What is Buprenorphine?

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  • Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024

Комментарии • 351

  • @jimwednt1229
    @jimwednt1229 2 года назад +60

    We need more of these guys in the field of treatment for opioid addiction.

  • @halecooley8296
    @halecooley8296 11 месяцев назад +6

    Refreshing hearing a dr talk positively and doesn't seem to be judgmental towards people with severe addiction to opiates.

  • @snowjammma
    @snowjammma 2 года назад +37

    I'm shocked this doesnt have more views the amount of raw information in here is top notch,
    thank you

  • @fireman746
    @fireman746 2 года назад +48

    All I can say as I have been on Norco and Tramadol for years due to chronic pain. The pain doctor put me on Buprenorphine (Butrans) Patch for chronic pain from Arthritis. This drug is a God Sent Medication. I have been given 80% of my life back, don’t feel out of it and depressed as I did on Norco & Tramadol. My pain has decreased by about 85-90%. Kudos to this Doctor on his knowledge and compassion to helping others who are suffering from pain and opioid disorders.

    • @Maryanncook2022
      @Maryanncook2022 2 года назад +3

      I was on subutex 8mg 3 times a day and methadone 60 mg daily I have severe back problems from my experience subutex is way better for pain ..the only reason it's a partial opioid is because the euphoric effect is taken out

    • @wendybell9007
      @wendybell9007 Год назад +2

      my husband is on his fourth week of transdermal patches5mg it hasnt done anything for his chronic pain and his depression hasbecome much worse. he is barely waking up during the day, he sleeps on the settee, he wakes up early evening and has something small to eat visits the loo then watches telly off and on during the night . He is becoming weaker every day he can barely turn himself over when hes sleeping i have to help him stand up i pray every day that he will get some rerlief from his back and shoulder pain . Docs dont seem to be bothered about his mental health, he sees nobody but me, our grandchildren cant come visit as he gets too anxious and stressed and we only live in a small 1bed flat. However it is inspiring that you have had success with this medicine and reduced your pain . Can you tell me what strength you had please

    • @fireman746
      @fireman746 Год назад +5

      @@wendybell9007 I was taking about 30mg worth of Norco a day before I went on the Buprenorphine Patch. I’m on 7.5 mcg which is all the doctor will put me on for now because I have ongoing arthritis that is only likely to get worse. Plus I had shoulder and hip replacement in the last 9 months, so we left room for me to take OxyCodone and Tramadol for the breakthrough pain by leaving some pain receptors spared from the Buprenorphine. It’s not for everyone. So if it’s not working, you may want to ask the doctor to place him back on what works for his pain. It’s not effective on everyone that uses it, I would talk to the doctor or find a new pain specialist before it gets worse and have basic lab work done to make sure nothing else is manifesting.

    • @rogernelson67
      @rogernelson67 Год назад +4

      But it’s so expensive and I can’t get my insurance to pay for it, but they didn’t bother denying 12 years of Percocet

    • @Nan-59
      @Nan-59 Год назад +1

      @@rogernelson67. Has your doctor written an authorization for it? Sometimes they have to do that. If they haven’t asked them to please do it now.! ❤❤❤ I have been chronic pain too, so I know what it is. What it is, is terrible 😢. I sure hope you can get your insurance to pay for it. I’m on Belbuca which is beautiful morphing that you put inside your cheek, and it adheres and goes into your system that way. Mine is $1500 a month but my insurance pays it. I would not be able to pay at either.

  • @ManwithNoName-t1o
    @ManwithNoName-t1o 9 месяцев назад +6

    10 hours of info in 16minutes
    This guy is a machine!

    • @codyharris2807
      @codyharris2807 5 месяцев назад

      well he isn't correct only 80 percent

  • @needmoreramsay
    @needmoreramsay Год назад +11

    Seriously, God bless you Dr. Ripperda. The fact you treat this horrible addiction with such compassion and understanding is incredibly rare and greatly appreciated. Please continue to practice your excellent work in treating and educating those with addictions. Truly going above and beyond the "normal" standards of care.

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад +1

      I was put on this earth to do some good. I'm trying. Thanks for your kind words!

  • @NoOneCaresJSYK
    @NoOneCaresJSYK 3 месяца назад +5

    The love of my life passed away 6 years ago this month from a buprenorphine overdose. Idk how he managed that, but it happened. He had gotten off pills after a near fatal overdose from a laced pill, and was what we call “California sober”. I just don’t get it. I miss him so much.

    • @allisona.1047
      @allisona.1047 Месяц назад +1

      I’m so sorry for your loss. I pray that you find peace and happiness 🙏💕

    • @eva_marie633
      @eva_marie633 29 дней назад

      @@NoOneCaresJSYK I’m so sorry 😢!

    • @CrashoutJD777
      @CrashoutJD777 24 дня назад

      So sorry for your loss

  • @luispardo3323
    @luispardo3323 8 месяцев назад +4

    Superb! Great video for clinicians as well as the normal population. Thank you for your knowledge. I, as an OB/GYN, have learned a TON from your videos. Again, thank you!

  • @caseyw.6550
    @caseyw.6550 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so much for putting this info out into the world. The number of lives saved because of this medicine cannot be overstated. I am one of them...for 8 years now. I have never relapsed in that time, so I have zero shame in staying on it.

    • @spaceace4613
      @spaceace4613 6 месяцев назад

      I was on bupe for 7 yrs...never relapsed once ..I realized that bupe..sub ect keeps people satisfied to the point that they don't really don't want to get off...IMO is a money making racket...IV fent was easier ..much easier than sub even with a taper... Unfortunately I was ejected out of a vehicle and put on 400 mg of oxycodone... nonetheless a 20 yr hell hole .Subs helped tremendously..but it's organized drug addiction..almost dope light ..Being a half antagonist people can only get so high... but the withdrawal is absolutely hellasish... congratulations on your sobriety... but male a plan to try and get off... because I guarantee you the Dr will never get titrate you..more than likely you will be a monthly or weekly payment for the Dr..good luck..God Bless

  • @MichaelMack-k9g
    @MichaelMack-k9g 10 месяцев назад +1

    This is the best video i have found. Listen a few times

  • @b.p.879
    @b.p.879 2 года назад +11

    This is a great video, very easy to understand for us laypersons. Suboxone saved my life, allowed me to get back into a normal adult routine, hold down my job, and repair and maintain relationships with my friends and family. All it took was taking the cravings away and I could be normal again and feel pretty close to normal! If you're reading this and you want out or want help, find a suboxone clinic nearby and try it, it could save your life. I've been clean since Feb 8th 2015!

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад +1

      Well said!!

    • @cathyt144
      @cathyt144 Год назад

      Awesome! Ive been on subx for 9 mos. What do you take for pain now ?

    • @LincolnGTX
      @LincolnGTX 7 месяцев назад

      Same here, still on maintenance but got my life back on track

  • @ChaneVazquez-rx2dy
    @ChaneVazquez-rx2dy Год назад +1

    This man is a great doctor. He seems to actually care about his patients needs.

