Effexor can make you feel strange when you start taking it. Remember this is a drug that is changing the chemicals in your brain and how they function. Talk to your Dr if the symptoms don't improve.
It depends how many Mg of methadone you're on & how long you've been on it. You don't want to take suboxone for about 3 days from the start of the withdrawal symptoms. If you start the suboxone before then, it will make you sick.
Yes, but make sure it is prescribed properly by a physician that knows you are taking either drug.
No. A clinic will truy and tell u that the methadone will block the effecfs, but this is also not true.
It probably has to do with your body chemistry. Whatever fillers that were in the other pills you were taking werent agreeing with you, but the chemical make-up in Methadone just agrees with you. Plus, it is a pretty amazing drug ;)
yes, but methadone fills the neural receptors for opiates in the brain mush stronger than smack. If you are on 20mgs. or more of methadone, you are wasteing your time.
No. Methadone requires a special test so It WILL NOT show up on a panel test unless it is specifically requested.
Yes but it will make you drowsy & your blood pressure will go down.
It can take a couple of days to get into your system. You have to give it time. Just because you take one or two tablets in the beginning and you feel nothing, doesn't mean you better take a few more. Methadone doesn't work that way. It has to build up gradually into your system. Then you maintain that level of methadone in your body by taking it the way the doctor prescribes it. It is used as a long term pain reliever not for acute pain. If you do decide to ask about this medicine for chronic long term pain, make sure you ask a lot of questions. Make sure this is the medicine you want to use. It is highly addictive and you can't just stop cold turkey. The withdrawals are are terrible. Let the doctor wean you off of it.
Im trying to figure out the same thing. I know that if someone is taking water pills they increase the amount of methadone. So that leads me to believe that drinking large amounts of water with a dose of methadone will make it leave the body faster thus lessening the effects.
Testing exists to ensure that methadone patients are actually taking their medication and not selling it on the black market. I'd like to elaborate on the above answer. Testing for Methadone assures that patients are taking their medications because most people that are taking Methadone are on a previous medication that is causing the withdrawal alot of Methadone users will sell the drug to get their drug of choice. Also they want to make sure the user is not abusing the drug by taking too much.
No, if you take methadone, you should not mix it with suboxone. Make sure the methadone is out of you system before taking suboxone. Combining these medications can result in instant withdrawals and severe sickness.