EXPERT
Dr. C. Lord, MD
Addiction Medicine Specialist | Addiction Medicine
Dr. Clifton Lord (Fred) is Medical Director of Connecticut Valley Recovery Services in Windsor VT and the Acadia Health Comprehensive Treatment Center/ Opioid Treatment Program in West Lebanon, NH, providing evaluation and treatment of substance use and related disorders including FDA approved medications for opioid use and alcohol use disorder. CVAR also provides treatment for Hepatitis C, individual and group counseling and case management.
A 1978 graduate of the University of Vermont (now Larner) College of Medicine, he trained in General Surgery at Bridgeport Hospital (Yale University Affiliated Surgery Program), Orthopedic Surgery at the Brown University Combined Orthopedic Residency program (Rhode Island Hospital and Providence RI Veteran Affairs Medical Center) where he was a Haffenreffer Fellow in Surgical Sciences, and Orthopedic Oncology at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. After a 15-year career, he retired from active surgery and, after a brief hiatus in administration, completed the Addiction Medicine Fellowship at the University of Florida. He returned to Windsor in 2007 and established CT Valley Recovery Services, the precursor to the present practice.
Dr. Lord has been principal investigator and network/project director for several Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) and Healthcare and Rural Services Administration (HRSA) grants dealing with health information technology and network development in rural healthcare settings. He was the project director for a HRSA Rural Opioid Response (RCORP) grant (20GA1RH39550), to improve prevention and treatment of opioid use disorder in Windsor County, VT from 2020 to 2023. He serves as a preceptor for Addiction Psychiatry Fellows at the Geisel School of Medicine, where he is Clinical Assistant Professor of Psychiatry. He is also a preceptor and Adjunct Faculty for the Master of Physician Assistant Studies program at Franklin Pierce University.
Dr. Lord is a member and Fellow of the American Society of Addiction Medicine and a member of the American College of Academic Addiction Medicine. He is currently President of the Northern New England Society of Addiction Medicine
A 1978 graduate of the University of Vermont (now Larner) College of Medicine, he trained in General Surgery at Bridgeport Hospital (Yale University Affiliated Surgery Program), Orthopedic Surgery at the Brown University Combined Orthopedic Residency program (Rhode Island Hospital and Providence RI Veteran Affairs Medical Center) where he was a Haffenreffer Fellow in Surgical Sciences, and Orthopedic Oncology at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. After a 15-year career, he retired from active surgery and, after a brief hiatus in administration, completed the Addiction Medicine Fellowship at the University of Florida. He returned to Windsor in 2007 and established CT Valley Recovery Services, the precursor to the present practice.
Dr. Lord has been principal investigator and network/project director for several Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) and Healthcare and Rural Services Administration (HRSA) grants dealing with health information technology and network development in rural healthcare settings. He was the project director for a HRSA Rural Opioid Response (RCORP) grant (20GA1RH39550), to improve prevention and treatment of opioid use disorder in Windsor County, VT from 2020 to 2023. He serves as a preceptor for Addiction Psychiatry Fellows at the Geisel School of Medicine, where he is Clinical Assistant Professor of Psychiatry. He is also a preceptor and Adjunct Faculty for the Master of Physician Assistant Studies program at Franklin Pierce University.
Dr. Lord is a member and Fellow of the American Society of Addiction Medicine and a member of the American College of Academic Addiction Medicine. He is currently President of the Northern New England Society of Addiction Medicine
47 years
Experience
Dr. Clifton F. Lord, MD
- Windsor, VT
- University of Vermont College of Medicine
- Accepting new patients
No results found
Painful lumb on scrotal sac
You need a urologist, friend, not an addiction specialist. See your PCP

How is alcohol addiction treated?
There are many approaches. Psychotherapy ( outpatient, group including intensive outpatient, partial hospitalizationa and residential), peer support (e.g. alcoholics anonymous- READ MORE
There are many approaches. Psychotherapy ( outpatient, group including intensive outpatient, partial hospitalizationa and residential), peer support (e.g. alcoholics anonymous- don't knock it until you've tried it) and medication. Medication is used in less than 20% of people with Alcohol Use Disorder in the US, which is a shame. Meds like naltrexone, acamprosate and disulfiram (Antabuse) are FDA approved. Other meds like gabapentin, topiramate, baclofen are used "off label".
Can I take ashwagandha and phentermine together ?
Addendum- Apparently yes, they should not interact.
Alcohol effects
Alcohol doesn't interfer with absorption per se- but people who drink heavily tend to have poor diets and become deficient on that basis.\ recall that 1 "standard drink" (as you READ MORE
Alcohol doesn't interfer with absorption per se- but people who drink heavily tend to have poor diets and become deficient on that basis.\
recall that 1 "standard drink" (as you describe) or less per day defines "moderate drinking" and more than three per day or 7 per week defines "heavy drinking" for women. Alcohol isn't harmless.
recall that 1 "standard drink" (as you describe) or less per day defines "moderate drinking" and more than three per day or 7 per week defines "heavy drinking" for women. Alcohol isn't harmless.
3day emergency refill
Call your doctor- there are discount cards (Good Rx, for example) that can give you significant discounts on medications including buprenorphine.
My body
One dose? oxycodone is detectable by liquid chromatography/mass spectroscopy for 3-5 days after a single dose.
Was my ex ODing
Can't say for certain, of course since I wasn't there. However, you describe a pretty classic scenario of an overdose and If that is the case your daughter is in danger.
Anesthesia and Heroine/ Meth Addicts
A regular/heavy user of illicit opioids (and I doubt it's heroin, since that has mostly been replaced by fentanyl) will likely require more medication to retain anesthesia, and READ MORE
A regular/heavy user of illicit opioids (and I doubt it's heroin, since that has mostly been replaced by fentanyl) will likely require more medication to retain anesthesia, and will certainly require more pain medication afterwards.
Methamphetamine causes such significant bad effects on heart, brain and liver that complications may be more likley- need to be honest with whoever the anesthetist is.
Methamphetamine causes such significant bad effects on heart, brain and liver that complications may be more likley- need to be honest with whoever the anesthetist is.
How much is too much?
I thought I answered this before, sorry, I guess not. What you are drinking a day is the equivalent of 6 standard drinks (4 oz wine, 12 oz 6% beer or 1 1/2 oz of 86 proof spirits) READ MORE
I thought I answered this before, sorry, I guess not. What you are drinking a day is the equivalent of 6 standard drinks (4 oz wine, 12 oz 6% beer or 1 1/2 oz of 86 proof spirits) a day. This is the definition of heavy drinking and predisposes to all kinds of health problems. So if you keep it up, it's not doing you any good.
How can you help with my alcohol addiction?
See your PCP first. There are medications to help one through the withdrawal which, depending on your age and general health can be troublesome to dangerous. THEN- decide what READ MORE
See your PCP first. There are medications to help one through the withdrawal which, depending on your age and general health can be troublesome to dangerous. THEN- decide what you want to do. Counseling, peer support (12 step groups, SMART or Rational Recovery) are all variously effective especially when combined with medication e.g. naltrexone, acamprosate.
It's not easy, don't get discouraged. Good luck.
It's not easy, don't get discouraged. Good luck.
nicotine prescription
I cant answer that.....i dont know the laws in Australia
Inadvertent Xanax withdrawal symptoms?
Withdrawal symptoms should resolve when restarting the drug that is responsible. These symptoms might be something else. Contact your provider with this question.
Good luck
Good luck
Orthopedic
I have not practiced orthopedics in >20 years and am not comfortable answering questions like this. This is something you should definitely talk to your surgeon about as soon as READ MORE
I have not practiced orthopedics in >20 years and am not comfortable answering questions like this. This is something you should definitely talk to your surgeon about as soon as possible.
Best of luck
Best of luck
Cocaine and perindopril
cocaine is a chronotropic- affecting heart rate- and ionotropic- increasing strengh of contraction- drug for the heart muscle. It also constricts blood vessels- that's why ENT READ MORE
cocaine is a chronotropic- affecting heart rate- and ionotropic- increasing strengh of contraction- drug for the heart muscle.
