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Telltale Codeine Addiction Symptoms

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As a main ingredient in cough suppressants and various prescription pain meds, codeine works best at treating persistent coughs as well as most any type of pain symptom. According to the U. S. Food & Drug Administration, codeine can be formulated to produce a range of different effects, which accounts for its being one of the most versatile opiate drugs on the market.

Unfortunately, codeine’s opiate characteristics make for a highly addictive drug when used for prolonged periods of time. With continued use, codeine’s addictive effects take place behind the scenes altering delicate chemical processes in the brain. Before long, users start to experience telltale codeine withdrawal symptoms that only work to promote ongoing drug use.

The longer a person keeps taking codeine, the more apparent withdrawal effects become. Over time, these effects start to impair a person’s physical and psychological health to the point where his or her lifestyle revolves around supporting compulsive drug-using behaviors.

Codeine Products

codeine abuse

Feeling unwell when you do not have codeine is a sign of addiction.

Opiate drugs as a whole work well at relieving pain symptoms of all kinds. Most all opiates belong to the narcotics class of drugs depending on how a particular drug is formulated.

Most codeine formulations include other non-narcotic ingredients, such as acetaminophen, aspirin and ibuprofen. These combinations make it possible for codeine-based drugs to be sold as over-the-counter products. According to Dickinson College, codeine exists as the first opiate drug to be sold as an over-the-counter product.

In effect, these added ingredients work to intensify codeine’s pain-relieving effects. Unfortunately, these effects only increase codeine’s potential for abuse and addiction.

Like all opiate substances, codeine gains easy access to key brain cell receptor sites and increases the amount of neurotransmitter chemicals secreted at these sites. With continued use, these interactions start to alter essential brain chemical processes as physical dependency and eventual addiction take root. Codeine addiction symptoms will develop as addiction becomes more noticeable.

Withdrawal Effects

A key telltale sign of a developing codeine addiction takes the form of withdrawal effects. According to Elmhurst College, as brain processes grow more dependent on codeine’s effects, they gradually lose their ability to regulate bodily processes as normal. Brain cell structures also undergo ongoing damage from overuse.

Withdrawal effects start to surface in response to the brain’s inability to coordinate necessary chemical processes. In effect, withdrawal symptoms correspond with the processes most affected by codeine’s effects. Likewise, withdrawal effects grow worse in intensity the longer a person keeps using codeine.

Withdrawal symptoms most commonly experienced include:

  • Insomnia
  • Emotional instability
  • Shakiness or tremors in the extremities
  • Changes in appetite
  • Irritability
  • Gastrointestinal problems
  • Fluctuating body temperatures

Lifestyle Changes

With friends and loved ones, changes in a person’s lifestyle can be easy to spot when codeine addiction takes hold. Unfortunately, the person affected has become so preoccupied with getting and using codeine that he or she has no idea anything’s wrong.

Over time, the damage to brain structures and chemical processes alters a person’s judgment, reasoning and overall motivations. Long-term codeine use essentially alters the way the brain works in such a way as to impact a person’s perceptions, priorities and interests. Unless something is done to stop this cycle of addiction, drug users will likely remained trapped inside an addiction lifestyle.

Where do calls go?

Calls to any general helpline will be answered or returned by one of the treatment providers listed, each of which is a paid advertiser: Recovery Helpline or Alli Addiction Services.

By calling the helpline you agree to the terms of use. We do not receive any commission or fee that is dependent upon which treatment provider a caller chooses. There is no obligation to enter treatment.

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