  • @matthewriccio5909
    @matthewriccio5909 7 месяцев назад +2

    I tried cold turkey, methadone, everything under the sun. I was against buprenorphine at first- in hindsight probably because it didn't get me high. A few years later I have my own place, a full time job and a whole new life I never imagined.

  • @veltealexander
    @veltealexander Год назад +5

    I was a intravenous heroin addict for 6 and a half years. I lost everything and was homeless for 3 years. I am ten months sober now and my life is great. Thanks to Subutex and going to NA meetings.

    • @JamezMealz
      @JamezMealz Год назад +2

      Sameeeeeee!!! I just hit 8 months, had a heart infection in February from shooting up dirty shit, I beat it after my surgeries and went to a rehab after and started to work a program after. Subutex literally helped save my life. I’m so thankful for it 😊

    • @AV-sq3jb
      @AV-sq3jb Год назад

      Clean 😂😂😂 try to get of this schit and you in for a nasty surprise

  • @Nan-59
    @Nan-59 Год назад +2

    So, what is the title of the video we were supposed to watch first???

  • @holdonC
    @holdonC 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you for stating the end of taking Buprenorphine is not always in site.

  • @karlchinaski9790
    @karlchinaski9790 10 дней назад

    I've seen this video pop up in my feed a few times. Every time I see the thumbnail I think of the music video for Drugs by Ratatat, coincidentally.

  • @drainedeyes4268
    @drainedeyes4268 Год назад +16

    Here’s the issue with Buprenorphine for all the people wanting to get on it - it plugs those receptors all the time, and you end up feeling horrible after a few years. Also trying to get off of Suboxone is MUCH harder than short acting opioids because the taper is horrible and the withdrawal lasts on and off for up to a year.
    It’s very sticky, it lasts a long time, so after a while you end up with incredible amounts of depression and anhedonia just from being on Suboxone. Everyone I know who’s been on it was always late to work, stopped going out or doing anything or seeing anyone to hang out, and ended up trying to take other drugs or gamble or desperate to release dopamine in other ways.
    When you’re on something like this, your dopamine just feels depleted all the time. You feel decent for maybe 2 hours out of the day, so your whole day ends up being spent just waiting to take your Suboxone.
    It is a horrible existence, and everyone I’ve talked to who’s stayed on it longer than 2 years feels this way. It is no way to live. And it’s NOT good for recovering from addiction.
    Here’s my opinion after being on it for 7 years. It’s a LIFE SAVER of a drug if you want to use it as a bridge to get off short acting opioids. Take it for a couple weeks max. It’s also great for stabilizing your life and preventing withdrawal BUT you need to know how fucking hard this shit is to get off of. Tapering is a horror story, to avoid major withdrawal you’ll need to taper for 2-3 years and stay under 1mg for a year. This is the literature nowadays. And from the beginning doctors knew how strong this medication is - 1mg = 30mg of Hydrocodone.
    Here’s my opinion - if you want to stay on it for a while, get on Sublocade and you can just stop at any time and it’ll slowly come out of your system and force you to taper without any math.
    If you are ready to free yourself from addiction right now, use Suboxone for 2 weeks max, instantly use it to taper off completely.
    Doctors love to pretend Suboxone is easy to get off, but it’s absolutely not, it’s the most difficult thing I’ve ever had to do in my life.
    And anyone can get off opioids if they are ready and want it more than anything else. This whole “only half of patients can get off and do well” is bullshit. It’s very individualized it’s very subjective, but I promise you this is a marketing strategy between the DEA, doctors, and pharmaceutical companies. They prescribe everyone the highest dose possible and keep them on it for as long as possible.
    Suboxone is an industry, we have a healthcare system that profits off illness and addiction, and you need to know that you will not be on this stuff forever. I was ready to abort my life from the depression and anhedonia and anxiety induced by Suboxone. Now I’m almost off of it, and everyone I’ve seen who used Sublocade to get off buprenorphine are doing SO much better now.
    Please don’t trust these doctors, use them to get off opioids and then get out of there. Get some real therapy, give psychedelic therapy a shot, get in the 12 step program. But don’t just assume they’re telling the truth when they say it’s “irreversible” for half of patients, that’s absolutely bullshit. They’re going off of people who are still in active addiction or relapsed. You don’t have to relapse.

    • @5thElement347
      @5thElement347 Год назад +2

      It's toxic poison

    • @cr-nd8qh
      @cr-nd8qh Год назад +2

      Fukk I hear ya. I can never get off this crap I need other opiates for the withdrawal it's so bad

    • @Killmaisy
      @Killmaisy Год назад +1

      I only took it for a week starting high at 28mg-32 the first 2 days (I didn't know and was not monitered by doctor) down to 2mg on day 5 nothing day 6 and am feeling some withdrawal and want to know how long I will feel this way. Fast metabolism

    • @nyakugatluak5301
      @nyakugatluak5301 Год назад +1

      I stopped my sublovade in January (4 months ago) & I haven’t gotten withdrawals. I was on it for 6 months. Are my opioid receptors blocked for life? I am getting my wisdom teeth out next month, I want to be able to feel the pain meds since it’s so painful

    • @wyattspop
      @wyattspop 11 месяцев назад

      My post targeted his information claims with numbers like 1/2, 1/3 ...this is absolutely false. As someone who's been clean for 31 years in the rooms of AA/NA, no treatment center or MD on the planet can claim those percentages, it's well-known in the AA/NA community (we've been around far longer than any treatment center) that not 10% last a year, period, no matter what method you use, and none comes close to following a 12-step program religiously..

  • @5thElement347
    @5thElement347 Год назад +3

    Is this dude even telling you about all of the horrific long-term side effects????

    • @bradleythebuilder8743
      @bradleythebuilder8743 Месяц назад +1

      No, he’s a well polished drug pusher, more reckless than any street dealer

  • @frankjamesbonarrigo7162
    @frankjamesbonarrigo7162 5 месяцев назад +1

    My God, what if u break a leg though?

  • @timallsopp9622
    @timallsopp9622 11 месяцев назад +1

    In my experience, if an addict really wants something, it doesn’t matter how it tastes etc but they certainly will lie about that to try and get something out of it.

  • @johndrax4174
    @johndrax4174 Год назад +3

    This drug sucks im down to like .5mg and im terrified to stop... It's so strong :/

    • @5thElement347
      @5thElement347 Год назад +3

      I've been off for 5 years I still cannot sleep, depression, anxiety & pain & everything else is Really bad, the long term side effects are numerous and absolutely horrific. This stuff is toxic 😒

    • @5thElement347
      @5thElement347 Год назад +2

      Don't be scared to stop- just be prepared for it when you do it with the right herbal meds and the proper foods -] you'll be OK. I was super scared and then I said screw it and just did it cuz it was poisoning me and I didn't even know it

    • @jcbanbury
      @jcbanbury Год назад +1

      ​@@5thElement347 "herbal meds" - which ones please??

