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I recently wrote Dr. Sinclair and thanked him profusely for helping me, among MANY others, get our lives back. This is what he wrote:
Dear Laura North aka Ketchikan1, Thank you for the email. It is a tremendous reward to hear how the treatment has helped.
I must say, your name is appropriate for someone in Alaska. More than Florida. My parents had retired to Ellenton, Florida. The Sarasota clinic has its origins there. My father was being treated at a Bradenton hospital and I flew over to see him. I found his doctors were much more interested in talking to me about the alcoholism treatment than telling about what they were doing with my father - he was a great salesman!
From that visit, the Sarasota clinic was started. There was a complication. I had gotten a patent on the treatment, and the patent was owned by a company that was not interested in starting clinics in the US at that time, about 1999. So I set up a clinical trial with the USF, and the Sarasota clinic was part of the trial. They got the same great results as we had in Finland, but they were notable to make a huge financial success. Even the NIAAA has been frustrated with the failure of alcoholism treatment facilities to include naltrexone. NIAAA backed the American research and were very positive about it. But established chains reported that, although they knew the scientific results show naltrexone provides significant benefits in alcoholism treatment, it does not fit into the chain's procedure and so they do not use it.
Another problem is that most alcoholism treatment facilities have not used naltrexone correctly. They start with detox and then prescribe naltrexone to maintain abstinence. Our dual clinical trial in Finland showed naltrexone is worse than placebo when used that way. Naltrexone has to be paired with drinking.
Using naltrexone incorrectly produced bad results and drove many doctors away from it. Furthermore, the package inserts that DuPont and then generics provided with naltrexone suggested that it should be used with abstinence. Nevertheless, many people are being helped after reading Roy Eskapa's book. The efforts to educate doctors and the public are continuing.
One new development is the expect acceptance of nalmefene here in Europe. It works about the same as naltrexone in the brain, but it is nicer to the liver. Nalmefene was tested using protocols promoting extinction, and the instructions with it will not advise use with abstinence but rather to pair it with drinking. Consequently, it is being promoted as a medicine to reduce the harm from alcohol drinking, rather than one to support the traditional goal of abstinence.
There has been a growing movement for along time for harm reduction in alcoholism treatment. I have to admit, however, that without naltrexone or nalmefene, AA was right about abstinence for most alcoholics. The worst results we got in the Finnish trial were from placebo patients being told to practice controlled drinking. 97% of the patients in the Finnish clinics wanted controlled drinking, not abstinence.
The antagonists now make controlled drinking an acceptable goal. Maybe this will get the message across. My own research has moved on to other addictions that are caused by the release of endorphins. Our lab recently completed an open label trial for pathological gambling, and is now doing a controlled study. My main interest right now is using the extinction treatment for people who are addicted to foods that release endorphins. This usually shows up as binge eating disorder (BED).
We are currently doing a double-blind placebo-controlled clinical trial. Indeed, yesterday was the first day of giving patients the medication. We are using a short acting antagonist,naloxone, so that the medicine is only present when the eating binge is present, for about 2 hours. Naloxone cannot be given by pill, but instead is taken by nasal spray.
You can learn more about this by googling Lightlake Therapeutics; it owns the patents I wrote for the treatment and is supporting the trial. I have been considered becoming a snowbird, buying a now-cheap placeprobably near Sarasota and spending winters there. Perhaps once this trial is over, I will have that opportunity. For the time being, however, I will be staying here in Finland. David
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