98%
921
2 minutes
20
Background: Alcohol Dependence Syndrome (ADS) is a prevalent condition marked by difficulty controlling alcohol use, with significant global health impacts. Despite the effectiveness of anti-craving medications like Naltrexone, Acamprosate, Baclofen, Ondansetron, and Topiramate, these medications remain underutilized by healthcare providers. This study aims to assess the relationship between craving and relapse rates among individuals prescribed anti-craving medications and to explore the correlation between medication dosage and craving severity.
Methods: This was a prospective observational cohort study in which individuals prescribed anti-craving medications were monitored over three months. The study utilized the Penn Alcohol Craving Scale (PACS) to measure craving intensity and the Medication Adherence Rating Scale (MARS) to assess medication adherence. Alcohol use patterns were categorized into relapse, lapse, abstinence, and active use based on predefined operational definitions.
Results: Participants were between 30 and 50 years old and predominantly male. Severe dependence was observed in the majority of cases, and baclofen was prescribed to most participants. Pearson's correlation between Severity of Alcohol Dependence Questionnaire (SADQ-C) and PACS scores was = 0.304 ( = .017), and MARS scores significantly predicted PACS scores ( = 0.757, = 0.573, < .001). Most participants were in the action phase, with a significant proportion maintaining abstinence. However, relapse rates increased as the study progressed. Overall, adherence to anti-craving medications reduced cravings and facilitated abstinence.
Conclusions: The research noted a significant reduction in craving in individuals receiving anti-craving medications. Nevertheless, no statistically significant correlation was identified between the dosage of Baclofen and PACS scores.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12357832 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/02537176251359425 | DOI Listing |
Indian J Psychol Med
August 2025
Dept. of Psychiatry, Dr. Chandramma Dayananda Sagar Institute of Medical Education and Research, Ramanagara, Karnataka, India.
Background: Alcohol Dependence Syndrome (ADS) is a prevalent condition marked by difficulty controlling alcohol use, with significant global health impacts. Despite the effectiveness of anti-craving medications like Naltrexone, Acamprosate, Baclofen, Ondansetron, and Topiramate, these medications remain underutilized by healthcare providers. This study aims to assess the relationship between craving and relapse rates among individuals prescribed anti-craving medications and to explore the correlation between medication dosage and craving severity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Drug Alcohol Abuse
August 2025
Department of Psychiatry, Vardhman Mahavir Medical College & Safdarjung Hospital, Delhi, India.
Alcohol use disorder (AUD) remains a major global health challenge with limited effective treatments. Ketamine, an NMDA receptor antagonist with rapid anti-craving and neuroplastic effects, has emerged as a promising novel therapy for AUD. To review the literature examining the safety and efficacy of ketamine for treating AUD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPharmaceuticals (Basel)
July 2025
Global Medical Division, Gedeon Richter Plc, 1103 Budapest, Hungary.
: The introduction of the transdiagnostic approach in psychiatry shifts the focus from discrete diagnoses to shared symptoms across various disorders. The Transdiagnostic Global Impression-Psychopathology (TGI-P) scale is a newly developed tool designed to assess psychiatric symptoms across diagnostic boundaries. It evaluates ten core symptom domains-positive, negative, cognitive, manic, depressive, addiction, anxiety, sleep, hostility, and self-harm-regardless of specific diagnoses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychopharmacology (Berl)
July 2025
Laboratoire de Psychologie Médicale et d'Addictologie, ULB Neuroscience Institute (UNI), CHU Brugmann-Université Libre de Bruxelles (U.L.B.), Brussels, Belgium.
Rationale: While medications such as acamprosate, baclofen, or naltrexone have shown promising effects in the treatment of alcohol use disorder (AUD), meta-analyses have yielded conflicting findings regarding their efficacy. This retrospective study examined whether alcohol cue reactivity and its neural correlates could serve as protective factors against relapse in AUD inpatients receiving pharmacological treatment during a three-week detoxification program.
Method: Fifty-eight inpatients diagnosed with AUD undergoing a three-weeks detoxification program were selected.
bioRxiv
June 2025
Sussex Neuroscience, School of Psychology, University of Sussex, Falmer, BN1 9QG, United Kingdom.
Cues such as fast-food advertisements associated with food can provoke food cravings which may lead to unhealthy overeating. To effectively control such cravings, we need to better understand the factors that reduce food cue reactivity and reveal corresponding 'anti-craving' brain mechanisms. We previously reported that access to environmental enrichment (EE) that provides cognitive and physical stimulation in mice reduced cue-evoked sucrose seeking and prelimbic cortex (PL) neuronal reactivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF