FierceBiotech FierceBiotech IT FiercePharma FierceMedicalDevices
FierceBiotech Research FierceVaccines FiercePharma Manufacturing FierceDrugDelivery

Free Newsletter

About | View Sample | Privacy
Related Topics >> alcohol | cabergoline | dosinex

Hormone therapy reduces desire for alcohol

Tools

A hormone therapy may offer a new approach to treating alcoholism. Researchers say that rats injected with cabergoline--sold under the brand name Dostinex--reduced their level of drinking. Reporting in Biological Psychiatry, the team also said that the drug did not produce any noticeable changes in other behavior.

"This is encouraging, because it demonstrates that cabergoline is specific for alcohol but does not affect general reward or pleasure. One of the problems with some existing drugs to treat alcoholism is a side effect that decreases pleasure, making compliance an obstacle to sobriety," said Dorit Ron, a principal investigator at UC San Francisco's Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center.

To test the drug, rats that had been trained to press a lever to get a drink were injected with the drug. The higher the dose, the fewer times the rats pressed the lever. And the same effect was noted among binge drinkers. But researchers also noted that the drug evidently would work in humans at a low dose, reducing the risk of an adverse drug effect.

The drug increases production of GDNF, which researchers had already determined worked to reduce the desire for alcohol.

- read the report from HealthDay

Related Articles:
Epilepsy drug proves positive in alcoholism trial
Compound found for reducing alcohol dependence


SHARE
WITH:
Email Twitter Facebook LinkedIn StumbleUpon
Get Your FREE FierceBiotech Research Email Newsletter:
Be the first to comment
More stories about dosinex   alcohol   cabergoline  

Comments

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.