BENZODIAZEPINES or Benzos EVERYTHING you need to KNOW











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For innovative and holistic drug addiction treatment and alcohol rehabilitation, trust Mountainside Treatment Center. CLICK: http://mtsi.de/treatment or CALL 1-888-510-8852 (toll-free) • Benzodiazepines or benzos are part of a class of medications used for anxiety treatment. They may also be prescribed to treat seizures, migraines, and sleep disorders. Like opioids and alcohol, they are depressants that change the brain’s chemistry, slowing the central nervous system and promoting calmness in users. The most used benzos include Valium (diazepam), Ativan, Klonopin (clonazepam), and Xanax (alprazolam). Benzos are intended for short-term use and their efficiency only lasts for a couple of weeks. • In this video, you will learn everything you need to know about benzodiazepines, the risks and how you can overcome benzodiazepine addiction. READ THIS: https://mtsi.de/benzos • READ: • https://mtsi.de/benzos • https://mtsi.de/benzos • https://mtsi.de/benzos • Mountainside Treatment Center provides comprehensive, innovative and compassionate residential drug addiction and alcohol rehabilitation for individuals suffering with addiction. • Call 1-888-510-8852 (toll-free) for the most innovative and effective addiction treatment available. Mountainside Treatment Center is dedicated to providing highly individualized care for life-changing outcomes. • ===== • TRANSCRIPT • In the United States, about 30 percent of overdoses involve benzodiazepines, often referred to as benzos. Addiction specialists found that the frequency at which benzos were being filled rose approximately 37 percent from 1996 to 2013. • What are benzodiazepines? • Benzodiazepines are part of a class of medications used for anxiety treatment. They may also be prescribed to treat seizures, migraines, and sleep disorders. Like opioids and alcohol, they are depressants that change the brain’s chemistry. The most used benzos include Valium (diazepam), Ativan, Klonopin (clonazepam), and Xanax (alprazolam). • Why do people abuse benzodiazepines? • Because they are intended for short-term use, the effects that benzodiazepines have on an individual will lessen over time. Individuals often take more than prescribed to feel the effects they experienced when they started taking the drug. This can be a slippery slope into addiction. Others who start abusing benzodiazepines seek the drug illegally. When combined, benzodiazepines can intensify the effects of alcohol and other drugs, and so, many use it to achieve a stronger high. Others use benzodiazepines to come down from the effects of other drugs such as meth. • Regardless of the reason or drug, combining benzodiazepines with any other substances is not only dangerous, but often deadly. Benzodiazepine addiction can be a vicious cycle for those who try to abandon the drug because withdrawal symptoms include anxiety and panic attacks: the very outcomes users had hoped to alleviate in the first place. • Withdrawal symptoms for benzos mimic those of alcohol withdrawal. Some other side effects consist of hallucinations, seizures, psychosis, and suicidal thoughts. • While combining benzodiazepines with any drug is dangerous, mixing opioids and benzodiazepines is a particularly lethal combination. Because they are both sedatives that suppress breathing and undermine the brain’s ability to function, deadly overdoses are common when mixing the two. • Detox is the first step in treating benzodiazepine addiction. This allows the body to rid itself of all toxins, allowing it to begin to heal. However, it is important to remember that addiction is not solely physical and that the psychological impact it has also needs to be addressed. For this reason, it is important that those struggling with addiction continue onto either inpatient treatment or outpatient treatment. • ===== • CONNECT WITH US: • Official Website: http://mtsi.de/treatment • Facebook:   / mountainsidetreatment   • Instagram:   / mountainside   • Twitter:   / mountainside   • LinkedIn:   / mountainside-treatment-center  

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