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Naltrexone is used to treat addicts of various substances and comportments as well as alcoholics and people suffering from motor neurone diseases, but I think The Sinclair Method has only been really tested for alcoholism, but I believe Dr. Sinclair is looking into using the same method for other addictions.
Hey Curi,
Its my understanding that the Sinclair Method was developed from the results of a naltrexone study on heroin users. All of the users were told that they shouldn't use heroin during the study as a small dose would cause no effect and a large dose would be lethal. It turns out a small portion of the placebo & nal subjects used heroin during the trial. The nal subjects that sneaked heroin or methadone showed signs of pharmacological extinction, i.e. they showed a reduction in the compulsive heroin use.
Naltrexone does not make a distinction for what you are trying to treat with it. In this logic you could theoretically treat anything that causes an endorphin rush; bulimia, meth, cocaine, self-mutilation, gambling, sexual mania, etc.
Your question :
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For example: I need to reduce my alcohol and chocolate consumption (for someone else it might be benzos or whatever), if I consume both alcohol and chocolate on the days I take Naltrexone, I wonder if the effect would be the same on both? ...
really got me thinking...
Has anyone on the board adapted their nal sessions with booze to include other compulsive behaviors? Kinda like a dual selective extinction treatment??
Thanks for the food for thought
