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Several Meds Can Help People Quit Drinking: Study

But these drugs are rarely prescribed for people who abuse alcohol, experts say


WebMD News from HealthDay

Preliminary study suggests sugary sodas help

By Steven Reinberg

HealthDay Reporter

TUESDAY, May 13, 2014 (HealthDay News) -- A new review finds that several drugs can help curb the desire to drink alcohol, but the researchers note that these medications are rarely prescribed.

Acamprosate (Campral) and naltrexone (Revia), along with support from groups such as Alcoholics Anonymous or psychological counseling, can be useful tools to help people stay away from alcohol, the review authors report.

"Most people with alcohol use disorders aren't getting any treatment, and only about 10 percent are getting a medication as part of their treatment," said lead researcher Dr. Daniel Jonas, an assistant professor of medicine at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Two other drugs, nalmefene (Selincro) and topiramate (Topamax) also can help patients stop drinking, he said. Nalmefene is approved for pain relief and topiramate is approved to prevent seizures, but they are also used "off-label" to treat alcohol abuse.

Part of the reason these medications aren't used that much is that doctors aren't sure there are drugs that work, Jonas said. "But we do have treatments that work, and we should be using them more than we are," he added.

Jonas noted that these drugs should be used along with other treatments.

"We don't know if they should be used alone. They are always studied in conjunction with a psychological intervention, whether it's AA or cognitive behavioral therapy. The standard of care is that everyone should do one of those things and then you would add medication," he said. "When you add medication, you get added benefit."

The report was published May 14 in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality funded the research.

Dr. Katharine Bradley, a senior investigator at the Group Health Research Institute in Seattle and co-author of an accompanying journal editorial, said several effective medications are available to treat alcohol use disorders.

However, these medications are often not offered to patients seeking treatment for these disorders, she said.

Unlike the older medications for alcohol abuse, these newer drugs don't make people ill if they drink, Bradley explained.

"Instead, newer effective medications for alcohol use disorders address the underlying biology of addiction to alcohol, and make people less likely to drink or less likely to drink heavily if they do drink," she said.

Patients fighting alcoholism should expect, or ask, for information about medications that could help them in their battle, Bradley said.

"The decision of which alcohol treatment to choose should be the result of discussions between patients and their clinicians that take into account patient values, preferences and goals," she said.

For the new review, Jonas' team reviewed 122 studies that evaluated acamprosate, naltrexone or both. The researchers then calculated the number of people who would have to be treated with a drug to see the benefit in a single patient.

The researchers found that 12 patients would have to be given acamprosate to see a benefit from the drug in one patient. For naltrexone, it would be 20 patients.

There haven't been any head-to-head trials to see if one drug is more effective than the other, Jonas said.

For naltrexone, the researchers didn't find an association with return to some drinking or heavy drinking, but they did find an association with reduction in the number of heavy drinking days.

Alcoholism can cause damage to the liver, brain and other organs and may increase the odds of dying early threefold, the researchers said.

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Several Medications Can Help People Quit Drinking: Study



Most People Have Unwanted Thoughts, International Study Finds






News Picture: Most People Have Unwanted Thoughts, International Study FindsBy Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter

FRIDAY, May 9, 2014 (HealthDay News) -- Do you ever feel a bit tortured by the idea that you left the iron on or caught a dread disease in that dirty restroom? Ever have a random thought about hurting someone even though you're not a violent person?

You're far from alone.

A new study reports that many college students around the world routinely have these kinds of "intrusive" worries -- even if they don't have obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD).

The findings suggest it's not the thoughts that are the problem for people with OCD but the way they react to them, said study lead author Adam Radomsky, director of the Center for Clinical Research in Health at Concordia University, in Montreal.

"Almost everyone has these kinds of thoughts. They're normal, and they're a part of being human," Radomsky said. For people who suffer from OCD, this knowledge "can be incredibly helpful to change the meaning that they ascribe to the intrusive thoughts," he said.

About 1 percent of adults in the United States have suffered from OCD within the past 12 months, and about half of those -- one in 200 -- are classified as severe, according to the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH).

On average, people develop OCD at age 19, according to the NIMH. People with the condition can develop two types of symptoms, sometimes together. They can suffer from obsessive thoughts, like a broken record in their head, based on fears like contamination from germs. Or they may develop compulsions, such as endlessly checking a faucet to make sure it's off.

Researchers in the Western world, particularly in English-speaking countries, have shown that so-called intrusive thoughts are common and not just found in people with OCD. "We were interested in knowing whether this applies in other cultures," Radomsky said. "Is it fair to say that humans experience these intrusions?" Or just those with OCD?

The study authors gave surveys to 777 college students in 13 countries across six continents: Argentina, Australia, Canada, China, Iran, Israel, Italy, France, Greece, Sierra Leone, Spain, Turkey and the United States.

Almost 94 percent of the students said they'd had unwanted and intrusive thoughts during the past three months. "For most people, it was more than once," Radomsky said.

The surveys defined intrusive thoughts as having to do with subjects like contamination (worrying about germs, for instance), aggression (such as thinking about hurting someone else), and doubt.

An expert who praised the new study said people with OCD carry these thoughts further.

"The difference between individuals with OCD having a violent thought -- for example, thinking of pushing someone in front of a car -- is that they worry about the fact that they have the thought: 'What does this mean? Why am I thinking this? Does this mean I might actually do it?'" said Jeff Szymanski, executive director of the International OCD Foundation.

By contrast, he said, someone without OCD might respond by thinking the thought was peculiar but go on with their day.

Why would evolution give humans the ability to have fearful and unwanted thoughts? It may have something to do with people's natural ability to multitask and "think all sorts of things," study author Radomsky said.

The study acknowledges several caveats that could affect the reliability of its findings.

For one, the surveys were taken in different countries with different cultures and languages, potentially making it hard to directly compare the responses. Also, the survey questions may not have turned up an accurate number of intrusive thoughts among the participants. And the study only looks at college students, not older or younger people.

The study authors call for more research to confirm the findings and discover how they compare with scientific theories about OCD.

The study appeared in the Journal of Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders.

MedicalNews
Copyright © 2014 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

SOURCES: Adam Radomsky, Ph.D., co-editor, Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, and director, Center for Clinical Research in Health, and professor, department of psychology, Concordia University, Montreal; Jeff Szymanski, Ph.D., executive director, International OCD Foundation, Boston; Journal of Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders





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