A Pill to Cure Alcoholism?

A new treatment may offer hope to millions of people battling alcohol addiction

By Lindsay Chura

Posted: June 13, 2008

People struggling with alcohol addiction got some promising news this week: A team led by researchers at the University of Virginia Health System reported that the drug topiramate can lead to a reduction in heavy drinking. Topiramate is currently approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat seizures and migraine headaches. But doctors can prescribe it "off label" for alcohol dependence.

"Alcoholism is a treatable disease," says lead author Bankole Johnson, chairman of psychiatry and neurobehavioral sciences at Virginia. "Topiramate not only reduces the symptom of the desire for heavy drinking, but also improves the physical and psychological health of the people who take it."

The study, published in the June 9 issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine, is based on a 14-week nationwide clinical trial involving 371 male and female diagnosed alcoholics. The drug proved to be better than a placebo at reducing the craving for alcohol and did a better job of lowering liver enzymes, cholesterol, body mass index, and blood pressure-which reduces the risk of serious health conditions.A reduction in both cholesterol levels and blood pressure, for example, decreases the risk of developing heart disease. Topiramate may also lower the risk for the onset of cirrhosis, the scarring of the liver that is a leading cause of death in heavy drinkers.

One advantage of treatment with topiramate, Johnson says, is that it can begin even when patients are still heavily drinking. It also is already familiar to general practitioners. "This is not true of many other medications used to treat alcohol dependence, so they may be more willing to prescribe it," says Mark Willenbring, director of the Division of Treatment and Recovery Research at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, who was not affiliated with this study. "Most people with alcohol dependence never seek treatment," says Willenbring, "so it is important to find ways to make it available such that it is attractive, accessible, and affordable." He thinks topiramate has the potential to bring about a shift in the treatment of alcohol addiction similar to the sea change that occurred in treating depression after the introduction of Prozac in 1987 put help within easy reach.

Topiramate treatment was also associated with an improved quality of life: fewer sleep disturbances and a decline in obsessive thoughts about alcohol. On average, patients in the topiramate group experienced a 54 percent decline in their craving and obsessive thoughts about alcohol. This was compared with a 33 percent reduction in the placebo group. "That is what I think is very interesting about this study—that even without specific psychotherapy, individuals were able to reduce their heavy drinking," says Johnson.

Patients reported some side effects, including a numbness or tingling sensation, altered taste, weight loss leading to anorexia, and difficulty with concentration. Willenbring cites cognitive difficulty—most commonly manifested as having trouble finding words—as the most common reason patients decide to stop taking topiramate.

A range of behavioral based approaches offer another way for patients to overcome alcohol dependence, notes Jeffery Wilkins, vice chair of psychiatry and behavioral neurosciences at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and David Fiellin, an associate professor of medicine at Yale University School of Medicine. In addition to the traditional 12-step program of Alcoholics Anonymous, they include motivational enhancement therapy, and cognitive-behavioral therapy, which help people understand and change the destructive thought and behavior patterns that lead to relapse. Often, treatment combines various behavioral based approaches.

According to a 2006 report from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, published by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 18.2 million Americans ages 12 or older met the criteria for alcohol dependence or abuse between 2002 and 2004. Ortho-McNeil Neurologics, the manufacturer of topiramate, provided funding for this study.

My Son

I am a 70 year old Mum who's Son is an alcoholic,Im not very good with Computers,However when i get desperate i try to find something on the Internet.

I have just come across your site and it sounds good but I cant tell the difference between the genuine remedys and the non genuine.

My Son is 49 years old and is a Solicitor he manages his job quite well,but has no social life and very few relationship that are meaningful.

There must be someone out there that can help us,

Yours Sincerley

Mary Chesters

Mary Chesters @ Nov 08, 2009 05:03:53 AM

Mental, Physical, Spiritual

Apparently modern medecine centers around the treatment of symptoms rather than seeking to eliminate the cause. After all, medicine is big business today. There is much more money to be made by treating symptoms on an ongoing basis than by curing a disease. The article "A Pill to Cure Alcoholism?", by Lindsay Chura, states: "Topiramate not only reduces the symptom of the desire for heavy drinking, but also improves the physical and psychological health of the people who take it." This statement nor any other in the article mentions a cure as suggested in the title.

Alcoholism has long been known to be an incurable, progressive, terminal disease. The physiological definition of alcoholism, other than being identified by the symptom of heavy drinking (and its physical and psychological consequences) has been determined to be the production, in the brain of the alcoholic, of tetrahydroisoquinolone. (see http://www.samhouston.army.mil/hra/asap/docs/THIQ.doc) A "cure" therefore would most likely center on the elimination of existing THIQ in the brain of the alcoholic and the prevention of subsequent production of THIQ as the body processes alcohol, or blocking THIQ from neuro receptors, thus eliminating the addictive property of alcohol in the individual, making it possible to consume alcohol without addictive consequences. There is no indication in the article, nor anywhere else, that use of topiramate could acheive this.

Topiramate is credited with the following effects: "not only reduces the symptom of the desire for heavy drinking, but also improves the physical and psychological health of the people who take it.", also "lowering liver enzymes, cholesterol, body mass index, and blood pressure", and "may also lower the risk for the onset of cirrhosis, the scarring of the liver that is a leading cause of death in heavy drinkers." All these benefits attributed to topiramate are produced by the reduction in alcohol intake rather than being effects of the drug itself, so any method that reduces alcohol intake will produce the same health benefits.

"When the spiritual malady is overcome, we straighten out mentally and physically." (Alcoholics Anonymous)

I personally have recovered from alchoholism by becoming a member in the fellowship of, and by practicing the program of AA. I have not had to drink alcohol since April 20th 1999. I do not have to take medication and the remedy costs nothing. I am simply required to adopt a set of principles, spiritual in their nature, which if practiced as a way of life, can expel the obsession to drink, and enable the sufferer to become hapilly and usefully whole. The program of action, though entitrely sensible, was pretty drastic. It meant I would have to throw several lifelong conceptions out of the window. That was not easy. But the monent I made up my mind to go through with the process, I had the curious feeling that my alcoholic condition was relieved, as in fact it proved to be.

Bob S. of PA @ Oct 03, 2009 02:28:55 AM

Dont wase your time with Valium Kudzo works better

Hi All,

Don;t waste your time. Ive been on it for 2 years. I wont suggest any name brand becaude I wouldn't lie it either.

I am a raging alcoholic , but no matter. Buy Kudzo at the highest d. If you drank a lirer, you will have a sip. It completly does away with your withdrwals, and I have seen snakes, depression for 3 days whrer I could not get out of bed. From my third pill, I have not had a drink, went back to the gym, and because I was a drunk have not have a drink and although it was to late lost the love of my life.. For about $20 and 3 days it is well worth it. No side effects, and ive ben an alcoholic for 30 years and am afraid of cirrossis and death. I hope that this helps any lost people as I was 2 years ago. You can buy it at GNC, the viamin shoppe or the net.

God Bless to you all,

John

John of NY @ Aug 31, 2009 19:25:41 PM

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