Medications
Medicines can be used to help treat
alcohol
abuse and
dependence. Some medicines reduce
withdrawal symptoms during
detoxification. Other medicines help you stay sober
during the long process of
recovery.
Medication Choices
Medicines most often used to
treat withdrawal symptoms during detoxification include:
Medicines used to help you stay sober include:
- Disulfiram (Antabuse), which reduces
the pleasure alcohol produces and makes you sick to your stomach when you
drink.
- Naltrexone (ReVia, Vivitrol), which interferes with
the pleasure you get from drinking. Vivitrol is a once-a-month injection used
to treat alcohol dependence.
- Acamprosate (Campral), which may reduce your craving
for alcohol.
- Topiramate (Topamax), a medicine used to treat
seizures. One recent study shows that it also might help treat alcohol
problems.6 Experts are studying how this medicine, and
medicines like it, might help with recovery from alcohol abuse and addiction.
What to Think About
Alcohol abuse can cause your
body to become low in certain vitamins and minerals, especially thiamine
(vitamin B1). You might need to take thiamine supplements to improve your
nutrition during recovery. Thiamine helps prevent
Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome, which causes brain
damage.7
You also might need supplements
to help replace fluids and
electrolytes.
The U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) has issued an advisory about injectable forms of
naltrexone. You may have a skin reaction at the injection site, the place where
the shot is given. Call your doctor if you notice any skin change at the
injection site, such as swelling, tenderness, redness, or pain, that does not
improve or gets worse within 2 weeks.