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Waismann Method, thousands overcome drug dependence


     The Waismann Method has helped many opiate, and benzodiazepine dependent persons overcome addiction

Ask any narcotic or benzodiazepine drug dependent person what is one of the worst things about addiction they have experienced, and the answer that rockets back is withdrawals.

Categorically, one of the most avoid-at-all-cost “state-of-body, state-of-mind” conditions, withdrawal pains end up exclusively driving a drug dependent person in the direction of the nearest drug of choice. To avoid becoming not just sick, but super rotten sick from the savage withdrawal dragons breathing fire & brimstone within, the addict will do just about anything to sooth the beast. That is why many addicts going through detoxification using conventional methods end up relapsing relatively fast.


  Waismann Method has helped many
  addicts overcome opiate dependence

Patients are normally detoxified in a period of 3 to 5 days using clonidine, a blood pressure medication used to take the edge off of the rather large gorillas pounding on the addict’s back, and maybe some sleep medication that wouldn’t relax a gnat. But they are still sick, and often suffering from a bout of diarrhea so vicious you’d think your insides were rotting away. Plus, you’re power puking until the only thing coming up is dust, you’ve got a runny nose reminiscent of Niagra Falls, cramps so terrible it feels like a gang of metal workers have your intestines in a vice, and unrealistically expected to participate in a  psychological treatment method when brain, and body still screams for narcotics, or whatever drugs you were physically dependent on.

Is it any wonder then why drug dependent persons usually relapse shortly after detoxification, and/or treatment? Most are still battling the often unbearable residual withdrawal affects after discontinuance of the drug months later. When asked to meaningfully participate in the formulation of a master treatment plan with their therapist by disclosing deep seated emotional problems, the newly detoxed patient is still more interested in a fix than disclosing a lifetime of negative emotional experiences that just don’t quite seem to make it to the surface for observation anyway. The person’s mind is very much clouded from the sudden change in body/brain chemistry. The patient’s brain chemistry has either retreated to safer ground, or is working overtime as if a tsunami was rolling in.


Prescription drug abuse at epidemic levels

Enter a method for drug detoxification that has been around now for about 11 years, and is turning out to be the viable alternative to the standard practices being used to treat chemically dependent persons in the area of drug detoxification, as well as counseling because the patient may be more amenable psychologically to treatment “after” the procedure is performed.

Called the Waismann Method, it was developed by Israeli doctor Andre Waismann. The method was born out of Waismann’s military service in the Israeli army in the mid 80’s where he noticed the pervasiveness of narcotic addiction, and thereafter at neo-natal clinics where newborn babies were suffering from heroin withdrawal resulting from their mother’s addiction. At the time, methadone was being used to wean adults off of heroin, but babies could not be given the drug because it could cause brain damage.

The Waismann Method has been available in the US, and in particular, Beverly Hills, California, where I had a chance to interview a leader in the field, Dr. Michael Lowenstein.

Board certified in addiction medicine, pain medicine and anesthesiology, Dr. Lowenstein has peformed the Waismann Method for over ten years. His expertise and experience in treating chronic pain, and addiction have contributed to the continued advancement of the Waismann Method as a highly effective, safe, and humane treatment for opioid dependence.

Dr. Lowenstein’s current positions are: Co-Director, Waismann Institute, Private Practice, Pain Medicine Clinic, Medical Director, Specialty Surgical Center of Irvine. In addition, Dr. Lowenstein has experience from 2001-2007 as Medical Director – CompCare Pain Treatment Center. His education consists of a Doctorate of Medicine, 1984-1985, Loma Linda University School of Medicine, Loma Linda, CA, and Masters of Public Health, 1982-1983, University of California, Berkley, Berkley, CA. Dr. Lowenstein is also involved in post-graduate training, Fellowship – Anti-aging, Restorative and Regenerative Medicine American Academy of Functional Medicine.

Professional societies (past and present), Dr. Lowenstein belongs to are: American Society of Addiction Medicine, International Spinal Injection Society, North American Spine Society, Institute for Functional Medicine, American Association of Anti-Aging Medicine, Society for Interventional Pain Practitioners, California Society of Industrial Medicine and Surgery, Licensure/Certifications: American Board of Addiction Medicine – Board Certified, American Board of Anesthesiology – Board Certified, American Board of Anesthesiology - Added Qualification in Pain Management, American Board of Pain Medicine – Board Certified, American Board of Anti-aging Medicine – Board Eligible.

Clearly, Dr. Lowenstein’s credentials afford his patients the premium care they deserve in a field fraught with production line methods because caseloads are much too large, waiting lists the norm, and treatment much too short. With this method of detox, the patient is in therapy much sooner, with a clearer head, and ability to participate in their own rehabilitation, unlike most of those persons coming out of conventional detoxification units who are actually still quite sick from strong residual withdrawal symptoms.

One of Dr. Lowenstein’s area of special interest is understanding the effect of chronic pain, and opioid dependence on neurotransmitters, and utilizing nutritional, and hormonal supplementation as well as lifestyle changes to restore balance to the brains neurotransmitters.

What distinguishes this form of detox from others now in use is the time it takes, (the actual procedure is about 1½ hours), the use of “light”anesthesia, depending on the nature of the dependence, and the substantial reduction of withdrawal symptoms felt by the patient, which is a big plus for a drug dependent person who fears withdrawals like the plague.

