Article Title: Beta-naltrexol level predicts alcohol relapse Author: McCaul, M E Journal Title: Alcoholism: clinical and experimental research ISSN: 0145-6008 Published: 1997 Volume: 21 Issue: 3 Page: 32A
"172 B-NALTREXOL LEVEL PREDICTS ALCOHOL RELAPSE
McC.ul. M.E., Wand. G.S.,S ullivut. J., Mumfad. G. Qugley. J. Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21205.
Recent studies have indicated that naltrexone decreases relapse in recently abstinent treated alcoholics. Present findings are based on a 6-rnonth, double-blind clinical trial of naltrexone (0, 50 and 100 mg). Subjects were alcohol dependent with comorbid opioid and/or cocaine abuse. They were recruited from admissions to an urban publicly-funded substance abuse day treatment program offering cognitive behavioral and 12-step services. Initial findings indicated that relapse rates. time to relapse, and self-reported alcohol consumption did not differ significantly across dosage groups. However, recent preliminary analyses suggest that blood level of B-naltrexol. a major metabolite of naltrexone may predict alcohol relapse. First, there was a significant negative relationship between number of drinks/month and B-naltrexol level; that is the higher the blood level, the lower the reported number of drinks. Second, there were no instances in which subjects with a monthly B-naltrexol level greater than 40 ng/ml experienced an alcohol relapse. Finally, when B-naltrexol assays were sorted into low, medium and high levels, there was a significant difference in number of drinks/month consumed by subjects with results in the low versus high group (3.58+-8.13 vs 0.27+-.73). Importantly, 79% of the low B-naltrexol levels were contributed by 50 mg group subjects, whereas 81% of the high levels were contributed by 100 mg group subjects. It is well-known that there are considerable individual differences in naltrexone metabolism. These individual metabolic differences in combination with differences in medication compliance may have contributed to the wide variability in B-naltrexol levels observed in the present study. The present findings suggest that B-naltrexol level may be an important predictor of alcohol relapse risk and that future clinical trials should explore minimurn effective blood levels."
_________________ Graph Of My Units Over 182 Days
Weeks 0-26: 80, 65, 97, 90, 80, 101, 104, 83, 83, 88, 91, 83, 100, 39, 32, 71, 51, 34, 4.5, 0, 5, 3, 6, 11, 0, 0, 0u
I'll always naltreksonipillerin advance
---Lo0p (resident geek )
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