I didn't see the program when it aired, and when told about it, my first reaction was what our former loved-and-hated Murphy would have said..."bollocks". However, I moderated that view a bit when I read more about this program, and realised that it is being run at a well-known and respected Australian hospital by a Professor who is a neurologist and addiction specialist with years of work in the field. In other words, it's not one of those fanciful claims of incredible success rates sometimes made by private money-driven rehabs, crackpot individuals, CBT/counselling enthusiasts, or a spiritually-based group. The fact that it is largely medication based, and using medications that are not just antidepressants or the same old officially-approved alcoholism drugs, further increased my interest.
Professor Jon Currie is running this from the St. Vincent's Hospital's Department of Addiction Medicine in Melbourne, Australia, and his statement about the medications used is as follows:
We are using epilepsy medications and there is a medicine used for muscle spasms which is fantastic for craving with alcohol. All of these are new uses for old medicines
I can only guess, but the muscle spasm medication could well be baclofen, while the epilepsy medications could be topiramate/Topamax aswell as a few others that have anecdotal reports of efficacy in alcohol and benzodiazepine dependence, such as Tegretol/Trileptal and gabapentin. The combination of these drugs, rather than using just one, could allow success without needing huge doses of any one drug (strictly my speculation only). It is also notable that these medications are ones that do not have tolerance as a reported problem, unlike benzodiazepines for example.
Anyway I thought it may be useful to post about this on the forum, and anyone wanting to read the full story can follow this link:
Today Tonight - Addiction*Doctor
I admit it all sounds too good to be true, and an old and true saying haunts me with things like this..."if it sounds too good to be true, then it generally is". I feel skeptical when anyone claims that one treatment can cure heaps of problems, but this guy also states that he is flexible with the medication treatment, tailoring it to suit the particular addiction or compulsion.
I live a long way from this hospital, unfortunately, but I will see if I can find out any specific details. If I hear anything more definite, I will post again.
EDIT : The claim that this Professor is the first in the world to develop a program that can switch off the part of the brain that controls cravings made me highly suspect at first, since we know Dr Ameisen claimed this result from very high doses of baclofen back in 2004 or so. In this case, however, there is an actual treatment program for patients to attend, if I have read it right. Also, in this case, hopefully the result is obtained using dosages of medications that are within usual guidelines, rather than the 2-4 times usual maximum dose that usually applies when baclofen is used as the sole treatment.
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