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Sleep Disorders 6 Times Higher Among Veterans

WEDNESDAY, July 20, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Sleep disorders are six times more likely among American military veterans than in the general population, a new study finds.

And veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) seem to have the highest rates, the researchers said.

The research involved more than 9.7 million veterans treated by the Veterans Health Administration system between 2000 and 2010. The majority (93 percent) of these military service members were men. Slightly more than 750,000 were diagnosed with at least one sleep disorder, the study authors said.

Over the course of 11 years, the investigators found that the rate of sleep disorders rose from less than 1 percent to nearly 6 percent. Sleep disorders were most common among veterans who had experienced combat and those with PTSD.

“Veterans with PTSD had a very high sleep disorder prevalence of 16 percent, the highest among the various health conditions or other population characteristics that we examined,” study senior author James Burch said in a news release from the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. Burch is an associate professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at the University of South Carolina.

The study doesn’t prove that PTSD triggers sleep disorders, but the researchers noted that diagnosed cases of PTSD tripled over the course of the study.

Sleep apnea was the most commonly diagnosed sleep disorder among the study participants. Sleep apnea, which causes brief pauses in breathing during sleep, accounted for 47 percent of diagnosed sleep disorders, the researchers said.

Insomnia accounted for 26 percent of diagnosed sleep disorders, the findings showed.

Veterans with other chronic health issues — including heart disease and cancer — also had higher rates of sleep disorders than other study participants, according to the report.

The findings point to a need for improved management of sleep disorders among U.S. military veterans, the researchers concluded.

The study was published in the July issue of the journal Sleep.

More information

Find out more about sleep disorders from the National Sleep Foundation.





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6 Best Instagram Accounts to Follow for Get-Healthy Inspiration

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

When you’re looking for a new kick-butt core exercise, some healthy lunch ideas (because you’re so over blah salads), or a rah-rah “You can do this!” from someone who knows the struggle is real, a quick scroll through your Insta feed may be all the inspiration you need: “Instagram can be a great place to find motivation,” says Cassie Bjork, RD, founder of healthysimplelife.com. “I think the main reason it resonates with us is because images are powerful, sometimes even more powerful than words.”

One word of caution: Remember to take “flawless” gym selfies with a grain of salt, Bjork says. Like with all social media, people tend to post highly-edited pics to Instagram. Something to keep in mind if you find yourself falling into the comparison trap.

Here, six real women who could become your new favorite follows, for all the practical, get-healthy inspo they serve up.

@workoutbean

This graphic designer-turned-Soul Cycle instructor got uber fit by following the Bikini Body Guide program by Kayla Itsines. She’s attracted a following with her straight talk and contagious passion for fitness.

Instagram Photo

@shutthekaleup

Yoga instructor Jeannete Ogeden posts pics of her gorgeous eats. Think sweet potato bowls, bright salads, and creative spins on toast. Her produce-focused meals will not only give you a serious case of lunch envy, but they’ll motivate you to incorporate more colorful, clean foods in your meals.

Instagram Photo
RELATED: 9 Fitness Trainers to Follow on Instagram

@ss.fitness.health

Shara Swanson is a certified personal trainer who has been documenting her body transformation over the last two years. Her relatable journey will make you think about your own get-fit path, and her before/after shots will inspire you to keep going.

Instagram Photo

@eatingbirdfood

Head to this health coach’s page whenever you think, What should I have for dinner tonight? Her beautiful creations are a good reminder that nutritious food can be fun. (Mint chocolate chip-avocado ice cream, anyone?) Trust us, you’ll never look at salad the same way again.

Instagram Photo

@mygirlishwhims

You might recognize Rebecca Grafton from the cover of People magazine. The 25-year-old lost 100 pounds in two years—and her candor about the journey is easy to relate to. Along the way, Grafton posted selfies of her progress on Instagram for motivation and encouragement. Now she’s offering the same kind of support to her 73,000 followers.

Instagram Photo

RELATED: 7 Adorable Pets You Need to Follow on Instagram

@ashleylwiseman

The personal trainer, fitness instructor, and mom of two is committed to being strong, living a balanced life, and staying honest all the way. You’ll be inspired by her mostly healthy eats; but Wiseman also shows you can get rockin’ abs even when you enjoy dessert (and the occasional mega plate of French toast).

