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 »  Home  »  Addictions  »  Drug Addictions  »  Percocet Addiction
Percocet Addiction
By Bill Urell | Published  11/16/2005 | Drug Addictions | Rating:
Bill Urell
Pick up your Free Recovery Rolodex, Over 97 pages of self help and recovery tips, resources, and links to enhance your life. Bill Urell, MAAC. CAAP-II, is an addictions therapist at a leading residential treatment center. He teaches healthy life styles and life skills as a component of holistic addictions treatment. To learn more about healthy lifestyles, visit: Addiction Recovery 

View all articles by Bill Urell
Percocet Addiction

Percocet Pain Medication

A person with a percocet addiction is often someone who began taking the medication to alleviate moderate to moderately severe pain.  Percocet, which is a combination of oxycodone and acetaminophen, attaches to pain receptors that are located in the brain.  Here, they trick the brain into reducing the feelings of pain.  It also slows down the amount of prostaglandins produced by the body, which causes pain. 

The oxycodone in percocet is what is responsible for percocet addiction.  If percocet is taken in larger doses than what is prescribed, or taken more frequently than prescribed, it is easy to develop a percocet addiction.

Common physical side effects of percocet addiction include constipation, nausea, and itching.  In addition, percocet addiction can cause a decrease in the ability to mentally focus.

Some people with a percocet addiction can experience personality changes, as well.  Therefore, it is possible for a person with a percocet addiction to act as if he is drunk all the time.  Or, a person with a percocet addiction might experience extreme paranoia or talk incoherently.

Furthermore, the acetaminophen in percocet, while not addictive, can cause liver damage in people with percocet addiction.  This is because large amounts of acetaminophen must be filtered through the liver in order to protect the rest of the body.

An additional concern for a person with a percocet addiction is mixing the drug with alcohol.  Many people with a perconcet addiction mix the two drugs, which can lead to dizziness and drowsiness – or even death.

It is possible to build a tolerance to percocet.  Therefore, people with a percocet addiction will usually take more and more percocet in order to relieve pain or in order to reach a state of euphoria, or a high, from the drug.  This can lead to an overdose.  A person with a percocet addiction who has overdosed will often experience slowed breathing, weakness, and dizziness.  A person with a percocet addiction who has overdosed may also feel nauseated and cold, with sweaty or clammy skin.  More serious symptoms of an overdose associated with percocet addiction are confusion, seizures, and even coma or death.

Drug addiction is a matter of life and death. Literally. Discover valuable Info on addiction and "17 Tips For Choosing the Right Drug Rehab" by Clicking Here: Drug Rehab

article source: Healthy Living Article Directory.com

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