Drugs We Detox

Buprenorphine, Codeine, Demerol®, Dextropropoxyphene (Darvocet®), Dihydrocodeine, Dilaudid®, Fentanyl, Heroin, Hydrocodone, (Vicodin®), LAAM, Lortab®, Methadone, Morphine, MS Contin, Opium, Oxycodone, Oxycontin, Percodan®, Roxanol®, Thebaine, Vicodin, and many more.
 
 

The Kaye Method of Ultra Rapid Opiate Detox is Modern Science applied to treatment for drug dependency. It's safe, painless, proven, effective, and compassionate .  Ultra Rapid Opiate Detox is done under general anesthesia.  We believe it should be performed only in a hospital Intensive Care Unit (ICU) by an Anesthesia provider who is specially trained in the procedure.   The Kaye Method of Ultra Rapid Opiate Detox is performed by Dr. Alan David Kaye MD, PhD, DABPM.   Dr. Kaye is Head of Anesthesiology at LSU School of Medicine New Orleans and Chief of Anesthesiology at two New Orleans-area full service, accredited hospitals where he performs the procedure in the hospital's Intensive Care Unit. He is also the inventor of the Kaye Method of Ultra Rapid Opiate Detox.

Experience Counts:   Dr. Alan David Kaye MD, PhD, DABPM, has been performing Ultra Rapid Opiate Detox since 2000.  He is the Founder and former Director of the Texas Tech Health Sciences Center Ultra Rapid Detox Center in Lubbock, Texas.  He brought his technology and expertise to LSU School of Medicine. Dr. Alan David Kaye MD, PhD, DABPM, has been performing Ultra Rapid Opiate Detox since 2000. He is the Founder and former Director of the Texas Tech Health Sciences Center Ultra Rapid Detox Center in Lubbock, Texas..

Conventional methods of detox are painful, usually ineffective, and potentially unsafe:  Conventional detox consists of “cold turkey” withdrawal, or the gradual weaning of the body off addictive drugs.  Both are usually painful and ineffective in the long run.  Statistics show a long term success rate of 10-12%.  They can also be dangerous because of the stress they place on the body and its organs.

The Kaye Method of Ultra Rapid Detox is safe, painless, and effective: The Kaye Method of Ultra Rapid Detox eliminates opiate drugs from the body and also eliminates the pain and discomfit common to conventional detox methods.  Why suffer through the pain and potential danger of conventional withdrawal when you can be detoxed safely, painlessly and effectively while you sleep under general anesthesia at the Kaye Clinic for Rapid Detox?  At the conclusion of the Kaye Method of Ultra Rapid Opiate Detox the Participant is 100% free of Opiate drugs and physiologically ready to succeed in a therapeutic Aftercare program.

The Kaye Method of Ultra Rapid Detox works at the most important level – the brain's Opiate Receptors: Drug dependency is a brain disease. Changes occur in the brain when one takes addictive drugs like opiates and others.  The human body produces natural opiates that are important for pain relief, pleasure, and a positive, upbeat attitude.  These natural bodily produced opiates are called endogenous opiates.  Endorphins are an example.  The body's endogenous opiates work on the brain's “Pleasure Center” to produce the pleasurable feelings like those associated with sex, and the “runner's high” some people get from exercise.  They're essential ingredients of a normal life.  When opiate drugs are abused, exogenous opiates that one puts into the body by injection, snorting, smoking, or pills, replace the natural endogenous opiates.  The body's production of natural endogenous opiates shuts down.

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Get Help with Opiate Addiction Now Call 504-305-9984 or 9956

This is a serious problem.  The body needs its natural (endogenous) opiates, but they're no longer available.  They've been replaced by the exogenous opiates (opiates put into the body by drug abuse).  Once these exogenous opiates get into the body, they're transported to the brain's Pleasure Center just like the body's natural opiates were when they were available.   The exogenous opiates begin to coat the Opiate Receptor neurons in the brain, and become the chemical that works on the brain's Pleasure Center.  When that happens, the person becomes “addicted” to the exogenous opiates he/she has been taking, and will eventually go into withdrawal if that opiate use is interrupted or stopped. 

