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Alcohol dependence is a major health problem worldwide and recently in Israel and it has major health care costs. Cannabis dependence is also a major health issue and many cannabis users find it difficult to quit. Similar to dependence on heavy drugs, alcohol and cannabis-dependent patients find it difficult to quit drinking and smoking cannabis and they relapse to drinking alcohol and using cannabis during treatment. Craving for alcohol and cannabis and withdrawal during detoxification are major factors for relapse to drinking and using cannabis. The cue-exposure and priming paradigms have been used in order to induce craving for alcohol and cannabis in the laboratory. Several studies have delineated the brain mechanisms responsible for cue-induced craving for alcohol using functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI), a method that can be useful in monitoring progress of treatment. A proven useful medication for treatment of alcohol dependence is the opiate antagonist naltrexone commonly used for treatment of opiate dependence. We have found that cannabis-dependent patients in treatment for cannabis dependence who also were heavy users of alcohol have dropped early from treatment.
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We propose to use naltexone to reduce craving for alcohol and cannabis in alcohol and cannabis-dependent patients. We also propose to use established techniques of priming and cue-exposure for alcoholic drinks and cannabis together with measures of [18F] Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) in Positron Emission Tomography (PET) imaging in 24 alcohol and cannabis-dependent patients before and after 35 day treatment with naltrexone. We predict that in those who will be successful in quitting alcohol drinking and using cannabis there would be a reduction in alcohol and cannabis cue-induced brain activity in the meso-limbic reward circuit that is responsible for craving for alcohol and cannabis.
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24 participants in 1 patient group
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Aviv M Weinstein, Ph.D; Einat Even-Sapir, MD Ph.D
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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