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For anyone you know who is struggling with alcohol - really hopeful article

How the author used the Sinclair method in conjunction with Naltrexone to fix her drinking problem. I wish this was more better known

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by Anonymousreply 30September 19, 2024 2:59 AM

THREE KEY FACTS

Naltrexone, an opioid antagonist, helps reduce alcohol cravings, with a near-80% success rate.

The Sinclair Method uses naltrexone to break the association between alcohol and its rewarding effects.

Despite its effectiveness, naltrexone remains under-prescribed due to regulatory challenges and a lack of awareness.

Annabel Fenwick Elliott is a British freelance writer and editor based in England with a diverse career background in lifestyle, travel, news, fashion, advertising and publishing.

OPINION

Am I an alcoholic? It’s a question I’ve asked myself many times over more than a decade. That alone is enough for most addiction counsellors to confirm that yes, I probably fulfil the criteria. Along with an estimated 10 million adults in England who regularly exceed Government guidelines on alcohol consumption, and a further 600,000 who are dependent on it.

Until recently, I hadn’t even heard of naltrexone, the drug that would solve this for me – much like the weight loss benefits of the Type 2 diabetes medication Ozempic. Or the Sinclair Method, which uses this pill in direct contradiction to the traditional abstinence model promoted by Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), because it actually requires you to keep drinking; rewiring the neural pathways in your brain as you do, until your relationship to booze fundamentally changes.

But back, first, to the extent of my former drinking problem. Lest you assume it was a relatively tame case, here are some of the things I have done that would classify me as alcoholic. Regularly exceed the recommended allowance, as per the NHS, of 14 units (or six glasses of wine) a week. Blacked out many times. Been dishonest about my drinking. Had a dose of “hair of the dog” in the morning to stave off withdrawals. Snuck vodka onto a plane in a water bottle. Sipped wine in the cubicle of a public bathroom.

These are examples taken from phases of heavy drinking. Before I became a mother, I alternated between knocking back a bottle of chardonnay every night after work and going weeks without any at all (white knuckling, as it’s known in sobriety speak). Indeed, I long ago came to the reluctant conclusion that I couldn’t moderate. Or rather, I didn’t want to. I was either in a situation where I could drink as much as I liked (on holiday, at a party, or post-parenthood, not in charge of my toddler) or I abstained entirely.

I had no interest in having “a glass of wine here or there”. If I couldn’t consume enough to reach my sweet spot – a cosy corner of my otherwise chaotic brain where the blinds come down, the sirens muffle, and all my worries slip quietly from the room – then I didn’t wish to partake at all. Because it requires at least a bottle of wine to unlock that cave (a quantity that has crept upwards over the years); anything less felt akin to having an itchy nose but not quite being able to follow through on a sneeze. Torment.

by Anonymousreply 1September 18, 2024 2:55 AM

I didn’t want to be like this. So when I read about a medication that has a near 80% success rate in clinical trials at getting patients to drastically reduce or stop their drinking altogether, I was intrigued. This figure, for context, compares with current abstinence-based rehabilitation methods that yield success rates of less than 15%, according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) and the World Health Organisation (WHO).

When I discovered, first through research and then from experimenting with it myself, that this pill works, in such an astoundingly simple way – like ibuprofen for headaches – I was baffled as to why it isn’t common knowledge.

Naltrexone is an opioid antagonist that blocks the dopamine reward you get from alcohol. It doesn’t reduce any of its other effects, so you will still feel “drunk” – it just won’t be rewarding. It doesn’t work solely on alcohol, but any stimulus that produces an addictive rush. I found that it reduced my craving for junk food, too, which is why it is also added to certain weight loss medications.

Taken under the guidance of the Sinclair Method – more on this in due course – at least an hour before drinking alcohol, naltrexone will over time (in my case, within a matter of days) break the association between the taste of alcohol and the rush that makes it so moreish.

It is not a new drug; it was first approved in 1984. It’s not expensive; costing between £1 ($2.12)and £3 a pill. There are few side effects (for me, there were none). It works on people who would simply like to cut down a little, all the way across the spectrum to full-blown addicts. Why, then, is this not the first line of treatment for alcoholics? Where is all the hype? This is, as I mentioned before, essentially the Ozempic for problem drinkers, and hardly anyone knows about it.

The reason, in part, is tangled up in red tape. Worldwide, it is out of patent, so there is no real money to be made by Big Pharma. In the UK, naltrexone is tricky for GPs to prescribe thanks to licensing. For reasons too convoluted to go into, it is approved only for gambling addiction. To address alcohol dependence, it has to be prescribed by the NHS “off label”, which GPs are penalised for because there’s such a limited budget for it.

It was enough of a revelation for Dr Janey Merron, who prescribed me the medication, to leave the NHS and join a private clinic so she could administer it freely. “I practised in a very deprived area with a high rate of alcohol misuse and was so fed up with not being able to treat people with this simple drug. It was incredibly disempowering,” she tells me.

Dr Merron was the first doctor to join Sinclair Method UK, a clinic formed in 2019 that prescribes opioid blockers alongside counselling to those who wish to reduce or eliminate their drinking. Packages start at £345 for the private GP phone consultation, the ongoing prescriptions (the pills cost an extra £90 for 30) and three months of counselling.

The Sinclair Method (TSM) was developed by Dr John David Sinclair, an addiction specialist at the Finnish Foundation for Alcohol Studies, and later confirmed in over 90 clinical trials worldwide. It uses naltrexone to produce an effect known as “pharmacological extinction”. By blocking the dopamine hit we get every time we consume alcohol, the brain soon learns there is no point in chasing that rush with more and more booze.

Essentially, it works according to Pavlov’s Dogs theory; the famed 1897 experiment which proved how classical conditioning can be used to make or break habits. Pavlov showed how easy it was to get a dog to drool at the sound of a bell. Naltrexone, using the same principle, stopped me from salivating over the prospect of chardonnay.

by Anonymousreply 2September 18, 2024 2:56 AM

An hour after I first took the pill, I poured a glass of wine and was astounded by the results. It looked like wine. It tasted like wine. It offered the same mild relaxation effect, but the euphoria didn’t kick in. I kept taking another sip, waiting for the chain reaction to fire off; the one that usually takes me to the end of the bottle, but it never did. I took a larger gulp, then half an hour later, did something I hadn’t done in as long as I can remember – I tipped the rest down the sink. A small part of me felt sad that I no longer had the key to my cosy cave that evening. But mostly, it felt like a miracle had occurred, and an overwhelming relief took over.

I repeated this several times, in the interests of the experiment, at home, alone, where I used to do most of my drinking, but the motivation was quickly banished. All it left me with was sour breath, and that feeling, later, of lingering poison in the veins.

The real test was my next social engagement. One of the many reasons I always avoided AA (aside from its cultish rhetoric and the group’s insistence that you “surrender to a higher power”) – even during phases when I really wanted the cycle to stop – is because I couldn’t face the prospect of being sober at events or parties forevermore. I’m an introvert. I despise small talk. I find socialising boring, scary and pointless. If it was up to me, I’d never go to another wedding or festival or dinner with strangers ever again, but alas, I have a very outgoing husband and sometimes it’s expected of me.

And so I took a naltrexone and went to a children’s birthday party full of adults I’d never met – in other words, my iteration of hell. I turned down the first few offers of a boozy beverage because I genuinely didn’t feel like one, but later I accepted a glass of wine. Perhaps it was the placebo effect of having that familiar, cold prop in my hand, or the alcohol’s central nervous system depressant effect, which the drug doesn’t block. Possibly a combination of both, but found it relaxed me. Enough to have a reasonably good time. What it didn’t do was light up that dopamine reward path. I didn’t finish that glass or crave another. It was, and continues to be, game-changing.

I spoke to several friends who are in AA – the programme, developed in 1935, which argues there is no cure for alcoholics but lifelong abstinence – and most were sceptical. AA had worked for them, after all.

I also consulted Jan Gerber, the chief executive of Paracelsus Recovery, an addiction clinic in Zurich which I’d visited and written about several years ago. “We use naltrexone for alcohol use disorders and gambling to reduce craving and to reduce consumption,” he confirmed. “But I feel it should always be used in the context of a wider treatment strategy, since it does not address the root cause of the dependence; trauma, personality disorders, stress, depression, all being common.”