Withdrawal is painful and it stresses the body and its organs.  A person addicted to opiates must either continue to use exogenous opiates or suffer the pain and discomfit of withdrawal until the body begins to once again produce its own natural endogenous opiates.  The replenishment process takes several days, during which the person undergoing withdrawal may be in intense pain and discomfit.  In addition, residue from the drugs the person had been taking remains on the brain's Opiate Receptors, and induces physical cravings for that drug. This is one of the primary reasons why conventional detox has such a low success rate. It doesn't remove this residue, and “physical' as well as psychological drug cravings continue to occur.

The Kaye Method of Ultra Rapid Opiate Detox flushes opiate drugs and drug residue out of the body.  Dr. Kaye performs the Kaye Method of Rapid Detox procedure in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). The detox Participant has the one-on-one attention of Dr. Kaye and the ICU specialists utilized by the Kaye Clinic for Rapid Detox .

The Kaye Method of Rapid Detox is safe, painless and effective.  The Participant is asleep under anesthesia while the detox and withdrawal occurs. Withdrawal is done safely and rapidly in hours instead of the days taken by conventional detox methods.  The Participant is 100% opiate free when he/she is awakened by Dr. Kaye.  He/she is kept overnight in the ICU, and upon discharge is given a prescription to help eliminate psychological cravings during the initial phases of the Aftercare recovery program, while the body is beginning to replenish its naturally produced endogenous opiates.

         If you or someone you know is considering Ultra Rapid Opiate Detox, we recommend you consider the Kaye Clinic for Rapid Detox for the procedure.  You will have the personal attention of Dr. Alan David Kaye MD, PhD, DABPM, Head of Anesthesiology at LSU Medical School New Orleans, and inventor of the Kaye Method of Ultra Rapid Detox.   You'll have one on one medical attention from Dr. Kayer.  You'll be treated with courtesy, kindness and respect; and will be in a caring, compassionate environment where your safety, comfort and well-being are the primary focus.

         Nora D. Volkow, M.D., Director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, says “Drug addiction is a brain disease that can be treated.”  Dr. Alan David Kaye and the Kaye Clinic for Rapid Detox provide the treatment necessary to eliminate the physical aspects of opiate drug addiction.

            Give us a call at 504-305-9984 or 9956.  We're here to help you begin the journey to long term recovery from opiate addiction.

Get Help with Opiate Addiction
The Kaye Clinic Ultra Rapid Detox Is The Best Choice

  1. Our Medical Director is the Head of a Medical School Anesthesiology Department.  Dr. Alan David Kaye is Head of the Department of Anesthesiology at LSU School of Medicine, New Orleans.  He's also Chief of Anesthesiology where he performs the Kaye Method of Ultra Rapid Detox.
  2. Only the Kaye Clinic has Dr. Alan David Kaye M, PhD, DABPM. (link to CV)
    • Dr. Kaye is Board Certified in both Anesthesiology and Interventional Pain Management, and is a Diplomate, American Board of Pain Management. 
    • He's the Head of the Anesthesiology Department at the LSU School of Medicine, and Chief of Anesthesiology where he performs Ultra Rapid Detox procedures. 
    • Prior to coming to LSU, he was Chairman and Program Director of Anesthesiology, and Founder and Director of the Ultra Rapid Detox Center at Texas Tech Health Sciences Center, Lubbock, Texas, where he developed and perfected the Kaye Method of Rapid Detox.
    • He is also a Research Scientist, and has published more than 500 book chapters, peer reviewed Manuscripts, and Abstracts on Anesthesiology, Pharmacology, Vascular Opiate Pharmacology, and Ultra Rapid Detox.  
    • Consumer Research named him an Anesthesiologist and Interventional Pain Management Doctor of the Year 2006-2007.
    • He is a member of the Texas Tech Health Sciences Center Anesthesiology Hall of Fame.
    • He was the winner of the Arizona State Rhodes Scholar Competition, and was the National Western Region Rhodes Scholar Competition Runner up.
    • He has conducted research studies on the Ultra Rapid Opiate Detox procedure and published the results in peer reviewed medical journals.
    • He is a caring, compassionate healer, who is loved and admired by his patients. 
  3. The Kaye Method Ultra Rapid Detox procedure is personally performed by Dr. Alan David Kaye MD, PhD, DABPM, where each Participant has one-on-one medical and nursing attention and support.
  4. Safety: All Rapid Detox Participants are given comprehensive testing the day before the Rapid Detox Procedure is performed and the Rapid Detox Procedure is performed in the Intensive Care Unit.

