Pubdate: Mon, 19 Nov 2007 Source: Daily Camera (Boulder, CO) Copyright: 2007 The Daily Camera. Contact: http://www.dailycamera.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/103 Author: Cindy Sutter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) Better Living Through Medicine: NEW WAVE OF ADDICTION TREATMENT IS PHARMACEUTICAL It sounds too good to be true. A patient walks into his doctor's office and admits he's been drinking too much or tells the doctor he wants to quit smoking. The doctor writes a prescription. The patient drinks less or throws away the cigarettes. Such a scenario is not likely in the near future, if ever, but researchers are beginning to tease out the brain chemistry of addiction -- or at least find drugs that allow them to tinker with the neurochemical machinery of substance abuse. A October study in the Journal of the American Medical Association is the latest to offer the tantalizing possibility that pharmaceuticals could eventually play a significant role in the treatment of addiction. In the study of 371 men and women, those receiving the anti-seizure drug topiramate, brand name Topamax, along with a weekly psychosocial treatment, were more likely to achieve 28 or more days of not drinking heavily or 28 or more days of abstinence than those receiving a placebo. The drug is believed to work by blocking pleasure receptors in the brain, making drinking less enjoyable. Another drug, naltrexone, brand names Revia and Depade and extended release form, brand-name Vivitrol, works in the same way. A drug to treat cigarette smokers, varenicline, brand name Chantix, is similar, taking away the neuro-rewards for smokers. In animal studies with alcohol-addicted rats, the drug has also shown promise as a treatment for alcohol addiction. Other drugs such as Zyban for smoking and Campral for alcohol are prescribed to deal with nicotine and alcohol cravings. They represent a different approach from older replacement drugs such as the nicotine patch for smokers or methadone for heroin addicts. They also are different from aversion therapy such as disuliram, also known as Antabuse, for alcoholics. And several new addiction drugs are in the pipeline. "Medication development is one of the top priorities of the National Institute on Drug Abuse," says Dr.Christian Thurstone, an assistant professor at the University of Colorado and Denver Health Sciences Center. But, he cautions: "I think medication will never be the sole treatment for addiction. Addiction produces a lot of wreckage in people's lives that can't be dealt with by medication alone." Thurstone, who treats adolescents ages 12 to 19 for addictions, most prominently marijuana use, smoking and alcohol addiction is currently writing a grant to study the effects of Chantix on both cigarette and marijuana smoking. He says studies have shown very encouraging results for Chantix in smoking cessation. "It's double the effect of Zyban and quadruple the effect of a placebo," he says. "It decreases craving, decreases withdrawal, decreases the rewarding effect. If they do relapse and smoke, it decreases the pleasurable effect." However, he says, studies thus far have excluded people with other problems such as depression and anxiety, which frequently occur at the same time with nicotine addiction. And the smoking studies have excluded people with other types of addiction. "It's not clear what will happen in the real world," he says, where addictions and psychological problems often cluster together. And alcohol and drug addictions, with their destructive effect on work, relationships and other areas of an addict's life, are more complicated to treat than smoking. "An active alcoholic is like a bull in a china shop. Even after removing the alcohol, you still have to clean up the mess," says Sara Milmoe, a psychotherapist and certified addiction counselor in the recovery program at Mapleton Center in Boulder. She says alcoholism is an all-encompassing illness. "It's not just the physical piece. It's not just the emotional piece or the spiritual piece. The whole self is involved. To have true sobriety, you have to address all these areas in your life. There are certainly some folks who stop drinking. Their lives don't drastically change if they don't address the other things, too." In rehab circles, such a person is known as a dry drunk, which Milmoe defines as "all the behavior without the excuse." She worries that alcoholics could get the message that drugs would allow them to drink in moderation, an idea that most recovery professionals do not accept. She says alcoholics often rationalize, justify and deny the extent of their problem so they can keep using alcohol. "The alcoholic voice will look for any available back door to keep (drinking) going. It wants to be fed. It will destroy everything in its path, including family, job and self-esteem." Then there's the seemingly paradoxical notion of taking one substance to quit taking another. InnerBalance in Fort Collins offers an approach to addiction treatment called biochemical restoration. The center's treatment works on brain chemicals, but with supplements, vitamins and diet rather than prescription drugs, after extensive testing. Clinic Director Joe Eisele says hypoglycemia is an extremely common in alcoholics after years of drinking. The treatment seeks to fix chemical imbalances and includes social and spiritual support. Eisele says he regards many medications that work on brain chemistry as just another type of potentially problematic drug. "Sometimes it takes two months to come off an antidepressant," he says. "To me, that's an addiction." Those open to a drug therapy in conjunction with other talk therapy, say that a medical approach may lead to less stigma for addictions and the potential benefit that a person could seek treatment earlier in the addictive process. "I think it will enable us to start treating in an earlier stage," Thurstone says. "People typically recognize there is a problem before they hit rock bottom. They try to stop or use in moderation on their own. Increasing access to treatment (could) help people get treatment earlier." That said, a pill will likely never be the only treatment to fix the complex web of problems caused by addiction. "Everything in medicine has a biological, psychological and social (component) to it," Thurstone says. "There are genetic reasons why someone might be an addict. There (could be) psychological reasons because of a co-occurring anxiety. There's the social, too. You're more likely to use a substance if your friends are using as well." Research can perhaps shed light on all three. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake