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ALCOHOL In General: Alcohol is certainly the oldest of the sedative-hypnotic agents having been used since the time of genesis. It is ingested to ease anxiety, tension and agitation and to lull the imbiber into a soporific state. Other than providing calories, alcohol has no nutritional value and with heavy use the person will slowly develop vitamin deficiencies and nutritional diseases. It is the second most widely used psychoactive substance in the world, caffeine being the first. Alcohol is not an aphrodisiac and low doses may appear to cause some loss of restraint but as Shakespeare said in Macbeth, ‘It promotes the desire, but it takes away the performance’. Mental expectations and the physical setting become progressively less important at increasing doses because the sedative effects increase and behavioural activity decreases. Alcohol affects the circulation and the heart; it dilates the blood vessels in the skin, producing a warm flush and a decrease in body temperature. Thus it is pointless and possibly dangerous to drink alcohol when one is exposed to cold weather. Overcoming addictions, whether drug, alcohol, gambling or overeating, always required accepting and living in a greater truthfulness. At the heart of every addiction was an anaesthetised old hurt, seeking to be released. Some chemical or self-destructive behaviour reinforced the lie and made it more difficult to correct. Accepting the painful truth, rather than running from it, was the beginning of sobriety. Nothing less succeeded. Michael Cohen. C.Psychol. 1 Pharmacology of Alcohol: Ethyl, alcohol – ethanol Psychoactive drug – a depressant. Main difference from other depressant drugs is that it is used primarily for recreational purposes. It is soluble in both water and fat and is diffused easily through biological membranes. It is absorbed easily in the gastrointestinal tract – mostly in the upper intestine due to its large surface area. Blood – brain barrier is freely permeable to alcohol almost immediately. Alcohol is freely distributed from a pregnant woman’s blood to the foetus. Foetal alcohol levels become those of the drinking mother. Alcohol can become detected in the amniotic fluid and in the baby’s blood during pregnancy and even on the baby’s breath at birth. 30% - 50% of all babies born to alcoholic mothers have serious birth defects – low intelligence, mental retardation, anatomical abnormalities etc. It was presumed that alcohol acted as a general depressant through nerve membranes and synapses but this theory has been replaced by newer concepts concerned with excitatory and inhibitory nerve receptors, which are affected, causing the physical dependence. Alcohol inhibits the release of acetylcholine in the CNS which is why it might contribute to impairment of cognition and memory. It can also cause the dopamine receptors to fire more often in certain areas of the brain. When one stops drinking alcohol, withdrawal is often accompanied by a prolonged period of hyperactivity and the possibility of seizure. Michael Cohen. C.Psychol. 2 Tolerance and Dependence: 1. Metabolic tolerance – this is where the liver increases its amount of drug metabolizing enzyme. The rate of metabolism of alcohol in the liver is unusual because it is independent of the concentration of alcohol in the blood; it is linear with time and hardly increased by raising the concentration of alcohol in the blood. 2. Neurons in the brain adapt to the amount of drug present. Side Effects and Toxicity: Liver damage is the most serious physiological long-term consequence. 85% of alcohol is metabolized in the liver. 75% of all deaths attributed to alcoholism are from cirrhosis of the liver. It is the seventh most common cause of death in the USA. It can cause destruction of the nerve cells in the brain resulting in dementia known as Korsacoff’s syndrome. Heavy drinking appears to increase the risk of certain cancers, as drinkers tend to smoke more and alcohol may promote tumour growth. Alcoholism: This is a relatively recent term and was not recognised as an illness by the medical profession until the late 1950s. Jellineck was the first to present the hypothesis that alcoholism is a disease. Alcoholism is a primary, chronic disease with genetic, psychosocial and environmental factors influencing its development and manifestations. The disease is often progressive and fatal. It is characterised by impaired control over drinking, preoccupation with the drug alcohol, use of alcohol despite adverse consequences, and distortion in thinking, most notable denial. Goodwin (1955) has suggested that a good deal of evidence now indicates that many, if not most, alcoholics do not have primary alcoholism. Their addiction is associated with other psychopathology, for example anxiety and stress disorders and including addiction to other drugs. Many individuals have used alcohol as a self-prescribing medicant to treat their primary disorder. Therefore dual diagnosis must always be presumed, until proven otherwise. Michael Cohen. C.Psychol. 3 Drugs used to treat Alcoholism: Benzodiazepines: When alcohol ingestion is stopped, it rapidly is metabolized, precipitating rapid withdrawal symptoms. It can be a very dangerous drug to withdraw from and substituting a longer-acting drug such as chlordiazepoxide (Librium) or diazepam (Valium) may allow the person to withdraw more gradually and therefore safely. Antabuse makes the person nauseous, can cause vomiting, flushes and generally feelings of being unwell. Most people cannot drink for 3 – 4 days after using this drug. Campral, anti-craving effect by modulating excitatory synapses operated by glutamic acid. This drug might be an effective adjunct to a psychosocial rehabilitation program. Naltraxone reduces the dopamernergic activity in certain parts of the brain. In General: Almost any ‘dependent drinker’ can stop drinking temporarily if given the safety of a medically supervised detoxification. However, the real challenge is to remain abstinent. Out-dated views are that defining the problem of addiction was a physical dependence and detoxification was seen as a principal treatment for addiction and unfortunately is still seen as an answer by the medical profession. Free the individual from the clutches of the drug by assisting them through withdrawal and the grip of addition was broken. A more contemporary view of addiction treatment was necessitated by the observation that most individuals who go through detoxification eventually relapse Michael Cohen. C.Psychol. 4