Instagram Photo

For more healthy lifestyle tips and ideas, follow @healthmagazine!




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Brisk Walking May Help Ward Off Diabetes

WEDNESDAY, July 20, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Brisk walking may be more effective than jogging in controlling blood sugar levels in people with prediabetes, a new study suggests.

People with prediabetes have higher-than-normal blood sugar levels but not so high that it’s full-blown diabetes. The “gold standard” approach to diabetes prevention involves weight loss, diet and exercise.

“We know the benefits of lifestyle changes … but it is difficult to get patients to do even one behavior, not to mention three,” said study author Dr. William Kraus. So he and his colleagues wanted to know if exercise alone could achieve similar benefits.

“When faced with the decision of trying to do weight loss, diet and exercise versus exercise alone, the study indicates you can achieve nearly 80 percent of the effect of doing all three with just a high amount of moderate-intensity exercise,” said Kraus, a professor of medicine at Duke University in Durham, N.C.

The study included 150 people with prediabetes who were divided into four groups. One group followed a gold-standard program that included a low-fat, low-calorie diet and moderate-intensity exercise equivalent to 7.5 miles of brisk walking a week.

The other participants were assigned to one of three exercise groups: low amount at moderate intensity equivalent to walking briskly for 7.5 miles a week; high amount at moderate intensity equal to walking briskly for 11.5 miles weekly; and high amount at vigorous intensity equivalent to jogging for 11.5 miles a week.

After six months, patients using the three-pronged approach had an average 9 percent improvement in oral glucose tolerance — a measure of how readily the body processes sugar and an indicator used to predict progression to diabetes.

Among those who did exercise only, there was a 7 percent improvement in the moderate-intensity 11.5-mile group; a 5 percent improvement in the moderate-intensity, 7.5-mile group; and a 2 percent improvement in the vigorous-intensity 11.5-mile group.

“Another way to say it is that a high amount of moderate-intensity exercise alone provided nearly the same benefit on glucose tolerance that we see in the gold standard of fat and calorie restriction along with exercise,” said study co-author Cris Slentz, an assistant professor of medicine at Duke.

High-intensity exercise tends to burn glucose more than fat, while moderate-intensity exercise tends to burn fat more than glucose, Kraus explained.

“We believe that one benefit of moderate-intensity exercise is that it burns off fat in the muscles,” he said. “That’s important because muscle is the major place to store glucose after a meal.”

The study was published online July 15 in the journal Diabetologia.

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians has more about prediabetes.





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Study: VA Hospitals Compare Favorably to Non-VA Centers

WEDNESDAY, July 20, 2016 (HealthDay News) — The quality and safety of health care at U.S. Veterans Affairs facilities is comparable to that in non-VA centers, according to researchers.

Ongoing concerns about the quality of care provided in VA facilities led the investigators to review 69 studies conducted in the past 10 years.

“The results show that, in terms of safety and effectiveness, VA facilities compare favorably with others,” said review leader Dr. Courtney Gidengil, of the Rand Corp.

“Rates of surgical complications and availability of services had the least favorable results, but these results were mixed rather than consistently poor,” Gidengil noted.

Twenty-two of the 34 studies on safety and 20 of the 24 studies on effectiveness found that VA facilities provided the same, if not better, quality of care as non-VA centers, the researchers said.

Their findings were published online July 15 in the Journal of General Internal Medicine.

Death rates “have declined more quickly in Veteran Affairs health care settings over time than in non-VA settings,” Gidengil said in a journal news release.

For preventive, recommended or end-of-life care, VA hospitals provided equally good or better care than non-VA facilities. Medication management was also similar or superior to non-VA facilities, the review found.

For example, outpatient care in areas such as diabetes and screening tests for heart disease and cancer generally rated higher in VA facilities than in non-VA centers, according to the review.

More information

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs has information on health issues affecting veterans.





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Opioid Abusers Missing Out on Addiction-Fighting Drug

By Dennis Thompson
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, July 20, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Doctors aren’t using one of the most effective weapons at their disposal in battling addiction to prescription painkillers — the anti-addiction drug Suboxone, a new study finds.

A review of Medicare claims showed that U.S. physicians are woefully underprescribing Suboxone. The drug is the only therapy Medicare covers to treat opioid addiction.

“For every 40 family practice physicians who prescribed an opioid painkiller, only one prescribed Suboxone,” said lead author Dr. Anna Lembke. She’s chief of the Stanford Addiction Medicine Dual Diagnosis Clinic at Stanford University in Palo Alto, Calif.

“There’s lots and lots of prescribing opioids for pain, but very little prescribing of this specific drug to treat opioid addiction,” she added.

There’s an epidemic of prescription painkiller abuse in the United States. In 2014, prescription drugs contributed to nearly 29,000 overdose deaths from painkillers or heroin, more than any year on record, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.

Medicare patients have one of the fastest growing and highest rates of opioid abuse in the United States. More than six out of every 1,000 Medicare patients have been diagnosed with an opioid addiction. Hospitalizations due to overuse have been increasing by 10 percent a year, the researchers noted.

However, Medicare doesn’t cover methadone, the longest-standing treatment for opioid addiction, Lembke said.

Instead, Medicare covers Suboxone, a pill that combines two addiction-fighting drugs — buprenorphine (Buprenex, Bunavail) and naloxone (Evzio).

Buprenorphine is a weak opioid that has effects similar to acetaminophen/oxycodone (Percocet) or oxycodone (OxyContin). But, the effects level off at moderate doses. This reduces the risk of misuse and addiction, according to the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA).

The other component is naloxone. Naloxone blunts the effects of opioids and can reverse an opioid overdose, SAMHSA explains.

Naloxone is prescribed on its own as a lifesaving measure for people who have overdosed on opioids. A study released online in June in the Annals of Internal Medicine found that prescribing naloxone to chronic pain patients who take painkillers can reduce overdose emergencies.

For the new study, Lembke and her colleagues examined 2013 Medicare Part D claims data to see whether doctors were making effective use of Suboxone.

The investigators found almost 7,000 prescribers who had filed 486,000 claims for Suboxone. The prescriptions were written for about 81,000 patients.

Those prescribers represented less than 2 percent of the 382,000 prescribers who had filed more than 56.5 million claims for prescription painkillers, the researchers found.

Specialists in addiction medicine handed out the most prescriptions for Suboxone, nearly 99 claims per prescriber in 2013, the study revealed.

On the other hand, pain management physicians rarely prescribed Suboxone, even though they are the most prolific at prescribing opioid painkillers. They handed out fewer than five Suboxone prescriptions per doctor in 2013, the findings showed.

Family doctors also failed to use Suboxone, averaging about seven prescriptions per physician, the study said. Yet, family doctors averaged 161 painkiller prescriptions per physician.

Doctors may be reluctant to prescribe Suboxone because they know little about its use, Lembke suggested.

“Doctors receive very little education in medical school and residency on the treatment of addiction disorders, and understandably doctors don’t like to implement treatments that they don’t know how to use,” she said.

In addition, addiction continues to be seen more as a moral failing than an illness, and doctors may not be comfortable treating a confessed addict, Lembke said.

“They’re very, very worried any opioid they prescribe is going to be misused in some way, and this population is more likely to misuse it,” she said.

Dr. Harshal Kirane pointed out that doctors might not even know that their patient is an addict. He is the director of addiction services at Staten Island University Hospital in New York City.

Kirane said only about one in every three drug addicts in the United States has been diagnosed with addiction and is receiving treatment.

Further, federal regulations governing Suboxone use make things even tougher for doctors, Kirane noted.

Physicians must receive special training and receive certification from SAMHSA before they can prescribe Suboxone, he explained. Doctors are then allowed to only treat 30 patients with the drug during their first year. After that, doctors must file an additional request that will allow them to treat up to 275 patients, Kirane added.

“If you have a DEA [U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration] license and a medical license, you can prescribe as much oxycodone as you choose,” he said. “To prescribe Suboxone, there are restrictions in place that require some time and monetary investment on the part of the physician to be certified.”

Finally, Lembke said, although this isn’t the case for Medicare, most insurance companies don’t willingly cover Suboxone.

“I can tell you I have to fight with insurance companies often to have them approve a Suboxone prescription. But if I wrote a Vicodin prescription it could be filled within the hour at the local pharmacy,” she said.

More information

For more on opioid addiction, visit the American Academy of Family Physicians.





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Florida Investigates Possible Local Transmission of Zika Virus

WEDNESDAY, July 20, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Florida health officials are investigating what could be the first case of locally transmitted Zika virus infection in the continental United States.

