Device helping opioid and heroin addicts through withdrawal symptoms


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SALT LAKE CITY — Freedom from opioid and heroin addiction can be hard to achieve, but a groundbreaking device could help addicts get off those drugs without all the pain and agony of withdrawal symptoms.

It's called the NSS-2 BRIDGE. It's fitted behind the addict's ear as they go through withdrawal. According to a physician assistant at Odyssey House, a substance use treatment provider, the device has already helped 10 opioid addicts, despite a lot of initial skepticism.

Randy Burton, a former Utah heroin addict, was the first person in Utah to try the device.

“I’ve used pretty much every substance I could get my hands on,” Burton said. He said he got hooked on OxyContin about a decade ago, which led to heroin use. “That societal anxiety was really subsided by the drug use.”

The device, which costs $595, fits behind the ear and sends electrical impulses to the brain and branches of nerves. It has been cleared by the FDA to use to reduce the symptoms of painful opioid withdrawals.

Burton tried to kick his heroin addiction more than a dozen times over the last decade, but he could never make it through the shakes, nausea, chills and anxiety of withdrawals.

He said he remembers "not being able to think about literally anything else but trying to get high."

A physician's assistant with Odyssey House first put the BRIDGE on Burton two months ago. Once the device was placed behind his ear and started giving electrical impulses, Burton's heart rate dropped within minutes.


I was in full-blown withdrawals. They put it on. Within 30 minutes, I wasn’t detoxing at all. I had no feeling of anxiety.

–Randy Burton, former heroin addict


“I was in full-blown withdrawals,” Burton said. “They put it on. Within 30 minutes, I wasn’t detoxing at all. I had no feeling of anxiety.”

While all of his physical symptoms from the withdrawal were gone within 30 minutes, the drugs had not cleared his system. But, he said, he didn’t feel like using drugs.

“It was a night-and-day difference with how I felt,” Burton said. “I was ready to get sober once they put this on.”

Within an hour, symptoms of the withdrawals were gone.

The device "bridges that gap from being hopeless and homeless and really desperate for anything, to being able to actually wake up and show up for my life,” Burton said.

He said the severity of withdrawal keeps the majority of addicts from trying to get clean in the first place. Worn for five days, the BRIDGE helps addicts through the physical pain so they can start the emotional and mental work of recovery. Right now, he’s focusing on long-term sobriety and rebuilding important relationships.

Randy Burton as physician assistant Danele Cebrowski discusses the NSS-2 BRIDGE in Salt Lake City on Monday, March 12, 2018. (Photo: Sean Estes, KSL TV)
Randy Burton as physician assistant Danele Cebrowski discusses the NSS-2 BRIDGE in Salt Lake City on Monday, March 12, 2018. (Photo: Sean Estes, KSL TV)

Physician assistant Danele Cebrowski said she was skeptical at first, but “with every BRIDGE that I’ve placed, I’m no longer a skeptic. It’s amazing.”

She said typical opioid or heroin withdrawals last several days to a week; symptoms include excruciating pain, nausea, chills and sweating. Some require hospitalization.

With this device, patients notice anxiety relief in the first 30 seconds.

“They are done with their detox,” Cebrowski said. “They’re not sitting screaming in a bed, holding their guts, having diarrhea, having vomiting.”

She said the reason people relapse is because they cannot endure the agony of the withdrawal.

“Getting through withdrawal is the hardest initial part,” she said. “It’s what keeps my patients back from staying sober to completing sobriety programs."

While it does not eliminate the risk of a relapse, it helps the patient get started on immediate sobriety so they can have hope for long-term sobriety.

“With this, the patient can be comfortable. It’s not physical agony and torture for them,” Cebrowski said.

She thinks products like this will become standard in helping opioid and heroin addicts go through withdrawals across the country.

But there is a downside. It doesn’t help with other substances that individuals may be addicted to.

Contributing: Viviane Vo-Duc

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