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- Medications for Substance Use Disorders | SAMHSA
Medications for Substance Use Disorders Medications for Alcohol Use Disorder (MAUD) Medications for Opioid Use Disorder (MOUD) What is Buprenorphine? Buprenorphine is the first medication to treat opioid use disorder (OUD) that can be prescribed or dispensed in physician offices, significantly increasing access to treatment
- FDA Approves New Buprenorphine Treatment Option for Opioid . . .
The U S Food and Drug Administration approved Brixadi (buprenorphine) extended-release injection for subcutaneous use to treat moderate to severe opioid use disorder (OUD)
- Medical Breakthrough Offers Hope To Those Fighting Addiction
A new drug that helps people with a substance dependency detoxification —in five days—from opioids and alcohol without painful withdrawal symptoms recently completed a proof-of-concept
- Powerful new opioid could relieve pain — without addiction risks
DFNZ may also be used as a treatment for opioid addiction, as its therapeutic effects have proven comparable to methadone without presenting the same negative impact on the respiratory system
- Medications for Opioid Use Disorder - National Institute on . . .
Read more about medications for opioid use disorders Information on how to get treatment for opioid use disorder from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA)
- VCU researchers are developing a long-acting medication for . . .
In hope of providing more treatment options for opioid use disorder, the VCU research team reworked nor-levo-alpha-acetylmethadol, a metabolite of a previous FDA-approved opiate dependence medication, into a new formulation that could be used to help patients with opioid addiction
- AI model designs new treatment for opioid addiction
Currently, the standard drugs used to address opioid use disorder are themselves opioids, which adds to the stigma around addiction and makes accessing treatment challenging
- GLP-1RAs and opioid use disorder: a new frontier in addiction . . .
While medications such as methadone, buprenorphine, and naltrexone are FDA-approved for treating opioid use disorder, they remain underutilised, says Rong Xu, PhD, professor at Case Western Reserve University and an expert in addiction research
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