| |
Dr. Brenda G. Hewitt
and Dr. Enoch Gordis express their views about Alcoholism as
under:
Alcoholism
or Alcohol Dependence, chronic disease marked by a craving for
alcohol. People who suffer from this illness are known as
alcoholics. They cannot control their drinking even when it
becomes the underlying cause of serious harm, including medical
disorders, marital difficulties, job loss, or automobile
crashes. Medical science has yet to identify the exact cause of
alcoholism, but research suggests that genetic, psychological,
and social factors influence its development. Alcoholism cannot
be cured yet, but various treatment options can help an
alcoholic avoid drinking and regain a healthy life.
People tend to equate any kind of excessive drinking with
alcoholism. But doctors and scientists recognize that disorders
related to alcohol use lie along a continuum of severity. They
prefer to use the term
alcohol
dependence instead of
alcoholism to
designate the most severe of the alcohol-use disorders. The
terms alcohol abuse
and problem drinking
designate less severe disorders resulting from immoderate
drinking.
Alcohol dependence develops
differently in each individual. But certain symptoms
characterize the illness, according to the National Institute on
Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), a United States government
agency that is part of the National Institutes of Health.
Alcoholics develop a craving, or a strong urge, to drink despite
awareness that drinking is creating problems in their lives.
They suffer from impaired control, an inability to stop drinking
once they have begun. Alcoholics also become physically
dependent on alcohol. When they stop drinking after a period of
heavy alcohol use, they suffer unpleasant physical ailments,
known as withdrawal symptoms, that include nausea, sweating,
shakiness, and anxiety. Alcoholics develop a greater tolerance
for alcohol—that is, they need to drink increasing amounts of
alcohol to reach intoxication. The World Health Organization
(WHO) notes that other behaviors common in people who are
alcohol dependent include seeking out opportunities to drink
alcoholic beverages—often to the exclusion of other
activities—and rapidly returning to established drinking
patterns following periods of abstinence.
Alcohol dependence affects a
broad cross section of society around the world. Statistics show
that alcohol dependence touches successful business executives,
skilled mechanics, laborers, homemakers, and church members of
all denominations. Scientists have not identified a typical
alcoholic personality, and they cannot predict with absolute
certainty which drinkers will progress to alcohol dependence.
Alcohol use varies depending on
an individual’s social, cultural, or religious background. Some
individuals do not drink at all—about one-third of adults in the
United States who are 18 and older, for example, abstain from
alcohol. Others drink as part of social custom. Still others
drink frequently and in substantial amounts. Those suffering
from alcohol dependence drink to appease an uncontrolled craving
for alcohol or to avoid experiencing the unpleasant symptoms of
withdrawal.
WHO estimates that nearly 62
million people worldwide suffer from alcohol dependence. The
prevalence of the illness varies in different countries. In the
United States nearly 15 million people experience problems
related to their use of alcohol. Of these, alcohol dependence
affects about 8.1 million men and women, or almost 3 percent of
the population. Men are three times more likely than women to
become alcoholics, while people aged 65 and older have the
lowest rates of alcohol dependence.
In the United States, people who
start to drink at an early age are at particular risk for
developing alcohol dependence. Estimates indicate that 40
percent of people who begin to drink before age 15 will become
alcohol dependent at some point in their lives. These
individuals are four times more likely to become alcohol
dependent than those who delay drinking until age 21.
In Canada, close to 600,000
people, or 1.9 percent of adults aged 15 and older, are alcohol
dependent, and the number of male alcoholics is double that of
females. The highest rate of this illness occurs in Canadians
between the ages of 20 and 24. In Canadian surveys about one in
five current and former drinkers admit that their drinking
harmed them at some point in their lives, affecting their jobs
or financial position.
Alcohol dependence has reached
critical proportions in Russia, where 40 percent of men and 17
percent of women are alcoholics. Alcoholism is a punishable
offense in Russia. Alcoholics who refuse hospital treatment can
be imprisoned in labor camps. After their release they typically
find it difficult to find employment, and if caught drinking
again, they are returned to prison. Periodic efforts by the
government to control drinking by closing distilleries,
breweries, and bars have backfired. Instead of solving the
problem, such tactics only created a widespread black market for
liquor—as well as a country of people who hide their drinking
problems.
