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This Week in Addiction Medicine from ASAM
American Society of Addiction Medicine
100 episodes
2 days ago
A podcast source for news briefings on the top stories in the field of addiction medicine.
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Medicine
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Mental Health
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All content for This Week in Addiction Medicine from ASAM is the property of American Society of Addiction Medicine and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
A podcast source for news briefings on the top stories in the field of addiction medicine.
Show more...
Medicine
News,
Health & Fitness,
Mental Health
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts122/v4/5d/9b/05/5d9b05f7-7087-041e-4bdb-c8c1cbd9219a/mza_8776578880054987919.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Lead: Oral methadone versus sublingual buprenorphine for the treatment of acute opioid withdrawal: A triple-blind, double-dummy, randomized control trial
This Week in Addiction Medicine from ASAM
5 minutes 16 seconds
3 months ago
Lead: Oral methadone versus sublingual buprenorphine for the treatment of acute opioid withdrawal: A triple-blind, double-dummy, randomized control trial
Oral methadone versus sublingual buprenorphine for the treatment of acute opioid withdrawal: A triple-blind, double-dummy, randomized control trial  Drug and Alcohol DependenceResearchers compared oral methadone to sublingual buprenorphine for the management of acute opioid withdrawal. Patients at an inpatient drug treatment center in India were randomly assigned to receive either methadone or buprenorphine titrated over days 1-3 to control opioid withdrawal symptoms. Over days 4-10 medications were tapered and stopped by day 11. Completion of treatment was similar in both groups (83% methadone, 82% buprenorphine). Both subjective (SOWS) and objective (COWS) withdrawal symptoms decreased during the treatment, however the buprenorphine group had significantly greater withdrawal symptoms than the methadone group (p=0.009) at the end of treatment (day 10). Opioid craving also decreased in both groups with no significant difference between groups. Authors conclude that methadone is a safe and effective alternative to buprenorphine for management of opioid withdrawal.   Read this issue of the ASAM Weekly Subscribe to the ASAM Weekly Visit ASAM  
This Week in Addiction Medicine from ASAM
A podcast source for news briefings on the top stories in the field of addiction medicine.