Pellet History - Overview
Pellets are pharmaceutical devices inserted under the skin that gradually release a medication
over time. The medication is naltrexone. It blocks the effects of heroin and other opiates.
It attaches to the brain where the opiates attach, blocking them so they don't cause euphoria.
If heroin is used, it passes out of the body with no apparent effect. There is no incentive to
continue using the drug.
The pellets have been used as an alternative to incarceration. It enables jails and treatment
centers to send patients out with more than an admonishment not to use drugs. It offers the
possibility of long term recovery. Naltrexone can protect people while they build a foundation
in twelve-step recovery, which teaches them how to live a life without drugs.
A short acting form of the drug, in pill form, has been available for many years. Its safety
and effectiveness has been approved by the FDA. However, compliance has always been a problem
with the pills. People addicted to drugs simply don't take the medication every day. It is felt
that dosing every several months will result in better compliance than daily dosing. Approval
is being sought for the long acting pellet. In the meantime the pellets will be available from
doctors who have been licensed to make them by Pellet Technologies, L.L.C. The doctors can then
implant them in the patients they feel will benefit from the naltrexone.
The pellets have been implanted in thousands of patients in the United States and many foreign
countries. It involves a simple procedure under a local anesthetic that just takes a few minutes.
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