Oxycodone is a prescription painkiller drug manufactured from an opioid compound found naturally in poppy flowers. It is classified by the Food and Drug Administration as a Schedule 2 substance, meaning it has a high potential for abuse and only used for a few strictly controlled medical purposes.
The drug is designed to ease pain from injuries, surgery, and general muscle discomfort by overloading the brain with the pleasure and reward chemical dopamine and weakening the body’s pain receptors. Over time, users will become tolerant to the effects and needed stronger doses to achieve the same pleasure and numbing “high”.
Eventually, the drug will oversaturate the brain’s levels of dopamine, so the body will cease producing its own naturally, resulting in the inability to experience pleasure from means other than the drug. Long term users will become indifferent to every day exciting activities, like sports or romance. This behavior can lead to devastating bouts of depression and anxiety apart from the drug.
Dependency can pressure chronic users to go to extreme and criminal steps to obtain oxycodone and potent forms of opioid. As individuals increase their substance dosage and potency, the side effects dramatically increase and can lead to overdose and death.






