I have just copied part of this statement over from another thread, as it directly applies to everyone who reads this one!
Everyone, please don't hang out and wait for me to deliver a magic cure-all statement on this forum! I myself am trying to stay sober for as many days as I can, even before I find out about the new idea. I may only end up getting a very generalized briefing about this treatment at the end of this week, and may then have to be transferred to a doctor closer to my home if my current doc (who is 200 km away) won't directly treat me. He likes to be able to closely monitor all patients on any new treatments, especially anything unusual, and he has never been comfortable with the distance between him and I.
It is quite likely I will have to spend weeks looking for a closer doctor who is open-minded enough to actually prescribe this method to me on any sort of long-term basis, although I am going to try my best to ask the current doc if he will at least start me off on it, as I will offer to live with my mother initially and she is in the same general area as he is (only 8 km away or so).
Edit : Also, from an email I had directly from the hospital in Melbourne where this is being done, it is NOT a set protocol for every patient!! They said it is tailored individually for each person based on their history, which could (I am assuming) take into account pre-existing or co-existing problems, if any. If a person is purely alcoholic, with no underlying depression or other serious psychological problems, then the idea may well be similar to what was originally reported in our media, i.e. a muscle spasm drug (we would assume baclofen) plus an anti-convulsant. I have read a couple of presentations given a couple of years ago by the Professor now running the program, and when it came to the subject of anti-convulsants playing a role in alcoholism/addiction, he didn't only refer to topiramate/Topamax. He also referred to valproate/valproic acid (Depakote, Epilim, other brand names), gabapentin (Neurontin), and pregabalin (Lyrica). In a quit-marijuana program he started at a Sydney hospital a number of years ago, he was using the anti-convulsant tiagabine (Gabitril) and none of the others (but with a few other types of drugs).
For all these reasons, it is almost certainly not going to be possible for me to state a set protocol or one single pair of medications on this forum at the end of this week that everyone can start using as a cure. I myself am still keeping high-dose baclofen, with strong sedatives, up my sleeve in case all this does not work out for me, for one reason or another.
I am sorry for initially being so enthusiastic about this, and for misleading anyone into thinking it was a single-protocol cure-all. Apart from not anticipating the delays in finding out more details, I also foolishly took too much notice of the over-simplified things the TV show reporters (who are not technically minded) said when they initially aired this whole story on Australian television.
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