Infection with the Zika virus can cause the devastating birth defect microcephaly, which leads to babies born with abnormally small heads and underdeveloped brains.

In a statement released Tuesday, the Florida Department of Health said it was investigating “a possible non-travel related case of Zika virus in Miami-Dade County.”

“The department is actively conducting an epidemiological investigation, is collaborating with the Centers for Disease Control and will share additional details as they become available,” the statement said.

So far, almost all cases of Zika infection in the continental United States — roughly 1,300 — have involved people who traveled to areas where the mosquito-borne disease is circulating.

Brazil has been the epicenter of the Zika epidemic to this point. Infections have also been reported in other Latin American and Caribbean nations.

But U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officials have said repeatedly that they expect to see cases of local transmission of the Zika virus this summer in southern states with warm, humid climates such as Florida, Louisiana and Texas. The virus is typically transmitted through the bite of Aedes mosquitoes.

In addition to mosquitoes, the Zika virus can be transmitted through sex. The CDC has reported 14 cases of sexually transmitted infections. These infections are thought to have occurred because the patients’ partners had traveled to countries where Zika is circulating, the CDC said.

On Monday, U.S. health officials announced the first case of Zika infection that didn’t involve a mosquito bite or sex. Officials said they were trying to determine how a now-deceased elderly Utah man who had Zika managed to infect a family caregiver.

The Aedes mosquitoes that spread Zika aren’t usually found at the altitudes where the unidentified man lived in northern Utah.

“The new case in Utah is a surprise, showing that we still have more to learn about Zika,” said Dr. Erin Staples, a medical epidemiologist with the CDC working in Utah.

Staples said the infected caregiver recovered quickly. And local Utah authorities said the public shouldn’t fear general Zika transmission.

The deceased patient had traveled to an area outside the country where Zika is circulating and apparently caught the virus there. Lab tests showed he had extremely high amounts of the virus in his blood — 100,000 times higher than that seen in other Zika samples, according to a CDC news release.

Typically, the Zika virus doesn’t cause serious illness. Only about 20 percent of patients notice symptoms.

But Zika can cause serious birth defects if a woman becomes infected while pregnant. Thousands of babies have been born in Brazil with microcephaly. The virus has also been linked to a rare paralyzing condition called Guillain-Barre syndrome.

As of July 13, roughly 1,300 Zika cases had been reported in the continental United States and Hawaii. But none had been caused by local mosquitoes, the CDC said. Most of the infected people had visited countries where Zika is endemic.

The CDC advises pregnant women not to travel to an area where Zika transmission is ongoing, and to use insect repellent and wear long pants and long-sleeved shirts if they are in those areas. Partners of pregnant women are advised to use a condom to guard against sexual transmission during pregnancy.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provides more information on mosquito-borne diseases.

This Q&A will tell you what you need to know about Zika.

To see the CDC list of sites where Zika virus is active and may pose a threat to pregnant women, click here.





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Alzheimer’s May Hamper Ability to Perceive Pain

WEDNESDAY, July 20, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Alzheimer’s disease may affect people’s ability to recognize when they are in pain, a new study shows.

Undetected pain may allow underlying health issues to go untreated, leading to serious complications, such as organ damage, researchers from Vanderbilt University in Nashville cautioned.

For the three-year study, the researchers tested two groups of adults who were aged 65 or older. One group was made up of people diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, which affects thinking skills, memory and intellect. Members of the second group did not have the progressive neurological disease.

The study used a device to subject participants to different heat sensations and asked them to report their pain levels. After the tests, the researchers analyzed self-reported pain.

“We found that participants with Alzheimer’s disease required higher temperatures to report sensing warmth, mild pain and moderate pain than the other participants,” said study first author Todd Monroe, an assistant professor at Vanderbilt’s School of Nursing. “What we didn’t find was a difference between the two groups in reporting how unpleasant the sensations were at any level.”

Participants with Alzheimer’s were less able to recognize when they were in pain, but their pain tolerance was not diminished, the study found.

“While we found that their ability to detect pain was reduced, we found no evidence that people with Alzheimer’s disease are less distressed by pain nor that pain becomes less unpleasant as their disease worsens,” Monroe said in a university news release.

