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Post Acute Withdrawal Syndrome (PAWS)by Simon Olstein, MD, SACS, RYT; Medical Director, Scottsdale Treatment, Inc.; Board Certified in Addiction Medicine; American Society of Addiction Medicine Post Acute Withdrawal Syndrome (PAWS) is a group of symptoms that results from the combination of damage to the nervous system caused by alcohol or drugs and the stress of coping with life without alcohol or drugs. The severity of the symptoms of PAWS depends on two things: the amount of brain dysfunction caused by the addiction and the amount of stress experienced in recovery. The symptoms can begin one to two weeks into sobriety and usually grow to peak intensity over the next three to six months.
The damage is usually reversible, meaning the majority of symptoms will go away with time if proper treatment is received. But the adjustment doesn’t occur rapidly. Recovery from the nervous system damage usually requires six to twenty-four months with the assistance of a healthy recovery program.
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