It also constricts blood vessels- that's why ENT surgeons use it for topical anesthesia, because it decreases bleeding.
Faster heart rate +increased strength of contraction against increased resistenc (constricted blood vessels) equals elevated blood pressure. So, by using cocaine, your blood pressure med probably doesn't work and you're setting yourself up for stroke, heart attack, kidney failure, etc. \
It also constricts blood vessels- that's why ENT surgeons use it for topical anesthesia, because it decreases bleeding.
Faster heart rate +increased strength of contraction against increased resistenc (constricted blood vessels) equals elevated blood pressure. So, by using cocaine, your blood pressure med probably doesn't work and you're setting yourself up for stroke, heart attack, kidney failure, etc. \
Drug abuse
very rapid and very significant rise in blood pressure, into stroke territory.
Transitioning from fentanyl to methadone to Suboxone
Methadone is much safer than fentanyl and there is no issue at all with making that change. Frankly, I would not recommend initiating buprenorphine at this time. The risk of READ MORE
Methadone is much safer than fentanyl and there is no issue at all with making that change.
Frankly, I would not recommend initiating buprenorphine at this time. The risk of precipitating withdrawl while you are pregnant is very high and risks miscarriage or premature labor, depending on how far along you are.
You really should be stable on the methadone before you consider switching and at that, I would recommend waiting until after delivery to do so.
Frankly, I would not recommend initiating buprenorphine at this time. The risk of precipitating withdrawl while you are pregnant is very high and risks miscarriage or premature labor, depending on how far along you are.
You really should be stable on the methadone before you consider switching and at that, I would recommend waiting until after delivery to do so.
Clonidine for withdrawal?
First- understand that, since I do not know your wife and have no established medical relationship with her, nothing i say can be taken as medical advice and I will not give any. That READ MORE
First- understand that, since I do not know your wife and have no established medical relationship with her, nothing i say can be taken as medical advice and I will not give any.
That said, in general terms, 0.1 mg of clonidine twice a day is on the low end for opioid withdrawal. He may have prescribed that for fear of causing a severe drop in blood pressure when she stands up. Again, not knowing the circumstances, I can't say for sure. If you can't reach him, best bet is to take her to the ER- there are other meds that are helpful with opioid withdrawal and she can be evaluated for that.\
Good luck.
That said, in general terms, 0.1 mg of clonidine twice a day is on the low end for opioid withdrawal. He may have prescribed that for fear of causing a severe drop in blood pressure when she stands up. Again, not knowing the circumstances, I can't say for sure. If you can't reach him, best bet is to take her to the ER- there are other meds that are helpful with opioid withdrawal and she can be evaluated for that.\
Good luck.
Hydrocodone withdrawal?
Opioid withdrawal (I assume that's the issue since he's been on these meds for 15 years and is now without) is a potentially dangerous thing in older people, especially with coronary READ MORE
Opioid withdrawal (I assume that's the issue since he's been on these meds for 15 years and is now without) is a potentially dangerous thing in older people, especially with coronary artery disease.
Many emergency departments now have programs where they will evaluate a patient for opioid withdrawal and if appropriate start medication with a referral to a provider who can provide ongoing treatment. It sounds like he is physically dependent, no necessarily "addicted", but that needs to be looked into.
Good luck
Many emergency departments now have programs where they will evaluate a patient for opioid withdrawal and if appropriate start medication with a referral to a provider who can provide ongoing treatment. It sounds like he is physically dependent, no necessarily "addicted", but that needs to be looked into.
Good luck
Can cannabis addiction be fixed?
No, but it can be treated and put into remission. Good for you for recognizing that marijauna is addictive. There are no evidence based medication treatments but there are psychosocial READ MORE
No, but it can be treated and put into remission. Good for you for recognizing that marijauna is addictive. There are no evidence based medication treatments but there are psychosocial treatment modalities that can help. Best to call your local community mental health organization and ask about substance use counseling. Good luck.