Several laboratory tests can be used to diagnose alcohol abuse and evaluate the presence of medical problems related to drinking. These tests include:
The results of these tests may not be accurate if the patient is abusing or dependent on other substances.
Because alcoholism is a complex disorder with social and occupational as well as medical implications, treatment plans usually include a mix of several different approaches.
Most drugs that are now being used to treat alcoholism fall into one of two groups: those that restrain the desire to drink by producing painful physical symptoms if the patient does drink; and those that appear to reduce the craving for alcohol directly. Several medications in the second category were originally developed to treat
ALCOHOL-SENSITIZING MEDICATIONS The most commonly used alcohol-sensitizing agent is disulfiram (Antabuse), which has been used since the 1950s to deter alcoholics from drinking by the threat of a very unpleasant physical reaction if they do consume alcohol. The severity of the disulfiram/ethanol reaction, or DER, depends on the amount of alcohol and disulfiram in the blood. The symptoms of the reaction include facial flushing, rapid heart beat, palpitations, difficult breathing, lowered blood pressure, headaches, nausea, and vomiting.
A DER results when the drinker consumes alcohol because disulfiram inhibits the functioning of an enzyme called aldehyde dehydrogenase. This enzyme is needed to convert acetaldehyde, which is produced when the body begins to oxidize the alcohol. Without the aldehyde dehydrogenase, the patient's blood level of acetaldehyde rises, causing the symptoms associated with DER.
Another alcohol-sensitizing agent is calcium carbimide, which is marketed in Canada under the brand name Temposil. Temposil has been used clinically although it has not been approved by the FDA for use in the United States as of 2001. Calcium carbimide produces physiological reactions with alcohol similar to those produced by disulfiram, but the onset of action is far more rapid and the duration of action is much shorter.
ANTI-CRAVING MEDICATIONS One medication that has been studied in recent years for the treatment of alcoholism is naltrexone, which appears to reduce the craving for alcohol. In addition, naltrexone, which is sold under the brand names Trexan and ReVia, appears to cause few side effects. One 1992 study suggested that naltrexonetreated alcoholics who did have one or two drinks were less likely to continue drinking. Naltrexone has been the subject of a number of clinical trials in the United States; as of August 2000, 10 out of 30 NIH-sponsored clinical trials were studies of naltrexone. On the other hand, a review of medications presented to the National Institute on Alcohol and Alcohol Abuse (NIAAA) in November 1999 concluded that the effectiveness of naltrexone in the treatment of alcoholism appears to be limited.
An anti-craving drug that is presently approved for use in the European Community, acamprosate (calcium acetyl-homotaurinate), has no psychotropic side effects nor any potential for abuse or dependence. Although acamprosate is being used in clinical trials in the United States as of 2000, its effects are unclear. It appears to reduce the frequency of drinking, but its effects on enhancing abstinence from alcohol are no greater than those of naltrexone. In addition, acamprosate does not appear to enhance the effectiveness of naltrexone if the drugs are given in combination.
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Author Info: Rebecca J. Frey PhD, The Gale Group Inc., Gale, Detroit, Gale Encyclopedia of Genetic Disorders Part I, 2002 |