With the questionable rate of success for other forms of detoxification, and treatment methods, another tool in the arsenal for fighting drug dependence is an asset rather than a liability.

In part 2 of this series, look for a description of the procedure, what it does physiologically, and other forms of detoxification, to give you a clearer picture of what this treatment process involves, including its costs, risks, and benefits.

In the flow...

For more information, visit The Waismann Method.

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Detoxifying and cleansing the human body

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, Detroit Substance Abuse Examiner

Michael is a metro Detroiter with a passion for helping individuals and their families understand issues with substance abuse. He is a recovering addict, former substance abuse counselor, paralegal, and is pursuing publication of the book he wrote, Crash Test Addict. You can reach him at...

Comments

  • The Dangerous method 2 years ago

    Rapid-Detox:
    Also called UROD (Ultra-rapid-opioid-detox) is an expensive procedure carried out in an ICU and the patient requires hospitalization. The patient is injected with very high doses of an opiate antagonist (naloxone) under general anesthesia or heavy sedation followed by a slow infusion of naloxone. Proponents of the procedure claim that complete accelerated detoxification is attained, the patient experiences no withdrawal symptoms, physical dependency is eliminated, and the psychological craving for drugs is greatly reduced. However, medical experts disagree. Some have called it malpractice and a fraud. In a comprehensive study published in the prestigious Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) in 2005 the scientists concluded, "Anesthesia-assisted detoxification should have no significant role in the treatment of opioid dependence" Google "JAMA Anesthesia-Assisted vs Buprenorphine" and read it for yourself.

  • labrat 2 years ago

    The Waismann Method is a HOAX. It may cure "drug dependence" by rapidly and dangerously eradicating opiate drugs in an addicts body...but opiate addiction is a set of obsessive behaviors and mental symptoms....it is not a disease that can be cured by simply removing drugs from a persons body. If anything, the person comes out of the procedure experiences an acute increase in the symptoms of addiction!

    Drug dependence is a purely physical state that is the result of long term medication/drug use. There are many drugs that cause dependence from steroids to antidepressants. Remove the drug, get the body to start producing it's natural chemicals again and dependence is "cured".

    Addiction can happen during dependence, but it does not always. Addiction is how someone feels and the things they do (use drugs) as a result of those feelings. Like a person with torettes who feels overwhelming anxiety unless they tic. Addiction doesn't go away because the drug goes away!

  • Lue 2 years ago

    I don't understand what you are both talking about..It absolutely works and you cant deal with the core of the addiction until the patient is off the opiates. So what is better, instead of treating the patient in a hospital with doctors and get them through the miserable withdrawal, you would prefer to have them suffering in a rehab with no real medical supervision or give them Methadone and keep them addicts the rest of their lives. Are you both working for the pharmaceutical companies?

  • Elliott 2 years ago

    Three years ago, my son was treated by Waismann for an opiate addition. His depression was diagnosed as well, and he was treated for that upon his return home. Currently he is graduating from college, without the stigma of being a drug addict, that part of his life far behind him, and leading a productive life. My entire family couldn't be more grateful.

  • marie 2 years ago

    Wow, this sounds amazing! My dad was "dependent" on Vicodin after a spine surgery, I wish I had known about this then.
    Too bad so many people have such a primitive mindset when it comes to addiction today. Hopefully more progressive and forward thinking people like Dr.Waismann can change this...

  • Author 2 years ago

    Very glad to see that people have benefited from this procedure. It is yet another tool in the arsenal against addiction.

  • mortysmate 2 years ago

    speaking from experience i can definately say the Waismann method is anything but a hoax..I underwent surgery about 9 years ago and was prescribed an opiod painkiller. while it may be true that "dependency" and addiction cannot be used interchangably, when discussing opiods i think it is fair to say there is a large percentage that are dependent as opposed to addicted. I would have done anything to stop my ever increasing habit, yet every time i tapered or used suboxone, the withdrawals were so bad they derailed my intentions. For many people who find themselves at the mercy of painkiller dependence, just a chance to be free of that curse is enough..Im sure addiction has myriad facets that should be tackled as a whole, and im also aware that the Waismann method offers many post procedure options such as councelling, group discussion etc to complement the detoxification. For some of us, though, just the chance to be free from the misery of dependency is enough

  • JK 2 years ago

    Concerning the medical experts and a study done...I advise you to go to JAMA website article2005;294:903-913 where you can read a bogus study done by Dr. Collins and Dr. Kleber, psychiatrists who have benefitted financially from Rickitt Benckiser (look about 2/3's of the way down in the article) where it states (exact wording) FINANCIAL DISCLOSURES: Dr. Kleber has served as consultant for and has received an unrestricted grant from Rickitt Benkiser, the manufacturer for Buprenorphine, for issues unrelated to this article. No other authors reported disclosures.Yeah right...this is a biased study if I ever saw one. If this study had life threatening complications with their anesthesia detox,they didn't know what they were doing! This procedure has to be performed by knowledgeable and experienced doctors that know how to perform an anesthesia detox. Not by a bunch of money hungry "paid off by drug companies" psychiatrists prescribing Suboxone/Buprenorphine which is a very addicting opiate

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