More studies are needed to explore pain perception among those with Alzheimer’s disease, the researchers said. They added that doctors should use a variety of methods to evaluate patients’ level of discomfort, including pain scales, behavioral changes and nonverbal cues, like facial expressions. This is particularly important once Alzheimer’s patients begin having problems with verbal communication, the study authors said.

“As people age, the risk of developing pain increases, and as the population of older adults continues to grow, so will the number of people diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease,” Monroe said. “We need to find ways to improve pain care in people with all forms of dementia and help alleviate unnecessary suffering in this highly vulnerable population.”

The study findings were published recently in the journal BMC Medicine.

More information

The U.S. National Institute on Aging provides more information on Alzheimer’s disease.





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Even Your Heart May Benefit From Extra Education

WEDNESDAY, July 20, 2016 (HealthDay News) — While there are many obvious benefits to achieving a higher level of education, one you may not have considered is a boost to your heart health.

New research suggests that heart attack survivors with higher levels of education appear less likely to develop heart failure.

Heart failure is a serious complication of heart attack that significantly increases the risk of death, study author Gerhard Sulo said in a European Society of Cardiology news release. Sulo is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Bergen in Norway.

The study included more than 70,500 people in Norway, aged 35 to 85. All had been hospitalized with a first heart attack between 2001 and 2009. None had a history of heart failure at the start of the study.

By the end of 2009, 18 percent of patients had been diagnosed with early onset heart failure, the findings showed. Compared to those with only 10 years of schooling, the risk of heart failure was 9 percent lower among those with high school or vocational school diplomas. For those who’d completed college or university, the risk of developing heart failure was 20 percent lower.

Another 12 percent of patients were diagnosed with late-onset heart failure, the researchers said. Compared to those with 10 years of schooling, the risk was 14 percent lower among those with high school or vocational school diplomas. And for those who completed university or college, the risk of late-onset heart failure was 27 percent lower.

When the researchers focused on patients who underwent procedures to clear blocked arteries after their heart attack, the risk of heart failure was 16 percent lower among those with high school or vocational school diplomas, and 33 percent lower among those who’d completed college or university, compared to those with only 10 years of schooling.

The link between higher levels of education and lower risk of heart failure was similar in men and women, the study found.

Although the researchers found an association between education and heart health after a heart attack, the study wasn’t designed to tease out a cause-and-effect relationship. Still, the researchers do have some theories as to why people with more education seemed to fare better.

“Education, per se, cannot be considered a ‘protective exposure’ in the classical sense, but represents a clustering of characteristics that influence health behaviors and outcomes,” Sulo said.

For example, people with less education tend to delay getting medical care when heart attack symptoms occur. In addition, they may have less access to specialized care. Both of these factors can increase the risk of developing early onset heart failure after a heart attack, he explained.

Sulo also noted that people with less education are more likely to have pre-existing medical conditions and unhealthy lifestyles that can increase the risk of heart failure, which is the heart’s inability to pump enough blood to meet the body’s needs.

“Patients with lower education are less likely to be prescribed medication after a heart attack to prevent heart failure, and they are also less likely to take their medication. This may explain the increased risk of late-onset heart failure,” he added.

“Focused efforts are needed to ensure that heart attack patients with low education get help early, have equal access to treatment, take their medications, and are encouraged to improve their lifestyles. This should help reduce the socioeconomic gap in the risk of heart failure following a heart attack,” Sulo concluded.

The study was published July 20 in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology.

More information

The U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute has more about heart failure.





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Why Kicking the Opioid Habit Can Be So Tough

By Alan Mozes
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, July 20, 2016 (HealthDay News) — He was 26, a specialist fifth class with the U.S. Army, and stationed abroad, when an accident on the German autobahn sent him careening through the windshield of his car.

The now 60-year-old veteran prefers to withhold his name, but not his story, of a decades-long struggle against chronic back pain and an addiction to the opioid painkillers he’d hoped would help him.

“At first I was taking 50 milligrams [mg] of Percocet,” the Colorado resident recalled. “Every day I’d wake up in pain. And every day I’d automatically pop a pill right away and go back to work. I didn’t think anything of it — I’d just take Percocet in combination with hydrocodone [Vicodin], and it worked.”

However, “eventually it wasn’t working anymore,” he said. “I felt like I was putting a Band-Aid on a bullet wound, and I couldn’t stand the pain.”

