| Methadone
German
scientists synthesized methadone during World War II
because of a shortage of morphine. Although chemically
unlike morphine or heroin, methadone produces many of
the same effects. Introduced into the United States
in 1947 as an analgesic (Dolophinel), it is primarily
used today for the treatment of narcotic addiction.
It is available in oral solutions, tablets, and injectable
Schedule II formulations, and is almost as effective
when administered orally as it is by injection. Methadone's
effects can last up to 24 hours, thereby permitting
once-a-day oral administration in heroin detoxification
and maintenance programs. High-dose methadone can block
the effects of heroin, thereby discouraging the continued
use of heroin by addicts under treatment with methadone.
Chronic administration of methadone results in the development
of tolerance and dependence. The withdrawal syndrome
develops more slowly and is less severe but more prolonged
than that associated with heroin withdrawal. Ironically,
methadone used to control narcotic addiction is frequently
encountered on the illicit market and has been associated
with a number of overdose deaths. |
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