|
GOOD NEWS FOR ALCOHOLIC HAMSTERS
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
BOSTON, MA-
A traditional Chinese herbal treatment for alcohol abuse really
does appear to suppress craving for liquor, at least in
alcoholic hamsters, report Harvard researchers.
The researchers conducted a series of studies with an herb used
in traditional Chinese medicine to reduce alcohol cravings.
Unlike most laboratory rodents, the hamsters will choose alcohol
over water when offered a choice, making them a natural choice
for alcoholism studies.
Thirty ethanol-preferring Syrian golden hamsters received either
daidzin, the active ingredient in the herb, or disulfiram, the
active ingredient in Antabuse, a drug used to deter alcohol
craving in humans. Nine other hamsters served as controlled and
could drink as much ethanol as they wished. Alcoholic hamsters
receiving the Chinese herb displayed a marked reduction in
alcohol craving, in the same range as those receiving
disulfiram. Alcohol intake dropped by 70% in hamsters receiving
daidzin, and 80% in those receiving disulfiram.
Daidzin suppresses alcohol consumption in hamsters without
blocking the overall detoxification of acetaldehyde, the main
metabolic product from ethanol, which has been shown to
accumulate during Antabuse treatment and cause a broad spectrum
of disagreeable, toxic, and even deadly effects.
The researchers believe that daidzin may modify alcohol
consumption in laboratory animals by a biochemical pathway
other than that catalyzed by mitochondrial aldehyde
dehydrogenase, believed to be primarily responsible for the
detoxification of acetaldehyde.
The herb has been used for centuries in China with no adverse
side effects reported, but researchers stress that testing of
synthesized daidzin is exploratory and restricted to laboratory
animals.
Diadzin is a glucosylated isoflavone extracted from the kudzo
vine (Radix puerariae)
The compound may have potential in humans. It appears to exert
it effects by a metabolic route less toxic than that observed
in humans using Antabuse, the first-and until recently, the
only- agent ever approved for treatment of alcoholism in the
United States. Studies involving humans are expected to begin
within a year or so. Another drug called naltrexone was recently
approved for treatment of alcohol craving.
For more info. see: Proceedings of the National Academy of
Science, Sep. 11, 1995, Vol. 92, pp. 8990-8993, Keung et
al.
Related information on the
Internet
NIDA Homepage
|
|