Nausea drug may aid alcoholism treatment.A drug that lowers the activity of serotonin and other chemical messengers in the brain may boost the effectiveness of psychological treatments for a severe form of alcoholism, at least over a short time period, a new study finds. Ondansetron, a medication currently prescribed to quell nausea and vomiting Nausea and Vomiting Definition Nausea is the sensation of being about to vomit. Vomiting, or emesis, is the expelling of undigested food through the mouth. in chemotherapy patients, helps to reduce drinking and foster abstinence among adults who developed alcoholism before age 25, report psychiatrist Bankole A. Johnson of the University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio San Antonio (săn ăntō`nēō, əntōn`), city (1990 pop. 935,933), seat of Bexar co., S central Tex., at the source of the San Antonio River; inc. 1837. and his colleagues. "We think we're dealing with a biological trait that creates a predisposition to early-onset alcoholism and perhaps other addictions," Johnson says. The researchers recruited volunteers seeking alcoholism treatment at either of two substance-abuse centers in Texas between 1995 and 1999. A total of 271 participants-many of them middle-age, white men--were assigned at random to receive one of three daily dosages of ondansetron or a placebo pill for 11 weeks. All volunteers also attended weekly group-psychotherapy sessions aimed at teaching them strategies to avoid alcohol use. About 60 percent of people in each treatment group completed the trial. During the study, alcohol consumption was established through self-reports and chemical analyses of blood and urine. All groups exhibited noticeable drops in alcohol intake by the end of treatment and a greater tendancy to abstain from abstain from verb refrain from, avoid, decline, give up, stop, refuse, cease, do without, shun, renounce, eschew, leave off, keep from, forgo, withhold from, forbear, desist from, deny yourself, kick ( drinking. Among the 161 patients with early-onset alcoholism, those who received ondansetron consumed less alcohol and spent more time abstinent than did those who got the placebo, Johnson's team reports in the Aug. 23/30 JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association is an international peer-reviewed general medical journal, published 48 times per year by the American Medical Association. JAMA is the most widely circulated medical journal in the world. . For example, volunteers taking the middle dose of ondansetron spent 70 percent of study days abstinent and imbibed an average of 1 1/2 drinks daily; those in the placebo group were abstinent 50 cent of the days and averaged nearly 3 1/2 drinks daily. Participants with alcoholism that began later in life exhibited no greater improvement on ondansetron than on the placebo. Ondansetron blocks the activity of serotonin directly, which leads to reductions in other neurotransmitters Neurotransmitters Chemicals within the nervous system that transmit information from or between nerve cells. Mentioned in: Bulimia Nervosa, Impotence, Pain, Withdrawal Syndromes , including dopamine dopamine (dōp`əmēn), one of the intermediate substances in the biosynthesis of epinephrine and norepinephrine. See catecholamine. dopamine One of the catecholamines, widely distributed in the central nervous system. . However, the physiological mechanism that creates a disposition to early-onset alcoholism remains unknown. Henry R. Kranzler, a psychiatrist at the University of Connecticut The University of Connecticut is the State of Connecticut's land-grant university. It was founded in 1881 and serves more than 27,000 students on its six campuses, including more than 9,000 graduate students in multiple programs. UConn's main campus is in Storrs, Connecticut. School of Medicine in Farmington, says the new results herald rapid progress in finding medications that help specific sets of patients with alcoholism. John S. Searles, a psychologist at the University of Vermont School of Medicine in Burlington, disagrees. He regards ondansetron's effects on alcohol use as "pretty small and inconclusive" compared with those elicited by group psychotherapy alone. Further research should track patients with early-onset alcoholism who get ondansetron without group psychotherapy, Searles says. The drug naltrexone naltrexone /nal·trex·one/ (nal-trek´son) an opioid antagonist used as the hydrochloride salt in treatment of opioid or alcohol abuse. nal·trex·one n. An endorphin and narcotic antagonist. , previously reported as promising for treating alcoholism (SN: 11/21/92, p. 341), has yet to make inroads inroads Noun, pl make inroads into to start affecting or reducing: my gambling has made great inroads into my savings inroads npl to make inroads into [+ among clinicians. |
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