Then, over time, there was a “gradual slide,” he said, to more pills and higher doses.

It’s a story shared by a growing number of Americans. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has called prescription opioid misuse and addiction a full-blown “epidemic.”

About 2 million Americans are now in the throes of prescription opioid abuse or dependence, the agency estimates, and more than 165,000 men and women died from a prescription opioid overdose between 1999 to 2014.

“I was going down a very slippery slope,” the veteran recounted. “It affected my mood, it affected my attitude, but I couldn’t function without them. By the time I was 10 years into it I was taking three to four pills a day.”

After an attempted suicide, followed by a month in a mental health facility, he decided he’d finally had enough. “I wanted to get off them. I wanted to turn my life around. So I stopped taking opioids,” he said. “I went cold turkey.”

But that’s when things went from bad to worse, he said. Without proper medical guidance or social support, that initial quit attempt failed.

None of this surprises addiction specialist Kelly Dunn, who researches the issue at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, in Baltimore.

“When you stop taking opioids it takes time for your body to regenerate its own ‘painkiller’ system,” she explained. “Generally, four to five days. The severity varies per patient, and it’s not predictable who will react how — but withdrawal is real.”

Opioid withdrawal is a highly disturbing experience, added another specialist, Dr. Joseph Frank, professor of medicine at the University of Colorado. He said withdrawal typically involves a deep malaise, severe pain, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal cramps.

“Patients often don’t tell anyone, because they are worried they’ll be stigmatized for being addicted in the first place,” Dunn added. “Even if their problem arises from dependence on a medication they took exactly as prescribed. Some will just deal with it and get through, but some can’t tolerate it. So they go back to taking their meds, just to avoid the withdrawal.”

The veteran recalled: “I would curl up in a corner and just cry. I didn’t eat, I didn’t go to work, I lost my apartment, I lost my job. It was what I’ve heard heroin junkies go through when they try to quit cold turkey — I would equate it to that. You just withdraw into yourself, and then the mental problems start. You think that nobody cares, you think, ‘I would be better off dead.’ “

That story was repeated many times in a study Frank led recently that involved 24 Denver-based pain patients interviewed between 2014 and 2015.

Ranging in age from 31 to 73, most patients said their fear of pain’s return usually trumped any fear of addiction.

Many also worried that less addictive, non-opioid painkillers simply wouldn’t work. And for people who had tried to quit opioids but failed, withdrawal was so harrowing that it often kept them from trying again.

Still, success stories did occur. Reporting the study in a recent issue of Pain Medicine, Frank’s team said that a quarter of those interviewed had already discontinued their opioid use, while half were in the process of tapering off. A quarter were still taking opioids for chronic pain, however.

Typically, people who’d successfully kicked their addiction pointed to the support of family and friends as key. The help of other addicts — people who were on the same journey — helped, too, as did the guidance of a trusted doctor.

Today, the Colorado veteran says he is finally free of his addiction to opioid painkillers, but still not free of pain. “Now I only take 500 mg of aspirin, but it only controls about 10 percent of the pain,” he said. “So, I’ve had to learn to live with that. But I won that fight.”

Dunn agreed that chronic pain is formidable, so she understands how helpless people can feel.

“If you’ve ever known anyone who’s in chronic pain, you would do anything to help them,” she said. “So there’s a place for opioids. But they’ve been overprescribed, with a lack of focus on consequences. And now people of all ages, races and socioeconomic backgrounds are at risk for dependence or abuse.

“Detox, which is the most widely used approach, is not the only, or even the most effective way to go about withdrawal,” she added. “But the truth is that people often don’t seek treatment until they’re hitting a kind of bottom, when they’re battling a habit — an urge to use — that is often years in the making.

“These people need counseling, these people need help,” Dunn said. “They can’t do this alone.”

More information

Find out more about opioid addction dangers at the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse.





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Why Kicking the Opioid Habit Can Be So Tough

By Alan Mozes
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, July 20, 2016 (HealthDay News) — He was 26, a specialist fifth class with the U.S. Army, and stationed abroad, when an accident on the German autobahn sent him careening through the windshield of his car.

The now 60-year-old veteran prefers to withhold his name, but not his story, of a decades-long struggle against chronic back pain and an addiction to the opioid painkillers he’d hoped would help him.

