The Dividing Line: When Does Opiate Abuse Become Opiate Addiction?

Unlike stimulants and hallucinogens, opiate drugs produce the type of calming, relaxing effects that can make a person underestimate their impact. As harmless of opiate abuse may seem or “feel,” it’s actually one of the most dangerous forms of drug abuse around.

The difference between opiate abuse and opiate addiction is significant, but it’s difficult to know when this dividing line is crossed if you’re the one abusing the drug. Knowing the difference between opiate abuse and addiction and the signs to watch for can help you take back control of your life from these drugs while you still can.

If you need information on opiate addiction treatment programs, call our toll-free helpline at 888-647-0051 (Who Answers?) .

Opiate Abuse: Wanting vs Needing the Drug

The Opiate High

Opiate Abuse Become Opiate Addiction

Once addicted, getting high becomes top priority.

While a person may well start out taking opiates as a treatment drug, it’s the opiate “high” that lures him or her into opiate abuse practices. According to the Clinical Journal of Pain, this “high” effect stems from an influx of dopamine and serotonin into the brain. Opiates stimulate the release of these neurotransmitters in abnormally high amounts.

In effect, the opiate “high” keeps the ball rolling in terms of its ability to keep a person using the drug when he or she no longer needs it.

Staying in Control

Prolonged opiate abuse will bring on withdrawal effects, which indicate the body has become physically dependent on the drug. While withdrawal effects can and often do drive continued drug use, a person can still stop using the drug at will at this stage, according to the University of Arizona.

In effect, people who are still in the opiate abuse stage retain the ability to choose to get “high.” With continued drug use, this power to choose gradually goes away.

Opiate Addiction: A New Lifestyle

New Interests, New Motivations

Over time, the brain chemical imbalances that opiate abuse breeds become so severe as to change how the brain works. A person has crossed over from opiate abuse to opiate addiction once the drug’s effects start to interfere with the “thinking” areas of the brain.

Once addicted, users starts to lose interest in the things they once considered important. Priorities also start to change, meaning getting and using opiates begin to occupy much of a person’s time, energy and attention.

https://www.disorders.org/opioid-use-disorder/itll-never-happen-to-me-5-of-the-best-excuses-to-keep-abusing-opiates/

Lifestyle Changes

More than anything else, signs of a growing opiate addiction show up in a person’s daily lifestyle on multiple levels. At this point, a person’s psychological makeup has changed in drastic ways.

Lifestyle changes characteristic of an addiction problem include:

  • Relationship conflicts resulting from drug use
  • Problems meeting work obligations
  • Loss of a job
  • Problems with the law, such as DUIs
  • Change in social circle, as in spending more time with other drug users and less time with friends and family

In essence, signs of opiate addiction will continue to grow more severe the longer a person keeps using the drug. Chronic health problems, psychological disorders and even homelessness can result when opiate addiction is left untreated.

If you or someone you know is considering getting treatment help, call our helpline at 888-647-0051 (Who Answers?) to ask about opiate addiction treatment options.

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