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What Should You Not Take With Diazepam?

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Diazepam is a central nervous system depressant that belongs to a class of drugs known as benzodiazepines. It also goes by the trade name of Valium. It works by calming the overall activity within the body and the brain. When taken with a prescription and under strict medical guidelines, diazepam is generally safe and treats anxiety disorders, panic disorders, sleep disorders, and seizures. While it is relatively safe, it does not mean it is fully harmless. When you take Diazepam in large doses, for long amounts of time, or in combination with other substances, Diazepam becomes increasingly dangerous. What Should You Not Take With Diazepam?

Mixing Diazepam with Other Central Nervous System Depressants

When you take Diazepam with other depressant drugs or substances, the risk for dangerous and even life-threatening side effects increases tremendously. This can include depressants like alcohol, opioids (both illicit and prescription), anti-anxiety medications, and sleeping pills. 

More About Mixing Diazepam with Other Central Nervous System Depressants

When more than one central nervous system depressant is mixed together, the person can experience increased confusion, decreased psychomotor coordination, slowed respiration, and increased sedation. All of these side effects are also signs of an overdose. While they can also be the signs of an overdose on just Diazepam alone, the effects will happen much quicker and be a lot more powerful when combined with other things. Mixing benzodiazepines and opioids is especially deadly and can lead to coma and death. 

Putting A Stop to Your Diazepam Use

The idea of going to treatment and starting a sober life in recovery can seem extremely overwhelming. After all, recovery is hard enough when just one drug is involved. But it is much harder to continue in a life of drug abuse. Just because it is unfamiliar or uncomfortable does not mean it is without reward. Getting into treatment as quickly as possible can be the difference between life and death, but it is also never too late for you to get the help you need. Once you decide the treatment is for you, you will need to start with medical detox in South Florida that offers multiple levels of care. Here you will receive help and encouragement from doctors, medical staff, and treatment specialists while you safely withdraw from the drugs.

Start Healing and Reach Your Sober Days at Evoke Wellness at Miramar

After benzodiazepines detox in South Florida is where the real work begins; now that you are free from the drugs in your body, you can better understand the causes behind your addiction and how to best treat them in one of our treatment programs at Evoke Wellness at Miramar. Treatment involved both one on one therapy and group therapy. You will be able to get a personalized treatment program to fit your needs best. Then, if you are ready ad willing to get sober, we are ready to help you do it.