Pre-Procedure Assessment and Testing:

  • Medical History
  • EKG
  • Chest X-Ray
  • Toxicity Test
  • Liver Function Test
  • Pregnancy Test for Female

Other tests if considered necessary by Dr. Kaye.

Admittance to hospital:
Participants are admitted to the hospital's Intensive Care Unit(ICU) the morning of the Procedure, and remain in the ICU overnight Post-Procedure.

One on One Medical Staffing in ICU:
Participants receive the personal attention of Dr. Kaye and his Team during the entire time of the Procedure.

The Kaye Clinic people are caring, competent, and compassionate.  They're nonjudgmental.  They understand what you're going through and are with you every step of the way.

We're committed to helping our detox Participants succeed in long-term recovery.   We know that Detox is the first big step in a recovery program; and that people need help to maintain abstinence.  For that reason, we require that all Kaye Clinic detox candidates agree to participate in a follow-on Aftercare therapy program.  We'll help you find an experienced addiction-therapy specialist if you don't already have one when you contact us

Opiates Bind to the Brain's Opiate Receptors.  The Kaye Method of Ultra Rapid Detox cleans the Opiate Receptors. You have no physical drug cravings when you awaken from the anesthesia.

The key to total Detox is to remove the opiates from the body and clean the Opiate Receptors.

The Kaye Method does both --- while you sleep safely and painlessly under deep anesthesia.  Why would you want to Detox any other way?

Statistics

  • Every year nearly 2.2 million Americans use prescription painkillers for non-medical use. (i)
  • Among persons aged 12 to 49, the average age at first use of illicit pain relievers in 2005 was 21.2 years (see chart below).
  • In 2005, 4.7 million (2%) persons aged 12 or older used prescription-type pain-relievers non-medically in the past month.
  • In all adult age groups and some communities, prescription painkiller abuse exceeds cocaine and marijuana use
  • The largest number of recent initiates  (2.2 million) among abusers aged 12 or older occurs in non-medical use of pain-relievers.
  • Among persons aged 12 or older who used pain-relievers non-medically, 59.8% reported that the source of the drug used was from a friend or relative for free.
  • Another 16.8% reported they acquired the drug from one doctor.
  • Only 4.3% received the pain-relievers from a drug dealer or other stranger, and only 0.8% reported buying the drug on the Internet.
  • Non-medical use of prescription-type drugs among young adults aged 18 to 25 increased to 6.3% in 2005. This, due to an increase in pain-reliever use to 4.7% in 2005.
  • The largest number of recent initiates  (2.2 million) among abusers aged 12 or older occurs in non-medical use of pain-relievers.
  • Among persons aged 12 or older who used pain-relievers non-medically, 59.8% reported that the source of the drug used was from a friend or relative for free.
  • Another 16.8% reported they acquired the drug from one doctor.
  • Only 4.3% received the pain-relievers from a drug dealer or other stranger, and only 0.8% reported buying the drug on the Internet.
  • Non-medical use of prescription-type drugs among young adults aged 18 to 25 increased to 6.3% in 2005. This, due to an increase in pain-reliever use to 4.7% in 2005.

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