In Asian nations such as Japan,
alcohol abuse has become a social concern over the last decade.
In these countries, drinking almost is required when conducting
business. Bars are an extension of offices, places where key
decisions are made. A person who declines an invitation to a
drink after work risks being passed over for promotion within
the company. Alcohol is readily available in Japan—vending
machines along the streets of Tokyo dispense cans of beer and
sake. Over the past 30 years alcohol consumption has nearly
doubled in Japan.
|
III |
|
PHYSICAL EFFECTS OF ALCOHOL |
Ethyl alcohol, or ethanol, is
present in varying amounts in beers and wines, and in distilled
liquors such as whiskey, gin, and rum. When a person consumes
alcohol, the stomach and intestines rapidly absorb it. From
there alcohol travels in the blood throughout the entire body,
affecting nearly every tissue. Moderate and high doses of
alcohol depress the functions of the central nervous system,
including the brain. The higher the alcohol level is in the
blood, the greater the impairment.
As blood passes through the
liver, enzymes break down alcohol into harmless byproducts,
which are eliminated from the body six to eight hours later. But
the rate at which alcohol accumulates in the body may be faster
than the rate at which the body eliminates it, resulting in
rising alcohol levels in the blood. Consequently, alcohol
remains in the body, producing intoxicating effects hours after
the last drink was swallowed.
Small amounts of alcohol may
relieve tension or fatigue, increase appetite, or produce an
anesthetic affect that numbs pain. Larger quantities inhibit or
depress higher thought processes, bolstering self-confidence and
reducing inhibition, anxiety, and guilt. As a person becomes
intoxicated, painful or embarrassing situations appear less
threatening and, as drinking progresses, speech may become loud
and slurred. Impaired judgment may lead to incautious behavior,
and physical reflexes and muscular coordination may become
noticeably affected. If drinking continues, complete loss of
physical control follows, ending in stupor, and possibly death.
|
IV |
|
SOCIAL EFFECTS OF ALCOHOLISM |
Throughout most of history,
society has viewed people who drink to excess as irresponsible,
immoral, and of weak character. Punishment of drunkards was
considered necessary to protect the community. By the early
1900s, experts conceded that alcohol dependence may result from
tissue changes caused by the action of alcohol. These changes
produce a continued need to drink, such that the individual
seeks larger amounts of alcohol at more frequent intervals.
However, society still regarded taking or rejecting a drink as a
matter of personal decision, thus all excessive drinking was
considered a voluntary act. The individual, therefore, was held
responsible for his or her behavior.
Although a consensus is growing
among health professionals that alcohol dependence is a disease,
society’s attitudes toward individuals with drinking problems
remain ambivalent and confused. Until the mid-20th century, the
typical picture of the alcoholic was of someone without steady
employment, unable to sustain family relationships and most
likely in desperate financial straits. But this stereotype was
largely dispelled when highly respected people publicly admitted
their alcohol dependence and shared their successful recovery
stories. Particularly critical in changing the way Americans
view alcohol-use disorders were New York broker William Griffith
Wilson (more familiarly known as Bill W.) and Ohio physician
Robert Holbrook Smith (Dr. Bob). In 1935 these two recovered
alcoholics developed a program to promote their successful
philosophy for recovering from alcohol dependence. The program,
which became known as Alcoholics Anonymous, has spread around
the world, helping millions of members to avoid alcohol use and
rebuild their lives. In the late 1970s Betty Ford, the wife of
former U.S. president Gerald Ford, disclosed her struggle to
recover from alcohol dependence. She helped raise the public’s
understanding about alcohol dependence through her open, honest
revelations and her creation of a groundbreaking treatment
center for substance abusers in Rancho Mirage, California, now
known as the Betty Ford Center.
Intoxication threatens not only
the individual who drinks but also the surrounding community.
Therefore, societies around the world have attempted to control
excessive use of alcohol. Temperance societies in the 19th and
20th centuries pushed for laws ranging from arrest and jail
sentences for public drunkenness to prohibition of the
manufacture, distribution, and consumption of alcoholic
beverages.
Today experts characterize
alcohol-use disorders as a form of illness, and one so
widespread that it constitutes a major public health problem.
