Prescription Stimulant Detox
Physician-supervised withdrawal from Adderall, Vyvanse, Ritalin, and other prescription stimulants
Prescription stimulant misuse — taking Adderall, Vyvanse, Ritalin, or Concerta at doses or frequencies beyond prescribed, or without a prescription — is increasingly common. When someone becomes dependent and stops abruptly, they experience stimulant withdrawal: a "crash" characterized by fatigue, depression, hypersomnia, and intense cravings. Dr. Agresti provides outpatient psychiatric support for safe, structured withdrawal from prescription stimulants — and evaluates whether underlying ADHD is contributing to misuse.
ADHD vs. Stimulant Misuse — A Critical Distinction
Many patients who misuse prescription stimulants have undiagnosed ADHD. They self-medicate an untreated attention disorder — and the "misuse" is actually their first effective treatment. Dr. Agresti's evaluation process distinguishes between stimulant use disorder and ADHD requiring appropriate medication management. If ADHD is identified, withdrawal is followed by proper evaluation and, if appropriate, a correctly dosed, monitored stimulant prescription.
Medications & Clinical Support
- Tapered dosing schedule — gradual reduction to minimize withdrawal severity
- Antidepressants — address the depressive crash during withdrawal
- Sleep support — managing hypersomnia during crash and rebound insomnia
- Non-stimulant ADHD alternatives — Strattera, Wellbutrin, Intuniv for appropriate candidates
- Anxiety management during withdrawal — hydroxyzine, buspirone as appropriate
Prescription Stimulant Withdrawal Timeline
Hours 12–24
Initial crash: fatigue, irritability, increased appetite, slowed thinking
Days 2–5
Peak withdrawal: severe fatigue, hypersomnia, depression, intense cravings, mental fog
Days 5–14
Gradually improving energy; persistent low mood and ADHD symptoms become apparent without stimulant masking
Weeks 2–4+
Resolution of acute withdrawal; ADHD evaluation and appropriate treatment planning
Why Outpatient Detox?
Prescription stimulant withdrawal is uncomfortable but not medically dangerous — making outpatient management appropriate for most patients. The primary risks are psychological: depression and relapse during the crash phase. Gradual tapering combined with psychiatric support medications makes outpatient withdrawal manageable. Many patients prefer to complete withdrawal at home while maintaining work and family responsibilities.
The Concierge Difference
During stimulant detox, you have Dr. Agresti's direct cell number. If depression becomes severe or you feel unable to cope, you call directly — not an answering service. This access is what makes outpatient detox safe for patients concerned about managing withdrawal at home.
24/7
Direct physician access
Private
No inpatient admission record
Complete
Detox + ADHD eval in one practice
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I still get ADHD treatment after stimulant misuse?
Yes. Many people who misuse prescription stimulants have genuine ADHD. After a structured withdrawal period and proper evaluation, appropriate ADHD treatment — including correctly dosed and monitored stimulant medications or non-stimulant alternatives — is often the right clinical decision. Dr. Agresti treats each patient as an individual.
Is Adderall withdrawal dangerous?
Prescription stimulant withdrawal is not medically life-threatening, unlike alcohol or benzo withdrawal. The primary risks are psychological — depression, impaired judgment during the crash, and relapse. Psychiatric supervision ensures these risks are managed appropriately.
Should I taper or stop cold turkey?
A gradual taper is generally preferred over abrupt cessation — it reduces the severity of the crash and makes sustained abstinence more manageable. Dr. Agresti designs an individualized taper schedule based on current dose, duration of use, and your clinical situation.