Once an alcoholic, always an alcoholic-the saying is decades old, but
scientists have only recently uncovered why it is often true. Long-term
alcohol abuse changes the brain, making a person more sensitive to
stress and more likely to reach for the bottle to soothe his or her
anxiety. According to a new study, drugs that inhibit these stress
pathways could help recovering alcoholics stay in control.



Scientists at the National Institutes of Health and University College
London bred mice lacking the NeuroKinin 1 Receptor (NK1R), a protein
involved in the brain's stress response. The mice were given
unlimited access to alcohol spiked water for 60 days, during which the
alcohol content was incrementally raised from 3 to 15 percent. The
NK1R-deficient mice consumed far less alcohol-especially later in the
trial when alcohol concentration was higher-than normal mice did. They
were also more sensitive to alcohol's effects than the normal mice
were; studies have shown that the more sensitive a person is to alcohol,
the less likely he or she is to abuse it.

The team then treated 25 highly anxious recovering alcoholics with a
drug that blocks the NK1 receptor. After four weeks of hospital
treatment, the subjects taking the drug reported fewer spontaneous and
stress-induced alcohol cravings than patients given a placebo did. When
the scientist used functional MRI to look at the subjects' brain
activity, they found that the treated subjects showed less activity in
the insula, a region associated with craving. The scientists believe the
drug targets a stress pathway specific to alcoholics because it has been
shown to have little effect on stress levels in other types of patients.

Lead author Markus Heilig of the NIH cautions that although the study is
promising, it does not prove that the drug will help alcoholics
long-term. Scientists "need to do studies in outpatients and look at
reduction in drinking," he says. A larger clinical trial designed to
do just that will begin recruiting subjects later this year.

Happy Learning,


Yovan P. Putra
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com/>
Expand your genius through  Total-Mind Learning  Series coaching 
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