Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Medicines may help you quit drinking!

Darpan News Desk IANS, 20 May, 2014 12:22 PM
    If you wish to stop drinking, visiting the doctor may be the last thing in your mind as you hardly come across doctors prescribing pills that can keep you away from visiting the bars in the evening.
     
    This may change soon as researchers have now identified a few medicines that can work wonders in when used in conjunction with behavioural therapies.
     
    "We have medications that can help," Daniel Jonas, an associate professor of medicine at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, was quoted as saying.
     
    The medications (namely naltrexone, acamprosate, topiramate, and nalmefene), appear to help curb drinking problems by fighting the biology of alcohol addiction, the researchers said.
     
    Unlike Antabuse (a medication used for decades to treat alcoholics) that makes people wretchedly ill if they drink, these medicines do not make people so sick.
     
    Instead, these are drugs that address the brain chemistry that gets messed up by alcohol.
     
    In an analysis of 122 randomized controlled trials, both acamprosate and naltrexone helped people either quit drinking or cut back substantially.
     
    The study also found benefits in nalmefene and topiramate, two medications that are also prescribed for alcohol dependence.
     
    The study appeared in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    We can spot only two faces at a time?

    We can spot only two faces at a time?
    In what could be relevant to eye-witness testimony or neuro-psychological rehabilitation, a study has found that we can only see two faces in a crowd even if the faces belong to famous people.

    We can spot only two faces at a time?

    `Exposure to media violence may turn kids aggressive'

    `Exposure to media violence may turn kids aggressive'
    Along with limiting screen time, monitoring the content of what your kids watch on television or what video games they play may be equally important as exposure to media violence may turn them them aggressive, a study indicated.

    `Exposure to media violence may turn kids aggressive'

    Energy drinks consumption linked to smoking

    Energy drinks consumption linked to smoking
    Weekly consumption of sports drinks and energy drinks among teens is linked to higher consumption of other sugar-sweetened beverages, cigarette smoking, and screen media use, said a study.

    Energy drinks consumption linked to smoking

    Can meditation empower us to regulate immune system?

    Can meditation empower us to regulate immune system?
    The power of meditation may be much more than what is generally thought as researchers have now found that with behavioural training like breathing exercises people can learn to modulate their immune system.

    Can meditation empower us to regulate immune system?

    Mealtime TV viewing during pregnancy may turn kids obese

    Mealtime TV viewing during pregnancy may turn kids obese
    If you do not want your kids to grow up obese, stay away from viewing television during mealtime even before they are born, a study suggested.

    Mealtime TV viewing during pregnancy may turn kids obese

    Young blood holds key for reversing ageing: Studies

    Young blood holds key for reversing ageing: Studies
    In what could be termed as a game changer for the scientific community, three separate teams of researchers have discovered how the ageing process can be reversed one day in humans - by infusing young blood.

    Young blood holds key for reversing ageing: Studies