According to WHO, alcohol dependence and other alcohol-use
disorders undermine global health, accounting for 3.5 percent of
the total cases of disease worldwide. This figure equals the
hazards posed by unsafe sex and surpasses two other formidable
health foes, tobacco and illicit drugs. In the United States
alone, the NIAAA estimates that alcoholism causes losses of more
than $185 billion a year in lost productivity, illness, and
premature death.
|
V |
|
DEVELOPMENT OF ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE |
Alcohol-use disorders develop in
a predictable pattern. Health professionals use three stages to
describe this progression. Each stage is defined by a set of
symptoms that are used in early diagnosis and treatment. Most
individuals who drink alcohol never progress beyond stage one
and are commonly known as social drinkers. In this stage,
individuals drink alcohol primarily as an accompaniment to
social situations. Drinking at this stage is not the central
focus of a person’s activities.
A small percentage of social
drinkers progress to stage two. In this early stage of a
drinking problem, many people do not show any signs of illness.
But often, more severe problems develop with time and continued
heavy drinking. Activities that focus on drinking may take up
increasingly larger amounts of time in the person’s life, and as
problem drinking progresses the alcoholic’s intoxicated behavior
may become disagreeable and antisocial. A person may resort to
drinking to relieve the physical discomfort of withdrawal
symptoms. Most often, attempts to avoid the discomfort result in
morning drinking to offset symptoms that develop after a bout of
drinking the night before.
As drinking continues, drinkers
cannot acknowledge that drinking and intoxication have become
goals in themselves. Drinking may become a technique for coping
with problems, many of which have been brought about by alcohol
use. Drinkers may neglect responsibilities to their family,
seriously damaging relationships with their partners and
children. Their productivity at work declines, often resulting
in job loss. Despite numerous negative consequences experienced
as a result of their drinking, they remain in denial about their
problem. They continue to claim to friends or family that they
can stop drinking any time they want to. But in actuality they
find it increasingly difficult to control their alcohol use.
Stage three is the final stage of
alcohol dependence. In addition to suffering from many of the
problems experienced by individuals in stage two, an individual
in stage three can no longer control his or her drinking. This
impaired control, in which the compulsion to drink is
overwhelming, is the key identifier that health professionals
use to diagnose people who have progressed to alcohol
dependence.
Scientists do not know precisely
what causes alcoholism, but most experts suspect that a
combination of factors are involved, which may explain why some
people who drink become alcohol dependent while most do not.
Scientists have explored the
chemical action of alcohol among both normal individuals and
individuals who suffer from alcohol-use disorders, particularly
alcohol dependence. Some studies suggest that some people may
have a physical trait that enables them to drink large
quantities of alcohol before feeling its intoxicating effects.
These people have an enhanced tolerance for alcohol. Scientists
are unsure if this trait causes excessive drinking or develops
as the result of such drinking.
Studies show that alcoholism runs
in families—alcoholics are six times more likely than
nonalcoholics to have blood relatives who are alcohol dependent.
Researchers have long pondered whether these familial patterns
result from genetics or from a common home environment, which
often includes alcoholic parents. Studies of twins attempt to
identify if alcohol dependence develops as the result of genetic
factors, shared environmental influences, or a combination of
both. Laboratory studies compare the genetic structure in people
who are alcohol dependent with those who have no personal or
family history of the disease.
Studies of twins in the 1980s
showed that patterns of alcohol dependence differed among
identical twins, who share identical genes, and fraternal twins,
who are genetically different. If one twin becomes alcohol
dependent, an identical twin is more likely to develop alcohol
dependence than a fraternal twin. While these studies suggest
that a genetic factor plays a role in alcohol dependence, the
results are difficult to interpret. Many of these studies
assumed that all twins share a similar home environment. But
more recent studies revealed that the home environments of
identical twins are more alike than the environments of
fraternal twins. That is, as children, identical twins are more
likely than fraternal twins to play and study together and to
share friends. And as adults, identical twins are more likely
than fraternal twins to stay in close contact with each other,
possibly resulting in the development of similar behaviors.
Scientists are conducting further twin studies that take into
account differences in home environments.