He’s entirely right about this. Everyone who drinks too much does so for a reason. I’m fortunate enough to have had enough therapy over the years to understand my demons. Furthermore, when I was at Paracelsus, I was diagnosed with ADHD; a condition that very often leads to problems with alcohol, since it’s the only readily-available tonic capable of quickly sedating the symptoms.

by Anonymousreply 3September 18, 2024 2:57 AM

But while understanding all this, getting the support and “doing the work”, made a huge difference to my life, that neurological bond I had to alcohol, cultivated over half a lifetime, was still active, like a goblin on the sidelines. And taking naltrexone severed the tie.

Of course, actually swallowing the pill before you drink alcohol requires willpower, especially in the early stages of treatment, just as abstinence does. But I have found that popping a tablet while I still have good intentions, thus removing any opportunity to get hammered for the rest of the night, is a whole lot easier than having to resist on a minute-by-minute basis.

I have to believe that with enough coverage of such impressive success rates, the NHS might be motivated to take another look at its approach to this medication. Of the 600,000 aforementioned alcohol-dependent people in England alone, a staggering 82% are not even in treatment, according to a recent report. And if the Government can’t bring themselves to care about these addicts, The Department for Health and Social Care has estimated, at last count, the total cost of alcohol harm for the NHS and the wider public to exceed £25 billion a year. It is thought, additionally, to play a part in nearly half of all violent crimes.

Merron, alas, thinks it’s unlikely that the NHS will have an epiphany anytime soon. Until then, patients will have to go private if they want access to naltrexone. And perhaps here’s where the revolution starts. Following a recent article on this very topic in the national press, demand at Sinclair Method UK went through the roof. There were more than 500 enquiries within a few hours of the story being published; where previously the clinic had an average of 12 a week. Merron is currently busy training several new doctors to help tackle the waiting list.

All cards on the table, am I going to allow myself the occasional debauched, naltrexone-free knees-up? Yes. Those are one of life’s great pleasures, are few and far between, and have never been a problem for me. It’s the insidious, bottle-a-night spell that needed breaking. It is no exaggeration, therefore, to say that this little-known, woefully under-prescribed tablet has changed my life.

I should reiterate here that while such medication is capable of taking the cravings away, it does nothing to address the underlying reasons as to why one might be regularly anaesthetising themselves in the first place. I’ve addressed mine in-depth which is perhaps why naltrexone was so seamlessly the last piece of the puzzle for me. Regardless, the more people that learn about this tool, the better. Not just for drinkers and their loved ones, but for society as a whole.

by Anonymousreply 4September 18, 2024 2:58 AM

Naltrexone works!

by Anonymousreply 5September 18, 2024 2:58 AM

Awesome R5!

by Anonymousreply 6September 18, 2024 3:06 AM

I work for Naltrexone!

by Anonymousreply 7September 18, 2024 3:07 AM

Whatever happened to good old fashioned willpower?

by Anonymousreply 8September 18, 2024 3:09 AM

If willpower were reliable there would be no drug addicted people or the need for Ozempic

by Anonymousreply 9September 18, 2024 3:14 AM

R8 Willpower is good an all, but in the face of a really severe addiction just doesnt cut it too often

Alcoholism is a really horrendously difficult problem to deal with, and any help that people need to quit should be available to them. Throw every fucking thing you can at the wall and see what sticks, and this seems to for most people. It isnt that expensive either, people just dont know about it

by Anonymousreply 10September 18, 2024 3:15 AM

I drink all day every day starting at 4am when I get up and I'm only capable of sleeping for 2-4 hours at a time, usually once in the afternoon and once late at night. I don't care how bad it is and I hope it kills me. I have absolutely no possibility of a future and no value as a human being.

by Anonymousreply 11September 18, 2024 3:16 AM

drinking can be a solution to the life and fear of death problem, how about that? the idea that everyone should live on and take care of themselves is stupid and arrogant. let us self destruct in peace.

by Anonymousreply 12September 18, 2024 3:18 AM

I tried Naltrexone on and off for a few months and I didn't feel it helped much. I still drank heavily but it just stepped on the buzz I was after (as mentioned in the article) and I still felt shitty the next day.

I eventually quit drinking a couple years ago and after getting over the hump which took about 6 months to a year I feel much better now and have adjusted to a new sense of normalcy.

by Anonymousreply 13September 18, 2024 3:18 AM

Bitch stole my look AND my struggle!

by Anonymousreply 14September 18, 2024 3:20 AM

"more better known"

Oh Dear I need a drink.

by Anonymousreply 15September 18, 2024 3:38 AM

R11 why not try Naltrexone? Why do you think you have no value? That’s ridiculous!

by Anonymousreply 16September 18, 2024 3:43 AM

R11 unless you're some neo-Nazi fucktard every human life has value to someone

by Anonymousreply 17September 18, 2024 3:49 AM

R17 don't shoehorn that shit into this bitch i spit fire on magats and fascist pigs every day on this board

by Anonymousreply 18September 18, 2024 3:53 AM

It's depression, that's how I used to talk as well.

by Anonymousreply 19September 18, 2024 3:54 AM

R16 In a literal sense, I have nothing to offer that is considered to be of value and therefore unable to maintain my own basic survival without going to extreme lengths. I'm stupid, uneducated, have no family, destroyed credit, and an unhirable resume. I haven't seen a doctor in 8 years and will probably die soon of untreated dental infections.

by Anonymousreply 20September 18, 2024 3:55 AM

I’m struggling with my addiction to sweets 🍭.

by Anonymousreply 21September 18, 2024 3:59 AM

Very interesting article. Thanks for posting it OP

I quit on my own years ago. Finally! I knew I was a drunk years before I quit, of course. Everyone knew I was a drunk. It wasn't exactly a secret. I was a category 5 alkie.

At one point, I actually asked my doctor for Naltrexone and the bitch wouldn't prescribe it for me! She said it was too controversial or something. I doubt it would have worked on me, but who knows? Maybe it would have saved me (and my family) those last two years of hell - when shit got real bad because of my drinking.

by Anonymousreply 22September 18, 2024 4:31 AM

I’m one of those people who upped their drinking habits enough through Covid (2020/2021) that a doc put me on Sinclair (Gabapentin & Naltrexone) - I think it was 2022. It got my drinking back to where I will take several months away from alcohol entirely. This thread made me remember all this.

by Anonymousreply 23September 18, 2024 4:44 AM

[quote]How the author used the Sinclair method in conjunction with Naltrexone

Isn't the Sinclair method all about using Naltrexone before drinking? So that conjunction part is redundant.

by Anonymousreply 24September 18, 2024 4:53 AM

[quote]don't shoehorn that shit into this bitch i spit fire on magats and fascist pigs every day on this board

See R11/ R18 you DO have real value as a human being! Keep up the good work

R22 your doctor was a useless cunt, hope you've since got a better one. And congrats on your recovery, maybe it could have been easier for you with this treatment

R23 great to hear it worked for you

R24 yeah you take the Naltrexone an hour before drinking - so not quite in conjunction but near enough

by Anonymousreply 25September 18, 2024 5:28 AM

R25 how do you drink v8 that ish nasty

by Anonymousreply 26September 18, 2024 1:37 PM

Journalist and podcaster Katie Herzog discussed ending her decades long alcoholism via naltrexone in this podcast episode. (It was a great episode and made me much more sympathetic towards Katie and very interested in naltrexone as a therapy)

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by Anonymousreply 27September 18, 2024 2:01 PM

Antabuse worked better for me

by Anonymousreply 28September 18, 2024 2:10 PM

I thought I would never quit smoking. I really just thought I would smoke it out and wither be a cool old man who smoked or just die early,

I loved it and had no willpower. Over a pack a day.

Twelve years ago, my insurance company sent out a flyer saying they were now covering Chantix 100%. (After years of not covering it at all.)

I just sort of thought, "Well, what the hell. It's free. I'll try it." Made a huge joke of it to my friends, and started on it.

For whatever reason, it worked. Knocked it right out of me with very little effort on my part. And again, I fucking LOVED smoking.

At first, I was sheepish about how I quit. I thought taking pills was "cheating" somehow,

Now I'll shout it from the rooftops.

Mostly because I can actually get to a rooftop now without wheezing.

All the best to people who stop drinking this way.

by Anonymousreply 29September 18, 2024 2:19 PM

Naltrexone is working for me. I've been on it for six months and have very rarely had an urge to drink. I was drinking over a litre of vodka daily and went through detox twice. Naltrexone was never offered to me by any doctor specializing in addictions. It took my primary physician to recognize that it might benefit me and it did. I still drank when I started it but not as heavily and within a couple weeks I realized I didn't really want to drink.

by Anonymousreply 30September 19, 2024 2:59 AM
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