“At first I was taking 50 milligrams [mg] of Percocet,” the Colorado resident recalled. “Every day I’d wake up in pain. And every day I’d automatically pop a pill right away and go back to work. I didn’t think anything of it — I’d just take Percocet in combination with hydrocodone [Vicodin], and it worked.”

However, “eventually it wasn’t working anymore,” he said. “I felt like I was putting a Band-Aid on a bullet wound, and I couldn’t stand the pain.”

Then, over time, there was a “gradual slide,” he said, to more pills and higher doses.

It’s a story shared by a growing number of Americans. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has called prescription opioid misuse and addiction a full-blown “epidemic.”

About 2 million Americans are now in the throes of prescription opioid abuse or dependence, the agency estimates, and more than 165,000 men and women died from a prescription opioid overdose between 1999 to 2014.

“I was going down a very slippery slope,” the veteran recounted. “It affected my mood, it affected my attitude, but I couldn’t function without them. By the time I was 10 years into it I was taking three to four pills a day.”

After an attempted suicide, followed by a month in a mental health facility, he decided he’d finally had enough. “I wanted to get off them. I wanted to turn my life around. So I stopped taking opioids,” he said. “I went cold turkey.”

But that’s when things went from bad to worse, he said. Without proper medical guidance or social support, that initial quit attempt failed.

None of this surprises addiction specialist Kelly Dunn, who researches the issue at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, in Baltimore.

“When you stop taking opioids it takes time for your body to regenerate its own ‘painkiller’ system,” she explained. “Generally, four to five days. The severity varies per patient, and it’s not predictable who will react how — but withdrawal is real.”

Opioid withdrawal is a highly disturbing experience, added another specialist, Dr. Joseph Frank, professor of medicine at the University of Colorado. He said withdrawal typically involves a deep malaise, severe pain, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal cramps.

“Patients often don’t tell anyone, because they are worried they’ll be stigmatized for being addicted in the first place,” Dunn added. “Even if their problem arises from dependence on a medication they took exactly as prescribed. Some will just deal with it and get through, but some can’t tolerate it. So they go back to taking their meds, just to avoid the withdrawal.”

The veteran recalled: “I would curl up in a corner and just cry. I didn’t eat, I didn’t go to work, I lost my apartment, I lost my job. It was what I’ve heard heroin junkies go through when they try to quit cold turkey — I would equate it to that. You just withdraw into yourself, and then the mental problems start. You think that nobody cares, you think, ‘I would be better off dead.’ “

That story was repeated many times in a study Frank led recently that involved 24 Denver-based pain patients interviewed between 2014 and 2015.

Ranging in age from 31 to 73, most patients said their fear of pain’s return usually trumped any fear of addiction.

Many also worried that less addictive, non-opioid painkillers simply wouldn’t work. And for people who had tried to quit opioids but failed, withdrawal was so harrowing that it often kept them from trying again.

Still, success stories did occur. Reporting the study in a recent issue of Pain Medicine, Frank’s team said that a quarter of those interviewed had already discontinued their opioid use, while half were in the process of tapering off. A quarter were still taking opioids for chronic pain, however.

Typically, people who’d successfully kicked their addiction pointed to the support of family and friends as key. The help of other addicts — people who were on the same journey — helped, too, as did the guidance of a trusted doctor.

Today, the Colorado veteran says he is finally free of his addiction to opioid painkillers, but still not free of pain. “Now I only take 500 mg of aspirin, but it only controls about 10 percent of the pain,” he said. “So, I’ve had to learn to live with that. But I won that fight.”

Dunn agreed that chronic pain is formidable, so she understands how helpless people can feel.

“If you’ve ever known anyone who’s in chronic pain, you would do anything to help them,” she said. “So there’s a place for opioids. But they’ve been overprescribed, with a lack of focus on consequences. And now people of all ages, races and socioeconomic backgrounds are at risk for dependence or abuse.

“Detox, which is the most widely used approach, is not the only, or even the most effective way to go about withdrawal,” she added. “But the truth is that people often don’t seek treatment until they’re hitting a kind of bottom, when they’re battling a habit — an urge to use — that is often years in the making.

“These people need counseling, these people need help,” Dunn said. “They can’t do this alone.”

More information

Find out more about opioid addction dangers at the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse.





from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/2atXih5