I had to time to read this article more closely and gleaned a couple of things from the authors. Keep in mind this study was on 50mg daily naltrexone with prior abstinence but continued drinking during the study so not exactly TSM.
-Younger patients were more likely to become nauseated than older
-Women were 7.2 times more likely than men to experience nausea
The authors take on this was
Quote:
Although nausea is a common side effect of many medications, we hypothesize that naltrexone-induced nausea is attributable to naltrexone's blockade of opiate receptors and may reflect an opiate withdrawal-like syndrome. Endogenous opioid tone is altered after alcohol consumption,21 and variability in nausea may be related to variations in opioidergic tone.
The only practical advice they offered was
Quote:
a lower initial dose (e.g., 12.5 mg) could be used, and the dose could be increased gradually as tolerated in high-risk patients or in those experiencing nausea early in treatment.
Again they were not using TSM here so I'm not sure how well this applies to you but if you are miserable with side effects and it is jeopardizing your compliance it might be worth a shot. I was surprised they didn't offer the simple and common sense advice of taking naltrexone with some food in your stomach.
Good luck Server.