It's very easy: YOU DON'T TAKE IT! Suboxone is for the treatment of opiate addiction. Suboxone is itself an opiate, but it doesn't get you high, so you can quit getting high without suffering painful withdrawal symptoms.
For example, a heroin addict who wants to quit getting high can start taking Suboxone instead of heroin. The Suboxone will feed the heroin addict's physical need for opiates, without getting him high. In essence, the heroin addict trades in his heroin addiction for a Suboxone addiction. He takes Suboxone, and now he is addicted to Suboxone, instead of heroin.
So, anyone who is using Suboxone the way it is meant to be used (for opiate addiction) is already addicted to opiates. He is addicted to the opiate heroin, and, as soon as he starts taking the Suboxone, he will be addicted to the Suboxone.
So, if you are asking how to take Suboxone without getting addicted to it, then you obviously are not an opiate addict. You are obviously asking because you want to use it recreationally. Which is illegal.
Furthermore, Suboxone is a very poor choice for a recreational drug. If it does cause a high for recreational users, I can't imagine that it would be a good high, since it is specifically designed not to get you high. Suboxone is made up of buprenorphine (the active ingredient) and naloxone, which is a partial opiate antagonist -- it blocks the opiate receptors in your brain, so you can't get an opiate high.
The drug Subutex is just plain burprenorphine, without the naloxone. Since Subutex lacks the opiate blocker, it is possible to get some sort of high off of it. But again, I can't imagine that it would be a good high, like heroin or morphine or oxycodone.
Hmm not completely sure about that, maybe if you are addicted to opiates and withdrawing while in prison.. then maybe they would give you some suboxone to relieve those painful withdraws. Usually they will only give out suboxone at a detox center or a suboxone clinic.
suboxone/subutex is the latest prescription drug that can be substituted in place of another narcotic.. sub stops the horrible withdrawal symptoms when going off a narcotic once you're addicted..unfortunately you are simply replacing one narcotic for another narcotic.. although word is getting off suboxone much easier than getting off methadone, so switching to suboxone to get off methadone and then getting off subutex certainly make sense..in the case of getting off other narcotics[percs,Oxycontin,morphine,etc] can't really say that getting off suboxone is any easier than getting off those other narcotics because subutex is just another synthetic narcotic..
Hello,...First I would ask you why you would need this information? Did a doctor or friend recommend this drug to you? Do you feel you are in need of Suboxone?Suboxone is used to treat opioid addiction. I can also be addictive.The are alternative medications and treatments if you are addicted to opioids. That is why I asked why you needed this info. I am a life long addict and have had experience with different types of "therapy" for my addiction. Suboxone, because of a time factor was not one of them.I wish you luck in your search for what is right for you, if indeed you are in need.JohnD.
Suboxone
If you have the standard 8mg Suboxone, try cutting it into quarters. Take one quarter of Suboxone and wait about one hour. If you still feel crappy, try taking another quarter. Suboxone is strong, effective stuff! I was addicted to 80-120mg of Oxycontin and one quarter of Suboxone completely melted away my withdrawal symptoms. Good luck!
Yes, you most certainly can. Suboxone is an opiate, just like opium, heroin, morphine, hydrocodone, oxycodone, methadone, codeine, etc., and all opiates are extremely physically addictive. Taking opiates every day for just a week or two -- or taking them around the clock for just a few days -- will result in a serious physical addiction, and the pain of withdrawal is horrible, and can last for months. People take Suboxone so they can quit taking other opiates -- like heroin or oxycodone -- without the pain of withdrawal. For someone who is already addicted to opiates, Suboxone feeds the physical addiction, without getting the person high. However, once you've quit getting high and started taking Suboxone, you are now addicted to the Suboxone. The only way to stop taking Suboxone, without withdrawal pain, is to very slowly decrease your dosage over a period of several months, or even a few years.
addicted
being addicted to getting tattoos. getting stupid ones just for the sake of it ect. people can get addicted to anything
No one plans on getting addicted. It happens to millions of people.
No, you will not go into withdrawls, however, it would be a waste of Diluadid since Suboxone is an opiod-blocker and keeps you from getting high off of any opiate. But if you were taking Dilaudid and then immediately began taking Suboxone, THAT would cause you to go into withdrawls.
Going from methadone to Suboxone will make you sick. Going the other way will not make you sick. However, long exposure to the narcotic antagonist in Suboxone will have made you far more sensitive to opiates like methadone. There is a good chance of overdose. The methadone should be phased in slowly, starting with much lower doses than normal. A better idea: get detoxed from the Suboxone if necessary, and get REALLY clean. Why go from one addiction to another? Addicted is still addicted. Don't you want to be free of all that?
No more than an adult would get addicted to the newspaper.