    • @simonrobertson8795
      @simonrobertson8795 25 дней назад

      I agree, I’m now on 04mg, down from 24mg over two years my next drop is 50%, and I’m dreading it, my addiction Dr says it’s all in my head , I feel like punching him in the head when he says it, pleased that you all understand . Simon from England

    • @compostcorner5934
      @compostcorner5934 5 дней назад

      ​@@simonrobertson8795I'm from the UK and on 'Espranor' which is a form of buprenorphine that dissolves on top of the tongue .
      It's ok ,but I crave more all the time.
      I started on 4mg a day 2 years ago ,but now on 10mg ..The problem is with this stuff it doesn't seem to give you more of a high .
      What form of buprenorphine are you on?

  • @thedoctorpatientforum-dont9836
    @thedoctorpatientforum-dont9836 Месяц назад

    How do I get in touch with you?

  • @skooskipotato3750
    @skooskipotato3750 Год назад +7

    How do I get off Burprenophine ?? I got into a drug de-addiction program after 4 years of heroin addiction. Started with 10mgs of Burprenophine and tapered down to 1.4mgs over a period of a year. I want to get off this medication too but if I take less than 1.4mg my body feels like hell and I get depressed and shit. I just want to feel normal again.

    • @Bonesph
      @Bonesph 3 дня назад

      Once you feel icky start only taking that much till it makes you feel normal, then taper a little more. Ask doctor for Clonidine and take Ibuprofen to. It takes time but it's either that or cold turkey or just continue taking it forever.

  • @dylanparr6880
    @dylanparr6880 2 года назад +14

    God bless you for being educated on this and able to convey the info concisely. I've spoken with many doctors about buprenorphine and most either had no clue about the pharmacokinetics/cology or stated just blatantly false info about it. Good on you! Great video and explanation!

  • @bdoon51
    @bdoon51 9 месяцев назад

    I am prescribed buprenorphine off label for arthritic neck pain and previously for knee and hip pain. When the pain in knee and hips became bad the bupre no longer was not very effective but I could not take stronger meds as I had to work (engineering and planning).
    My first knee replacement, the day after the surgery (they practically sever your leg) no physician to prescribe pain relief couold be found. The 5 doctors at the surgical practice were playing golf I guess and the hospital floor doctor did not respond(turns out she was dealing with a code Blue from noon onwards). I always thought pain would plateau...but guess what...it doesn't. starting about 10 AM the pain got intolerable and then progressively worse from there. By 6:30 PM I was no longer screaming into a pillow as I was going in and out of consciousness. My wife had gotten a wheel chair to take me to the emergency room of another hospital. Finally the surgical practice responded. That was my number 10.
    Intensity of pain however is not always the measure of WORST. After months of RL pain finally they realized it was not my RK prosthetic but my RH was decrepit. Nevertheless I still had to wait almost 3 months for HR but buprenorphine was all that could prescribed for pain (of course OTC as well but should have saved my money). I worked in a professional capacity and could not be taking opioids.
    So 24/7 for 81 days I lived with perhaps 6 to 7 pain. When I awoke, when I stumbled with a walker or cane trying to reach a rest room before I pissed my pants, and before the Ambien they were providing finally put me to sleep. Ambien is the dangerous drug. If I had been able to move without pain, the "sleepwalking' events brought on by Ambien could have been dangerous. To be subject to that level of pain for day after day I was ready to call Dr Jack Kervorkian ... I understood while for some, he was the physician of choice (not exaggerating). When I awoke I was ready to kiss my male surgeon for the pain relief he had provided me and I have not been inclined to kiss another man since I was like maybe 2 years old...my father? I felt euphoric for a week after my second hip surgery RH due to the lack of pain. I was no longer falling on the floor at work or ignoring flirtations from pretty women (married and not) though I am married.
    No sooner did I receive relief from that pain then my heg and neck pain jumped a qualitative level and the x-rays revealed decrepitude.I asked for a neck replacement (right). So I take buprenorphine which is not a great pain killer but as mental healthe studies have discovered.....buprenorphine results in patients with better levels of mental health than the population as a whole. It may not be a good pain killer but it facilitates in me an attitude to better tolerate the pain.
    However I am facing a wisdom tooth extraction. When I had the hip replacement (number 2) I discontinued the bupre 3 days prior to surgery and the morphine they initially gave me had no effect so they used fentanyl...yes, that worked. However the dilaudid they prescribed post surgery may as well have been sugar pills. With the surgeon's permission I ended up tripling the initial prescribed dose fro almost a week. However I took Ambien to sleep. Woke up the day after leaving the hospital and the Dilaudid was spilled all over my bathroom with some floating in the toilet. I have no idea what happened. I took fotos and asked the surgeon to re-prescribe, showing him the fotos. I felt to ashamed but he did it.
    I was anxious to start taking bupre again and stop with the Dilaudid...it was not very effective and made me numb.
    Now facing dental surgery I do not know what to do. I am so sensitive to dental pain, my last tooth extraction I needed 7 injections of novocaine. I do not know what to do.
    BTW....in June , after taking the prescribed dose of Ambien at 11 PM, I awoke at 3 AM and felt compelled to hurry get in my new car and drive several miles ending my trip at a concrete barrier worth $15K in damage. Insomnia has never cost so much.

  • @mickdracul5823
    @mickdracul5823 2 года назад +2

    Thank You for this information! I just Subscribed to this Channel I look forward to more informative episodes!

  • @damonbtc9701
    @damonbtc9701 3 месяца назад

    Bonds Better than fentanyl? Can you site that?

  • @vatorman
    @vatorman 11 месяцев назад +3

    It’s poison

  • @matthewriccio5909
    @matthewriccio5909 7 месяцев назад

    P.S. I agree with all of the doctors notions on Naloxone, however my clinic- as it urine screens all of us, the detection of Naloxone can be used to determine if someone is say selling or misusing their Suboxone and in its place using (usually IV) Subutex for just an example.

  • @Lifehappens1
    @Lifehappens1 Год назад +3

    Have you had any complaints about severe constipation. I have been on quite some years myself and seemingly experiencing some complications. My doctor has suggested I love fiber which I do not believe to 100% be the case. Does seem to suck a lot of the hydration from stool. But did save my life

  • @boicrazee
    @boicrazee Год назад +1

    Bupe is a lifesaver. Period.

  • @pepepantuflas1
    @pepepantuflas1 2 года назад +2

    Why does this look like it was filmed in the 50s

  • @trudywapoose291
    @trudywapoose291 2 года назад +2

    Wow very well said in detail

  • @mrc6993
    @mrc6993 2 года назад +4

    What about side effects from buprenorphine? Tooth decay is real. Please be careful with this medication long term. If you feel it effecting your teeth please try to get off. I’m going to be in dentures in my 30s. I soaked this medication into my teeth for 7 years and it was a huge and expensive mistake. I’m alive but in constant pain in all of my teeth. I had perfect teeth before Suboxone and zubsolv.

