I decided to Google autism and alcoholism and found a site of a woman called Donna Williams in which she tells of her life as a sufferer of autism. What is interesting is that she is also an alcoholic and the two conditions, in her view, go hand in hand. This seems to support what is said in the Time Healthland article that the underlying condition responsible for addiction and autism and, for that matter, all anxiety related disorders is a dysfunction of the brain's amygdala or anxiety/fear mechanism.
I apologize for my unscientific way of putting all this but it seems to me that this is very important and significant. The article in Time only came out on 1 December 2010 but it is all over the Autism forums with the same sort of comments sceptics have levelled at Ameisen and Baclofen.
I think the time is upon us where all these disorders are looked at as primarily neurological and a lot of what people see as psychological issues are seen as neurological disorders. Perhaps the real conditions that people here and elsewhere refer to as "underlying" alcoholism are not really psychological issues which can be "fixed" with counselling any more than craving alone can be fixed with AA meetings. Maybe these underlying issues are part and parcel of the spectrum of disorders brought on by amygdala/Gaba B dysfunction or whatever you want to call it and the development of Arbaclofen is the next step in the progress towards a better understanding of these disorders and their ultimate treatment, if not "cure".
On the other hand, maybe there is something to the idea of the plasticity of the brain and its ability to change if "retuned" in the way that some say is necessary with autism. I feel that the next step in alcohol treatment for anyone is to look at the symptoms one has which led to alcoholism, apart from those conditions which can be rectified with good nutrition and abstinence, and examine whether they relate to an autistic type condition and to look at the treatment of those disorders. We will have to wait until 2013 for the release of Arbaclofen so in the meantime I for one am starting to look at alternative approaches to dealing with these underlying issues as part of a range of autistic conditions.
Obviously, I stand to be corrected and any comments are, in the spirit of his forum, gratefully and graciously received.
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