks

https:anrclinic.com
 
Accelerated neuroregulation has been around since 2004 according to one study I found. Look up ultra-, very- and low-dose naloxone or naltrexone therapy.
 
I just googled this and would not trust it. The second I heard magic cure in 48 hours, and including being put to sleep....umm..no :) I will withdrawal old school way.

What I don't get is how they are comparing this to rapid detox.
 
The clinic itself sounds suspect, but I'd have to do more research. The treatment itself is 100% legit.
 
Abstract
Acute weaning from chronic opioid abuse during general anesthesia is usually followed by adrenergic outflow effects. This article is to report our experience with accelerated neuroregulation that reverses the physical and psychological dependency. After a comprehensive psychological and medical examination, 361 heroin dependent patients were admitted to ICU to be hospitalized for a full 24 or 36 hours, including a 6 hour pre-procedure medication process (solbutamol, clonidine, diazepam, ranitidine, omeprazole, vitamin C, octreotide, and ondansetron). Anesthesia was induced with midazolam and propofol iv and maintained with propofol infusion. Naltrexon, clonidine, octreotide, and diazepam were then administered. Anesthesia was maintained for 3 ½ - 5 hours depending on severity of withdrawal symptoms precipitated by naltrexone. Analgetics and sedatives were given as needed afterwards. Upon discharge on the following day, patient was prescribed a regimen of oral naltrexone for 10-12 months. All 361 patients were successfully detoxified without any adverse anesthetic events. The side effects encountered were fatigue, insomnia, drowsy, shivering, abdominal pain, nausea, diarrhoea, myalgia, goose bumps and uncomfortable feeling. In most of the patients these symptoms disappeared without any treatment. Symptomatic treatments were needed in 32.7% of patients. In all 166 patients who completed their naltrexone maintenance treatment, craving disappeared in the 10th month. The main problem was the low patient compliance to oral naltrexone, so that only 45.9% of the patients completed their therapy. Conclusion: Accelerated neuroregulation which includes naltrexone maintenance treatment (10-12 months) was highly effective to detoxify and to abolish craving in the heroin dependent patients. (Med J Indones 2004; 13: 53-8)Keywords: detoxification, craving management

(Emphasis mine)

It's usually called ultra-, very-, and low-dose naloxone or naltrexone therapy now.
 
That sounds scary as hell. I would rather cold turkey off any dose than being put to sleep, fed benzos and shit, get pumped with narcan, wake up, get fed more benzos, then sent on my way with a vivatrol shot. Sounds exactly like rapid detox, however this guy claims he tweaked it (perhaps the ultra low dose as you said). Still don't see how you can walk out on day 2 like you had your life reset.

Would work for low level addicts on a few months of percs maybe with no benzo tolerance. A 10 year doser hooked on benzos is done.

I don't know. I need to research it more. Also curious on their reply, will update if they do.

The side effects encountered were fatigue, insomnia, drowsy, shivering, abdominal pain, nausea, diarrhoea, myalgia, goose bumps and uncomfortable feeling. In most of the patients these symptoms disappeared without any treatment.

Maybe 2020 would be less. For OP, do more research before you sign up for something like this. Your addiction levels will mean a lot. If you are coming off long term subs or methadone I would be very careful. Good luck.
 
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