    • @goodmorning8172
      @goodmorning8172 2 года назад +1

      I didn't have but 1 cavity in a wisdom tooth before suboxone 2 years ago. After only 6 months on subs, I literally, legitimately had multiple cavities in each and every tooth, top and bottom.
      Buprenorphine destroys teeth hardcore.
      Edit: Forgot to mention that I take my buprenorphine as a suppository,...16mg a day up the backside, so It doesn't ever even touch my teeth.

    • @deedevs
      @deedevs 2 года назад

      @@goodmorning8172 backside of mouth or up the arse?

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад +1

      The FDA actually issued a warning about this in January 2022. A lot of my patients have bad teeth when they start buprenorphine (addiction takes a lot of toll on the body) so it's hard for me to discern how many bad teeth are from lack of self care and how many are from buprenorphine. More research is coming...

    • @OneMoreRedNightmare
      @OneMoreRedNightmare Год назад

      I knew it wasn't my imagination. I had zero cavities when I started bupe (I actually took decent care of my teeth through addiction) but after a few months I had several and a few teeth straight up started breaking off pieces occasionally, even a few that were cavity free. I brought this up with the doctor and they said I must have acid reflux, which I don't. When I finally went to the dentist they also commented that it looked like my teeth were suffering from acid corrosion. They also said it would cost over $16,000 to TRY to save most of my teeth. Hopefully they find some solution to this for the sake of anyone who depends on bupe for quality of life because adding the stigma that comes with missing teeth on top of the one that comes with addiction treatment is definitely going to drastically negate from that quality. In more than one way.

  • @amaliasereno3315
    @amaliasereno3315 2 года назад +3

    i have been on the same dose of hydrocodone for a year and am able to stop at anytime, which is actually great because my body gets to the point where my dose is just not working due to me building a tolerance... So i stop for a day or two so that i can bring down my tolerance ... I’ve tried Oxy and had no affect i was in full blown pain (neuropathy). Burning, numbing pretty much constant pain...This Doc is actually making sense, he broke down!!! So in six weeks where my doc instead of upping my dose of hydro, added and upped antidepressants that also help with nerve pain, if all fails we plan to try this Buprenorphine... We shall see😬

    • @preston2636
      @preston2636 2 года назад +2

      Subs don't help pain much. Its best for opiate addiction regulation and if you don't have an opiates problem stay far away from subs because they're way more addictive. I can tell you all of this first hand. They saved me but I was a heroin addict

    • @fireman746
      @fireman746 2 года назад

      Buprenorphine is a God Sent medicine for my chronic arthritis pain. I had taken so much Hydrocodone and Tramadol the past 10 years that I too never had classic opioid side effects, although my pain was unbearable when the pills wore off. The Butrans Patch has reduced my pain by 90-95%! Don’t have to worry about taking pills and playing catch up trying to dull pain. I would suggest talking to your doctor. Buprenorphine in the Butrans Patch is 100x stronger than Morphine. I sincerely believe that since I’ve been on it.

  • @wyattspop
    @wyattspop 11 месяцев назад +1

    I must say, I've never heard a doctor so well-versed in the reality of living with opioid "addiction" (not everyone is addicted involuntarily). I have 10 herniated discs and couldn't live without opioids, I'd be bedridden with no quality of life. Ironically, I've been a sober man for 31 years...

  • @ttrestle
    @ttrestle 7 месяцев назад

    Does anyone know where a place like this is in Bloomington IN

  • @samlazar1053
    @samlazar1053 8 месяцев назад

    Am thats misleading. Buprenorphine stays at the receptors rought 26h.But it can be found in the body ca 5 days after last usage, This are 2 ENTIRELY different things

  • @freak37
    @freak37 6 месяцев назад

    Due to the fact that Bubrenorphine is prescribed by doctors and taken with a prescription, a huge number of addicts have joined this new method. After a few years, all those people realized that they had made the worst mistake of their lives. The simplest thing to say is that pharmaceutical companies succeeded in diverting the money of addicts to their accounts, ie they took over the market from drug dealers and became legal dealers.

  • @campergal6140
    @campergal6140 Год назад +2

    I lived in Illinois and went to inpatient detox then outpatient rehab for opiate addiction. After changing doctors a few times (over 10 years) I finally found one I was very very comfortable with. (A psychiatrist. Who specializes in addiction) when I first saw him all I wanted to talk about was getting off the drug. He was very compassionate and told me that if that is what I really wanted we would work on it but that what I needed to do was stop focusing on the dosage and going up or down and just live and do what I needed to do for my sobriety. He could see that my focus was on the wrong thing. I would see him every3 months for check up and refills. Sooner if I needed to.
    He was the best Dr, and really helped.
    After a few years we made the decision to downsize and move by our grandchildren and this past fall we moved to Michigan. I have been so unhappy with the Dr’s here that prescribe suboxone.
    I’m going monthly and it’s very much like a methadone clinic.
    It’s been really bad for my overall mental health concerning addiction- it’s hard to explain really but now all I do is think about it again.
    It’s like trying to diet - the minute you start thinking of all you can’t have or how much weight you need to lose you want to eat everything in sight!
    Does this make sense?
    Does anyone else live in Michigan and get suboxone? Are all Dr’s here the same? Is it a state thing?

  • @terri5757
    @terri5757 2 года назад +3

    I wish more doctors would talk to their patients or just talk in general about Buprenorphine. Most people I talk to don’t know what it is or that it even exists. That includes all forms including Suboxone and Sublicade. Many addicts or even just people in pain go to their doctor for pain pills and after the Feds started cracking down, doctors just started cutting patients off left and right. I heard this caused many suicides and now with Fentanyl pouring into the Country and often looking like real opioid pills there are thousands + of people dropping dead because many are addicts, those fearing the agony of withdrawals, or have severe pain issues they feel they have no choice but to chance buying off the street.
    If the Government isn’t going to do a better job of cracking down on Cartels and stopping China from shipping fentanyl to Mexico knowing full well it’s coming to the US, then more doctors and insurance companies need to make people aware there’s another choice, a very, very helpful choice, and make Buprenorphine available in many of its forms.

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад +1

      Amen!! -Jeff R, MD (the guy in the video)

  • @Angel2043-w3s
    @Angel2043-w3s Месяц назад

    Having been a "H" adict for years , I only needed to use once in the morning.

  • @thomasmcqueeney6877
    @thomasmcqueeney6877 2 года назад +1

    I've been 2 1/2 years on subs, no relapse or cheating, on 16mg

  • @heathercombs9014
    @heathercombs9014 2 года назад +1

    I believe you when you say bup works for 5 days because I went to the hospital for 4 days and I didn't feel sick at all those 4 days.

  • @truescotsman4103
    @truescotsman4103 2 года назад +5

    if the drug effects only last about 6 hours you're still able to go about 3 days without too much trouble till the real withdrawal kicks in. if the drug effect lasts 5 days what happens when withdrawal kicks in? how long does this drug take to resolve withdrawals? this drug may be good for getting off of other opiates but its not a solution its a bandaid till you actually buckle down and completely cease taking mu receptor agonists altogether. still a deathtrap that's hard to escape without a lot of pain and suffering.

