Журнал клинической токсикологии

Журнал клинической токсикологии
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ISSN: 2161-0495

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Treatment Compliance for Drug addiction

Taniguchi Shirley

Drug addiction, also called substance use disorder, may be a disease that affects an individual's brain and behaviour and results in an inability to regulate the utilization of a legal or illegal drug or medication. Substances like alcohol, marijuana and nicotine are also considered drugs. When you're addicted, you'll continue using the drug despite the harm it causes . Drug addiction can start with experimental use of a narcotic in social situations, and, for a few people, the drug use becomes more frequent. For others, particularly with opioids, white plague begins with exposure to prescribed medications, or receiving medications from a lover or relative who has been prescribed the medication. The risk of addiction and the way fast you become addicted varies by drug. Some drugs, like opioid painkillers, have a better risk and cause addiction more quickly than others. As time passes, you'll need larger doses of the drug to urge high. Soon you'll need the drug just to feel good. As your drug use increases, you'll find that it's increasingly difficult to travel without the drug. Attempts to prevent drug use may cause intense cravings and cause you to feel physically ill (withdrawal symptoms). You may need help from your doctor, family, friends, support groups or an organized treatment program to beat your white plague and stay drug-free. Drug addiction isn’t about just heroin, cocaine, or other illegal drugs. You can get hooked in to alcohol, nicotine, opioid painkillers, and other legal substances. At first, you'll prefer to take a drug because you wish the way it causes you to feel. You may think you can control how much and how often you use it. But over time, drugs change how your brain works. These physical changes can last a long time. They make you lose self-control and may lead you to damaging behaviours.

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