Scientists now recognize that
alcoholism is a polygenic disease—that is, many genes are
involved in increasing an individual’s risk for developing
alcohol dependence. In addition to family studies that establish
a broad genetic influence on alcoholism, scientists perform
laboratory studies to try to identify the specific genes
involved in the development of alcohol dependence. One method
scientists use is to look for genetic markers related to
alcoholism. A genetic marker is a gene that produces an
observable trait and has a known location on a chromosome, the
rod-shaped structures that carry genes. Once scientists have
identified genetic markers, they attempt to determine if the
markers are inherited in people with alcoholism. If the marker
is inherited along with alcoholism, scientists know that the
genes that cause alcoholism are likely located close to the
genetic marker on the chromosome.
In 1998 researchers moved closer
to the goal of finding the genes for alcoholism when they
identified locations on four chromosomes where these genes are
likely to be. Some experts speculate that these genes may not be
specific for alcohol dependence, but rather may determine
temperament or personality traits that increase a person’s
vulnerability to alcohol-use disorders.
Scientists recognize that
alcohol-use disorders likely results from a complex interaction
of biological influences and environmental factors.
Environmental factors that may affect the development of the
disease include personal behavioral skills, peer influences
early in life, parental behavior, societal and cultural
attitudes toward alcohol use, life stress, and availability of
alcoholic beverages. Once a person has established a drinking
pattern, environmental factors combined with physical changes
induced by heavy drinking may reinforce the continued use of
alcohol.
|
C |
|
Psychological
Influences |
Many experts believe that a loss
of control over drinking is as much psychological as it is
physiological. Studies show that alcohol-dependent individuals
will drink excessive amounts of a nonalcoholic beverage if they
believe it contains alcohol. Moreover, when they are given an
alcoholic beverage that they believe is alcohol-free, their
drinking behavior is similar to that of persons not dependent on
alcohol.
Many drinkers develop a
psychological condition known as denial, in which they are
unable to acknowledge that alcohol use lies at the root of many
of their problems. Denial was long thought to be a personality
trait shared by all persons who suffer from alcohol-use
disorders. Recent research suggests that denial may be a
psychological response to negative feedback people receive about
their drinking. Some studies indicate that when approached with
objective information about their drinking and its consequences
in an empathetic and nonconfrontational manner, many persons
with significant drinking problems do not demonstrate denial.
While some studies have found
that moderate use of alcohol has beneficial health effects,
including protection from coronary heart disease, heavy and
prolonged intake of alcohol can seriously disturb body
chemistry. Heavy drinkers lose their appetite and tend to obtain
calories from alcohol rather than from ordinary foods. Alcohol
is rich in calories and can provide substantial amounts of
energy. However, if it constitutes the primary source of
calories in place of food, the body will lack vitamins,
minerals, and other essential nutrients.
Prolonged use of large amounts of
alcohol may cause serious liver damage. In the first stage of
liver disease caused by alcohol, fat accumulates in the liver.
This stage of the disease is known as fatty liver. Most people
do not notice symptoms of fatty liver, although in some people
the liver becomes enlarged and tender. Some people with fatty
liver develop hepatitis, which inflames and kills liver cells.
Hepatitis is marked by jaundice, which gives a yellowish tint to
the eyes and skin. Others may develop cirrhosis, an irreversible
condition in which normal liver tissue is replaced by scar
tissue. The scarring prevents blood from traveling freely
through the liver, building blood pressure in the veins that run
from the intestine to the liver. Consequently, the liver can no
longer process toxins efficiently, causing poisons to build up
in the blood. This buildup can be fatal.
Heavy drinking also damages heart
muscle. Nearly half of all cases of cardiomyopathy are caused by
alcohol abuse. In this heart disease, the heart muscles,
particularly the right and left ventricles, enlarge and become
flabby, reducing the heart’s blood-pumping efficiency. This
inefficiency reduces the flow of blood through the kidneys,
which normally filter excess salts and water out of the blood.
Eventually the blood volume rises, causing a potentially fatal
backup of fluid in the lungs.
Alcoholics tend to have high
blood levels of the hormone epinephrine and deficiencies of the
mineral magnesium. This combination produces severe arrhythmias,
or heartbeat irregularities, a common cause of sudden death in
heavy drinkers. Chronic drinkers typically develop hypertension,
a leading cause of stroke.
In some cases, alcohol withdrawal
may lead to delirium tremens (DTs), which produces increasing
confusion, sleeplessness, depression, and terrifying
hallucinations. As this delirium progresses, the hands develop a
persistent and uncontrollable shaking that may extend to the
head and body.
Women who drink excessive amounts
of alcohol while pregnant run a high risk of having a baby born
with fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS), the leading known cause of
birth defects. FAS results in a combination of mental and
physical defects, such as retardation, a small head, and poor
muscle tone. Some babies exposed to alcohol during fetal
maturation develop fetal alcohol effect (FAE), which produce
more subtle symptoms, including behavioral problems, difficulty
paying attention, or the inability to think abstractly.
The best methods to treat alcohol
dependency vary, depending upon an individual’s medical and
personal needs. Some heavy drinkers who recognize their problem
appear to recover on their own. Others recover through
participation in the programs of Alcoholics Anonymous or other
self-help groups. Some alcoholics require long-term individual
or group therapy, which may include hospitalization. And still
others do not seek treatment at all. These people do not seek
treatment as the result of a combination of factors, including
ignorance of the symptoms of alcohol-use disorders, the social
stigma that still surrounds these disorders—that is, the fear of
being labeled an alcoholic—and an unwillingness to accept
lifetime abstinence from alcohol as a treatment goal.
Numerous studies indicate that
simple, brief interventions can be effective in changing
drinking behavior in those who are not severely alcohol
dependent. In brief interventions, a problem drinker meets with
a health professional for one to four sessions, with each
session lasting from a few minutes to an hour. During these
meetings, the health professional makes the person aware that
his or her current drinking patterns or medical problems are
related to alcohol abuse and could progress to alcohol
dependence. Using a warm, reflective, and understanding style of
delivery, the health professional employs a variety of
strategies to encourage the individual to change his or her
drinking behavior. The goal of brief interventions typically is
to help people moderate their drinking rather than resort to
complete abstinence. Brief interventions also have been used to
motivate alcoholics to enter specialized treatment programs and
work toward complete abstinence from alcohol.
For some alcoholics, treatment
begins with detoxification, which safely rids the patient’s body
of alcohol while treating any physical complications that
develop from severe withdrawal symptoms, such as delirium
tremens. Detoxification normally requires less than a week,
during which time patients usually stay in a specialized
residential treatment facility or a separate unit within a
general or psychiatric hospital. These facilities also offer
extended treatment programs to help alcoholics in their recovery
effort.
Recovery also may involve
individual counseling and group therapy to help a person who is
alcohol dependent adapt to a new way of life, one that is not
driven by alcohol. Throughout the United States and Canada,
public outpatient and inpatient clinics offer a variety of
treatments for alcoholics. The National Council on Alcoholism
and Drug Dependence (NCADD) has affiliates in many cities that
help people who are alcohol dependent find appropriate treatment
programs. Many public mental hospitals and Veterans
Administration hospitals, as well as private clinics and
hospitals, treat alcohol dependence.
Physicians may prescribe medications to help prevent alcoholics
from returning to drinking once they have stopped. The drug
disulfiram (sold under the trade name
Antabuse),
interferes with the way the body processes alcohol. Taken in
pill form daily, this medication generally has no noticeable
effects until a person drinks alcohol. The alcohol and drug
interact to produce an extremely unpleasant reaction, including
nausea, dizziness, headache, heart palpitations, and other
problems. Alcoholics then associate illness with drinking and,
in many cases, avoid alcohol use. Naltrexone (ReViva)
is a narcotic approved for use in alcohol treatment in 1995.
Although scientists are not certain how this medication works in
the brain, it reduces an alcoholic’s craving for alcohol, most
likely by blocking the positive effects the individual gets from
drinking alcohol. Naltrexone is most effective when it is used
in combination with counseling programs.
Most treatment programs
effectively help alcohol-dependent persons stop drinking for a
period, but they are less successful in preventing a subsequent
return to drinking. Treatment programs typically contain a
component that focuses on helping alcoholics understand the
situations, feelings, and interpersonal interactions that
trigger drinking. These programs teach people how to cope with
these factors without returning to drinking.
In addition to formal treatment
programs, other widely available community resources include
vocational rehabilitation, family guidance, and religious
counseling. Many countries, including Poland, Finland, and South
Africa, and some U.S. states have compulsory treatment programs
for alcoholics who have committed crimes. Mutual-help
organizations, such as Alcoholics Anonymous and Rational
Recovery, provide a free and effective method to cope with
recovery.