    • @joeldobbs7396
      @joeldobbs7396 2 года назад +4

      Why stop? I have been taking 20 MG suboxone a day for six years now and see no reason not to take it every day till my last. It doesn't make sense to stop taking a medication that allows you to live a normal, healthy life. I have zero side effects, zero urge to relapse and get less effect on my mind than one beer. I work full time in a decent day job and part time selling art on the beach I have my shit together by anyone's standards including the judge that just signed off on my six year old son staying with my half the month. Why would anyone risk disaster by stopping?
      If you are going to say that I just replaced street drugs with doctor drugs, I agree, that's exactly what I did. I damaged parts of my brain and nervous system by flooding them with opiates, now I take medication once a day to replace the neurotransmitters my brain will never make at full capacity again. If I tapered off it would take about 3 years and my chances of relapse would quadruple I don't see any way I would relapse but the world can be quite creative in the ways it flings shit so I figure it's smarter to play it safe. The only thing I worry about is getting injured, there are 2 opiates that I can use for pain and they are not common so I would likely suffer a bit until a doctor signed off on getting them. Anyway, what other medication would you say the same thing about? Why is it special because it's an opiate? Would you tell a schizophrenic to stop their meds? What about parkinsons patients, are they better off if they quit taking dopamine? Sorry if I seem like I am harshing on you a bit, but the way you are seeing this has cost people their lives. Give it some thought.

    • @truescotsman4103
      @truescotsman4103 2 года назад

      @@joeldobbs7396 my thought is opiates are a dead end drug that you can't become dependent on and live on for life. I've been smoking weed all my life and I'm actually quitting this week the last couple of weeks. I used all kinds of drugs my whole life and had my shit together the whole time. I'm 57 and I'm burnt out on weed in the end. I went through benzos cocaine opiates. Suboxone is a hook it's just another money Maker for the doctors. I agree that it can be effective in helping you but if you can't stop taking it it's just another drug it's another hook. I'm not suggesting you go cold turkey and lose your job etc. I'm saying think about it from my perspective I'm only trying to quit pot after being a hardcore drug user my whole life and it's like a joke. There is no withdrawal it was like the first two days I might have felt a little shaky. And now I'm completely sober and it feels better than I felt in my whole life. Just something to consider it's the end game when your body gets just fucking jacked up from all the work and all the partying and all the drugs you want to be able to come off that shit easy and not be a wreck. I'm feeling pretty good right now. Just something to consider.

    • @joeldobbs7396
      @joeldobbs7396 2 года назад +2

      @@truescotsman4103 I quit everything six years ago when my son was born, I don't take chances with my health anymore so I would need a very good reason to stop taking suboxone. I live in Canada so nobody has any motivation to keep me on a drug I don't need, no money in it aside from about a hundred and fifty bucks a month in generic drug and dispensing costs. I feel no effects or side effects at all, it just fills a gap in my brain chemistry. Fact is, my biggest problem is attitudes like yours.
      I lost a good job three years ago because someone found an empty pill bottle and brought it to the owner. Like you, he couldn't see past his own experiences and told me I was just a junky with a doctor for a dealer. I hope I can convince you to reconsider how you see people who are taking buprenorphine.
      It works for 60% of people who use it to treat opiate use disorder. If it increases their chance to live a long healthy life that's not a dead end, its the right thing to do. If they take it for the rest of their life the important thing is that they live and are free from symptoms. Someday you may influence someone to not get treatment, maybe they agree and think it is just as bad as street dope so they choose a three month detox instead. A few months after detox they have a shit week, relapse, and overdose. if they had chosen suboxone and taken their doctors advice they would still be alive. This happens too often so I suggest you support other people when they need treatment, even when that treatment might not be for everyone.

    • @truescotsman4103
      @truescotsman4103 2 года назад

      @@joeldobbs7396 I think you're wrong. With all due respect I'm trying to give you some advice to help you. Quitting Suboxone will change your life you'll actually be whole again. Your body doesn't need Suboxone you just think it needs Suboxone to be healthy.

    • @truescotsman4103
      @truescotsman4103 2 года назад

      @@joeldobbs7396 so I'm getting from your response that you think it's extremely dangerous for you to quit Suboxone. So you're basically walking a tightrope across a fire pit and one slip and it's over. What if you can't get Suboxone anymore? What if you have to switch to a new drug? What if they change the laws? I'm completely dumbfounded that you actually think you need that shit. Suboxone isn't sobriety bro it's chemical dependence. Just because you're not an addict doesn't mean it's not bad for you. I've been a functioning dependent drug user all of my life I have experience I know what I'm talking about. Until you quit that shit you don't even know what sober is.

  • @jacktrout5807
    @jacktrout5807 10 месяцев назад +1

    Great info. Thanks DOC. Could you do a video on the long term side effects of suboxone you know like organ failure 🤔 or will your corporate sponsors frown on that?

    • @caseyw.6550
      @caseyw.6550 9 месяцев назад

      What corporate sponsors? I guess I missed that part of the video. Personally, I'd rather live longer and die from organ failure surrounded by my friends and family who's lives I haven't destroyed rather than by myself in an alley with a needle in my arm and everyone hating or being disappointed in me. But go off! I'm sure you're a big hit at the NA meetings.

    • @jacktrout5807
      @jacktrout5807 9 месяцев назад

      @@caseyw.6550 that's fine as long as that's an educated decision you make, but as a medical professional the DR should be educating his patients on the long term effects ....... don't you agree?

  • @seanmorgan5339
    @seanmorgan5339 Год назад +1

    This drug saved my life I have bin on it for 5 years working on getting off it takes 30 +days to kick

  • @sistah9541
    @sistah9541 2 года назад +1

    Thank you so much! This was very informative.

  • @johnmarkcarsonjr1848
    @johnmarkcarsonjr1848 Год назад +1

    Wow, really cool info video. I like this doctor, he seems very humble. I will say I’m on Subutex, FOR ME, I cannot take any formula with naloxone, it does get into my bloodstream and it does make me very sick. And yes I take it SL

  • @stfuliberal
    @stfuliberal Год назад +2

    You are a good Man, normies have no clue on the matter.

  • @vikingkrigare5329
    @vikingkrigare5329 2 года назад

    Sweden could learn something from this doc

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад +1

      I'd love to visit Sweden!! Find me a doc there who wants to learn - I'll come over and enjoy some fantastic food and do some trainings.

  • @Floyd12345
    @Floyd12345 Год назад +1

    So if I'm understanding correctly, Suboxon isn't much different then the Belbuca that doesn't contain the added chemical called Naloxone? So detox won't be much different?

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад +2

      Correct! The active ingredient in suboxone and in belbuca is the same.

    • @Floyd12345
      @Floyd12345 Год назад

      @@katejeff2000 Okay, thank you.

  • @andreasgreek312
    @andreasgreek312 Год назад +1

    The drug that saved my life is called Libroxar. Bupreborphine and Naloxone. BUT... I was NEVER on more than one gram of heroin a day. Friends who use 2-3 grams of heroin a day, say that only a lot of Methadone helps them. Me, i was hooked, always, but in smaller heroin doses. And between Methadone and LIbroxar, the second thing worked for me. I use it for a week and after that i dont use anything and i dont get withdrawal symptoms at all. With Methadone i experienced severe cravings after my meth stash ended. There was also another silly factor. Methadone in my country comes in syrup bottles and Libroxar in pills. So going downtown to the black market to buy 12-15 bottles of Meth and then avoiding the cops, looked and looks dangerous to me. The only good thing about heroin addiction is that it was always about tiny bags/paper doses and you could hide that shit or throw it away if you saw cops approaching. How the hell do you get rid of ten bottles of meth syrup??
    Anyway, my advice is this. ALWAYS hear the addict. If the addict prefers one thing over another, choose a treatment with the thing the addict prefers. But remind him that every single time he takes a substance, that substance has effects on his body. All of them. Love and some chemicals for some time, have saved COUNTLESS lives. Do not think that your son/father/aunt is already dead.

  • @samlazar1053
    @samlazar1053 8 месяцев назад

    Buprenorphine was developed in Britain by the Bentley team

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 4 месяца назад

      True. In Hull, I believe. I was just simply wrong about that in the video.

  • @azxde9266
    @azxde9266 2 года назад +1

    That thumbnail got me laughing so hard, nice video btw.

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад +2

      I swear to God I'm less unattractive in person! My mom and wife both say so!! :)

  • @MedullarisConus
    @MedullarisConus 9 месяцев назад +1

    Buprenorphi e is another devil but without the pleasure

  • @TraceyStanislowski
    @TraceyStanislowski 8 месяцев назад

    Suboxone saved my life I wouldn't be here writing this today if it wasn't for being given Suboxone thank you for this information and not being judgemental about recovering addicts taking Suboxone or medication like Suboxone kudos to you 😂😊

  • @patrickmcdade7353
    @patrickmcdade7353 2 года назад +1

    When I take 2mg to 4mg at most a day of Bupe I don't have alcohol cravings and if I do drink it isn't more than half a beer and I throw up. I am going to convince my future bupe doc that this works not just for opiate addicts. And I am addicted to Kratom which hits opioid receptors and I need I need to quit taking it. My liver has to be affected because I will take 10 grams a day sometimes 20!!!! In 24 hrs.

  • @craigkonowal1260
    @craigkonowal1260 2 года назад +1

    Does buprenorphine or sublicate help with constipation otherwise caused by regular opiates

    • @mauriceosullivan6832
      @mauriceosullivan6832 2 года назад

      Craig,,,no it doesn't help mate,,, I've been on buprenorphine for 3 years and I have terrible trouble.

    • @craigkonowal1260
      @craigkonowal1260 2 года назад

      Yeah I figured it didn’t. I have cystic fibrosis, since I’ve been on oxycodone I’ve had three bowl obstruction surgeries. I can’t take it anymore

    • @youngkinghedwig
      @youngkinghedwig 2 года назад +1

      Symproic is a good medication. Milk of magnesium is really helpful once in a while too.

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад

      Constipation is by far the most common side effect of buprenorphine. It's usually better than on other opiates, but still present.

  • @AlB1974
    @AlB1974 Год назад +1

    I was on Norco 4-6 times a day for about 14 months straight for back pain from a spinal surgery. My doctor just prescribed me Buprenorphine 2mgs three times a day. Is this better than Norco for pain management? Never had this before and I just took 2 under my tongue and this hit me hard. I feel light headed and a bit dizzy. I know sometimes I would abuse my Norco and be out for a week or 2. Just want to make sure I don't hurt myself if I take an extra one or 2. Also, this doesn't have the blocker I guess but I thought that's what my doctor said she was prescribing me but the pharmacist said it didn't have it and I would need to ween myself down. Hopefully I can handle this since I'm new to it.

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад

      Asking whether buprenorphine works better for pain is complicated. The answer is: sometimes. If you have opiate induced hyperalgesia, a condition in which the pain regulation system of the body is massively screwed up because of long term opiate use, then buprenorphine works beautifully. For you, it's probably worth a try. It sounds like the 6 mg daily dose was probably too much for you, though...

    • @AlB1974
      @AlB1974 Год назад

      @@katejeff2000 I was bumped up to 2 pills a day 800mgs each. My pain is worse with these versus the Norco in the fact that I think my body is enhancing my pain tolerance to get more of the meds in my system. Not going to lie but I blew through the 20 pills I had in 3 days but the they actually did nothing for me. Plus with the bitter after taste I really don't care for these at all. I probably won't be able to talk my care physician into Norco since I refuse to stop taking the Ambien but I feel like even Tylenol 3's would be better for me.

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад

      @@AlB1974 Your best best is going to be some sort of MAT. Without seeing you, I can't give specific advice, but I think it's a no-brainer that if at all possible, you need to see an MAT provider to discuss naltrexone vs methadone vs buprenorphine. Good luck, my man.

  • @Magelind
    @Magelind 2 года назад +1

    This guy is pretty amusing

  • @vintagebleachedblonde4322
    @vintagebleachedblonde4322 Год назад

    I don’t understand what he means by can’t? What does he mean that it’s completely impossible for some people to stop taking the medication or does he mean that some people can’t stop taking it because they’ll relapse on their drug of choice?

  • @sherrydurham2220
    @sherrydurham2220 6 месяцев назад +1

    So seems like you're just trading 1 medicine for another 1.

  • @kcerin1
    @kcerin1 Год назад +1

    There is no way I can take 8mls once a day ket alone 3 times a day! I accidentally took two 4.1mls and it was awful! Rushing feelings, heart palpitations, anxiety! That only lasted for about 15 minutes, but it sucked so bad. I will never do that again.

  • @needmoreramsay
    @needmoreramsay Год назад +1

    PLEASE Dr. Ripperda PLEASE can you do a video on kratom and it's potential use for treating opiate addiction ? Or collaborate with another doctor if they've done research on it ?? Please and thank you !

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад +1

      For now, I don't advise using kratom to treat opiate addiction or withdrawal. It's not really been studied and kratom dosing has never really been standardized. Is there some potential for use in the future? Yes, but the knowledge deficits right now are too vast for me to recommend it.

    • @jcbanbury
      @jcbanbury Год назад +2

      ​@@katejeff2000 im hooked in it and don't know how to get off. Any advice please?

    • @AliRiz99
      @AliRiz99 Год назад +1

      I’m addicted to kratom and had to start suboxone to get off. It’s very addictive and has ruined my life

  • @rudyramirez9993
    @rudyramirez9993 Год назад +1

    Opioids messed me up. I’m off of them I take subs but I don’t get the same good feeling as hydros. I use to love to drink and go out socially w my friends now I’m such party pooper I’ll go out for a couple drinks n call it a night cause drinking isn’t the same anymore as it was before I started taking opioids. I wasn’t an alcoholic or anything but yea now I don’t find drinking fun or enjoyable anymore. I don’t have to many w draws anymore thanks for suboxne but it’s nasty asf I spit the saliva

    • @HeavyDKC1
      @HeavyDKC1 Год назад

      You dont get high off off bupreborphine thats why!

  • @peggytulip2273
    @peggytulip2273 Год назад

    My father has been on the patch for about 2 years for rheumatoid arthritis. He is 88 now and now has CKD stage 3. He is very weak, confused, balance issues...hospitalized, rehab now,
    But continues to not gain strength. Could the patch cause kidney issues. Had pain prior the patch but not CKD?

  • @ChaneVazquez-rx2dy
    @ChaneVazquez-rx2dy Год назад

    If you take an opioid after Suboxone wouldn't that turn on the remaining receptors since Suboxone only sticks to 40% of them??

  • @simonhunkeler7335
    @simonhunkeler7335 2 года назад

    Blessed K.W.Bentley
    The Chemistry have advanced with Bentley compounds,,,,buprenorphine is just 1 compound of 1000s from that.
    Diels - Alder reaction and add Gringnard reaction was the awsome in that Oripavine and Thebain Analogs.
    Ethorphine is still uses for big Animals like Rinoz and Elephants= 1mg.l for that Giants

  • @tylabrinkmanship3605
    @tylabrinkmanship3605 2 года назад +1

    Hey tried his best but I KNOW I could explain and help ppl … but ppl don’t listen to me lol n yeah 32 mg is the ceiling buttt with 16 mg you r close to 90 percent opiate saturation few other … but I will say better then most ppl giving this med

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад

      Thanks for the glowing praise! :)

  • @Ibogaine_RivieraMaya
    @Ibogaine_RivieraMaya 2 года назад +1

    ibogaine is better than buprenorphine

  • @tlv82
    @tlv82 2 года назад +1

    Good luck quitting. 30 day withdrawl vs 5 w heroin.

  • @boscozoo1285
    @boscozoo1285 2 года назад +1

    An you talk about teeth issues well on subs

  • @jpablo700
    @jpablo700 Год назад

    This guy needs to mention Butrans and Belbuca. Those are FDA approved for pain patients not addicted to opiates (OUD). That just makes things more confusing and blurs the lines of STOP demonizing people.

  • @cr-nd8qh
    @cr-nd8qh Год назад

    It's got street value. I like this guy

  • @icedeadline6286
    @icedeadline6286 2 года назад +1

    I said to myself if he repeated one more damn thing I was changing videos and it happened two more times

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад

      You've got to do better about keeping promises to yourself.

  • @TacoDan443
    @TacoDan443 2 года назад +3

    Now I miss snorting fat lines

  • @andyokus5735
    @andyokus5735 2 года назад

    This doctor doesn't know what he's talking about. In fact none of them do unless they've been juñkies. The first time I took Buprenorphine I took 6mg of Subzolve and it knocked me on my ass. I could barely stand up straight. I was on Doan for 15 years and morphine for 3. Believe me it will hit you right off the bat.

    • @br-dj2ti
      @br-dj2ti 2 года назад +4

      I was on painkillers for many years I take buprenorphine for many years now it has never kicked me on my ass it is never made me super high none of that so I don't know what happened with you but I'm just telling you what happens with me that's the truth my friend

  • @nigelkent789
    @nigelkent789 2 года назад +1

    We dont get this information from drug services in England they park you up on methadone and subutex no councillors nothing it's ridiculous I've been on a substitute for 31 years yea 31 years the drug councillors we did have were useless I had one who didn't know anything about addiction he said I'll have to learn off you I was shocked I'm a functioning addict this man should not have been doing this job and he stank of alcohol

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад

      I'm sorry to hear of your experience. I wish I could tell you that we had all the support needed to overcome addiction here in the US, but that's just not true. I'm forever shocked at how many people in healthcare and the legal system have no clue and no compassion about addiction. Keep fighting the good fight, my man.

  • @brockgangell5759
    @brockgangell5759 2 года назад +2

    They taste horrible

    • @dylanparr6880
      @dylanparr6880 2 года назад +1

      I've heard it was supposed to be a citrus/lemon lime flavor but nah, they totally fucked that up. Tastes like....unripe lemon and chalk

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад

      @@dylanparr6880 I giggled at that description.

  • @dustin3774
    @dustin3774 2 года назад

    Your human but, this is your specialty as a doctor and you should know exactly what each is and does. I do! If not! Get a new job. ! Or get yourself sued.

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад

      I've edited your post for clarity, grammar, and punctuation:
      You're a human butt. You seem to be special. You should know that. You deserve a new, better job. You could, perhaps, sue for a better job?
      Is that what you meant?

  • @sylthas5092
    @sylthas5092 2 года назад +2

    I've kicked most common opiods up to heroin and opana, Buprenorphine withdrawal was by far the worst as I wanted to die for well over a month. Go kratom, natures bupe.

    • @mongogojjo5944
      @mongogojjo5944 Год назад

      Fuck kratom and methadone is far worse than suboxone withdrawal...people act like tapering bupe is so hard when it's really not, you can go down by like 0.10 a day and have some comfort meds to go along with it, like CBD and Valium. I don't react well to withdrawal at all and I've kicked heroin, alcohol, benzos, Phenibut, methadone, poppy seed tea, suboxone, kratom, vicodin and oxy.....nothing was worse than methadone in terms of opioids and poppy seed tea was the 2nd worst easily, it's because of all the different alkaloids and how long lasting oral opium is.
      I had a way worse kick from poppy seed tea than even a daily gram heroin habit and I was getting 60-80% pure smack way before the fent took over. Suboxone withdrawal has never been that bad for me, I've been on it for 8 months now (2mgs) and have quit a couple of times, with the help of gabapentin and weed it's never been terrible....you must've cold turkeyed off of like 16 mgs, doctors put people on insane doses, anything more than 8mgs is overkill and only causes more negatives.
      I'd rather stay on bupe than be on kratom again too, that shit started giving me seizures (I wasn't taking anything else and I'm not prone to seizures, it's also well documented) much like tramadol and on top of that it made me a walking zombie, my mind was so fogged up on that crap...headshop kratom is sketchy and heavily adulterated with things like heavy metals...if you're gonna take kratom, get it from a reliable source and realize that it isn't a miracle herb and it does infact have many negatives. I wouldn't call it "nature's bupe" I maintain very well on bupe, I was a total mess on kratom.

    • @sylthas5092
      @sylthas5092 Год назад

      @@mongogojjo5944 yeah if kratom gives you seizures I would def resend staying away but while methadone I'd def worse bupe has a very long halflife and an affinity for opioid receptors that not even naloxone can match. I was on an insane dose and my doc was kinda a piece of shit but I was sick for over a month straight lost a ton of weight from basically never eating my pupils looked like I was tripping acid while standing out in the sun. If you use bupe correctly I agree it can be useful but most people just end up taking benzos with it and getting just as loaded as they did from dope.

  • @tylabrinkmanship3605
    @tylabrinkmanship3605 2 года назад +1

    Wooooow this is bad for a few reason….

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад

      No, this is bad: ruclips.net/video/dsUXAEzaC3Q/видео.html

  • @callthewaterblessed376
    @callthewaterblessed376 2 года назад

    Great information. Meuron ?

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад +1

      Are you asking me if I'm familiar with the works of famed architect Pierre de Meuron? I am!! I find the Beijing Olympic Stadium, the "Bird's Nest," to be inspired!

  • @Moverka
    @Moverka Год назад +1

    Fentanyl yea 2 hours but stored in the fat! Soo yea there’s that.

  • @marvymarier8988
    @marvymarier8988 2 года назад +2

    Methadone is much better.

    • @acidbath3226
      @acidbath3226 2 года назад +1

      the best

    • @dylanparr6880
      @dylanparr6880 2 года назад +3

      Full agonists do feel better...but the fact you have to goo the clinic daily is a pain. In. The. Ass.

    • @DTA-me3kv
      @DTA-me3kv 2 года назад +2

      No it is not. It's hell coming off of. For pain yes ..

    • @DTA-me3kv
      @DTA-me3kv 2 года назад +1

      @@dylanparr6880 Its like being in prison

    • @dylanparr6880
      @dylanparr6880 2 года назад +2

      @@DTA-me3kv so I've heard. The "pink" or "liquid" *handcuffs*

  • @dwayneandrews2059
    @dwayneandrews2059 3 месяца назад

    Put there by a man? Guess again.😊

  • @judowrestlerka
    @judowrestlerka 2 года назад +1

    BUPRENORPHINE has a 37 +/- hour half life.
    You are using the term "Opiate" with every other opiate and OPIOID interchangeability. This is ABSOLUTELY a rookie mistake. The term OPIOID should be disambiguated. You arent doing that.
    ALSO, the injectable format developed by Bohringer Ingersoll was VERY effecting at relieving short term pain. It is a different animal given parenterally.
    There are MANY other mistakes that you made through the video but I quit it before the end because this was so frustrating to listen you a DOCTOR flub such a topic
    Stop just repeating information you haven't actually verified because it's the company lime.

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад

      I have a bad habit of that - I actually talk about it in one of my other videos.

    • @judowrestlerka
      @judowrestlerka Год назад

      @Jeff Ripperda yeah. It's a pandemic of medical professionals NOT getting the data correct.
      I had to examine the waivers of over a dozen docs misusing the drug with patients over the last 3 months.
      You can see why I get livid, I hope.

  • @kcerin1
    @kcerin1 Год назад

    I had been taking Tramadol for 14 years for chronic pain. It was starting to not be as effective and I didn't want to increase the dosage. I went off Tramadol cold turkey all alone back in 2015. The worst four days of my life. Problem was all my pain came back. I tried everything over the counter that I could find to relieve the pain, but nothing worked. I never craved Tramadol. I only took it for pain relief. I hated having to go back on it after 9 months of being off. I didn't know about Suboxone back then. Now again, I am off Tramadol and feeling great with Suboxone. It actually works better for me. I only take one 4.1mls every three days.

  • @vacationboyvideos
    @vacationboyvideos 2 года назад +2

    I take 2 hydrocodone a day for 12 years for pain. I have tried to get off them but I have withdrawals, it does help my pains as well...I just don't know how " bad" is it to be taking 2 hydrocodone a day?

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад +1

      If you are taking the hydrocodone as prescribed without major side effects, drug cravings, or other issues, it's not bad at all. If you are having outside issues, time for a talk with your doctor.

  • @donkeyballs3307
    @donkeyballs3307 2 года назад +3

    Doctor gets paid. $30,000 for every prescription of subs that he writes,of course they want u to stay on it forever

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад

      I wish!! I'd write 100 prescriptions and take the rest of my life off.

    • @donkeyballs3307
      @donkeyballs3307 Год назад

      They do in Canada 🇨🇦, your just a doctor in the wrong country

    • @donkeyballs3307
      @donkeyballs3307 Год назад

      The average starting pay for a newly graduated doctor in general practice in Canada is $900 k -$1.1 million per year ,plus they get paid for every prescription they write

  • @mattphillips3819
    @mattphillips3819 2 года назад +11

    This guy is great what's not only explaining what he's talking about but just his overall attitude in general. I've suffered with opiate addiction for more years than I want to remember. With that said, I want to thank Shawnee health services for this informative video...God bless

  • @Ross-um4bc
    @Ross-um4bc 2 месяца назад +1

    I hold all my subby back and swap it for H

  • @SolidStructureWC
    @SolidStructureWC 2 года назад +9

    Love this guy. Delivers the facts without trying to sell you anything.

  • @glenbearh9109
    @glenbearh9109 11 месяцев назад +2

    I am on generic subutex for pain and it works

  • @patricksnyder7724
    @patricksnyder7724 2 года назад +15

    Excellent video extremely informative and educational. I take Suboxone myself and I feel it helped me take my life back, I thought it was funny when he says “tastes like the creators tried to make Gatorade and screwed something up” so true!

    • @dylanparr6880
      @dylanparr6880 2 года назад +1

      I've heard it was supposed to be a citrus/lemon lime flavor. They done goofed on that. It tastes like unripe watered down lemon juice and chalk. Ew

    • @alanmeyers3957
      @alanmeyers3957 2 года назад +2

      I took it for about 6 months, now even the smell makes me vomit.

    • @Leo_Davis_
      @Leo_Davis_ 2 года назад +1

      I was addicted for years... I started taking Suboxone about 5 or 6 years ago. I've always thought it tasted like an orange peel

    • @joeldobbs7396
      @joeldobbs7396 2 года назад +3

      Heh, I likened it to sprite and tonic water. Had one generic last year that was mint, much superior to citrus.

    • @cr-nd8qh
      @cr-nd8qh Год назад

      I can't stand the taste so I crush mine up and snort them. It definitely works

  • @Rugz-smoke
    @Rugz-smoke 7 месяцев назад +1

    It’s a life saver that’s what it is

  • @mhewett92
    @mhewett92 Год назад +6

    I am confused about precipitated withdrawal with this info. I always thought that taking suboxone too early into heroin withdrawal causes precipitated withdrawal because of the naloxone kicking off the opoids immediately from the receptors. Is this true? What's up with precipitated withdrawal?

    • @katejeff2000
      @katejeff2000 Год назад +1

      Suboxone causes precipitated withdrawal because buprenorphine kicks the heroin out of the opiate receptors and takes its place. The buprenorphine doesn't turn on those receptors nearly as strongly as the heroin, so the sudden crash in receptor activity causes the withdrawal. The naloxone really doesn't play a role.

  • @ttrestle
    @ttrestle 7 месяцев назад

    Subutex is amazing for pain. Suboxen sucks.