Until the mid-1930s, alcohol-dependent individuals who could not
afford a private sanitarium or psychiatrist could find help only
at state hospitals, in jails, or through street ministries. The
formation of Alcoholics Anonymous (A.A.) in 1935 marked the
first nonmedical approach that made sustained recovery from
alcohol dependence possible for many individuals. Today nearly 2
million people worldwide claim membership in A.A.
The A.A. program promotes
psychological principles that help people live a healthy,
stress-free lifestyle. The organization functions through local
groups that have no constitutions, officers, or dues. Anyone who
has a drinking problem may become a member, provided he or she
is willing to abstain from alcohol and make an honest attempt to
live by the principles outlined by the organization.
In A.A. meetings the individual
learns that he or she suffers from a disease. Any feelings of
unworthiness the individual feels are dispelled by supportive
group interaction. A.A. offers a twelve-step program to
recovery. The twelve-step program confronts the problem of
denial by urging alcoholics to admit that their drinking has
made their lives unmanageable. The program also calls for
alcoholics to atone for the harm caused by their alcoholism, to
commit themselves to live ethically and spread the A.A. message
to others, and to rely on a higher power greater than their own
will. Mutual help groups for family members of alcoholics
include Alateen, which serves teenagers, and Adult Children of
Alcoholics. Al-Anon is a mutual help group open to friends and
family of alcoholics.
|
B |
|
Other Recovery Approaches |
While Alcoholics Anonymous is
widely recognized as an effective source of support, not
everyone responds to the group’s spiritual bent. Other recovery
approaches include national organizations such as Rational
Recovery and Secular Organizations for Sobriety/Save Our Selves
(SOS).
Rational Recovery was developed
in 1986 for people who find the A.A. approach unappealing.
Rational Recovery promotes lifelong abstinence from alcohol and
teaches people how to recognize what is called an addictive
voice, the thoughts and feelings that promote alcohol use. By
identifying the addictive voice and separating from it, people
seeking to avoid alcohol can learn to avoid the actions the
addictive voice instigates.
Secular Organizations for
Sobriety/Save Our Selves (SOS), also known as LifeRing Secular
Recovery, uses peer-group support to promote abstinence. In
these support sessions, recovery is separated from
spirituality—individuals are encouraged to rely on themselves
and others in the group, not a spiritual power, to gain
sobriety.
|
IX |
|
PREVENTION OF ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE |
A concerted effort by many public
health organizations may in time enable society to readily
identify early signs of problem drinking and encourage people to
accept early intervention before the condition worsens. Many
agencies seek to improve public understanding about this
illness, including the NIAAA, the Substance Abuse and Mental
Health Services Administration, the National Clearinghouse on
Alcohol and Drug Information, Health Canada, and the Canadian
Center on Substance Abuse. Advertising campaigns, newspaper
articles, feature stories in magazines, and motion picture and
television presentations that call attention to the problem help
lessen any social stigma still attached to the disease. Schools
and colleges sponsor programs that help students to recognize
the symptoms of alcohol dependence and to know how to get help
when drinking becomes a problem. As the public becomes more
aware of the health and social consequences of the disease, the
incidence of alcohol dependence may decrease, and earlier and
better treatments may lead to higher recovery rates.
Homoeopathic Treatment
|
Alcoholism(Bad effects of) |
|
Symptoms/Problems |
Remedy |
Frequency(Doses) |
|
For bad effects of
execessive use of alcohol;tremors, delirium and gastric
complaints,etc;irritable and nervous patient |
Nux vomica.30 or 200 |
4 hourly |
|
When patient can not digest
even small quantity of food without taking alcohol |
Acid-sulph.30 |
4 hourly |
|
When patient becomes
violent and talkative after prolonged use of alcohol |
Cannabis ind.30 or 200 |
4 hourly |
|
For patients who drink in
excess and have many fears in mind.Delirium tremens |
Opium 200 or 1M |
10 min(3) |
|
Patient becomes intoxicated
after consuming small quantity of alcoholic
drinks;especially old bachelors |
Conium mac.200 |
6 hourly(6) |
|
Usually constipated,stools
hard;patient feels intoxicated with small quantity of
alcoholic drinks |
Alumina 30 |
4 hourly |
|
For bad character who are
wicked and jealous in nature and talk nonsense even before
drinking |
Lachesis 30 or 200 |
6 hourly |
|
Delirium tremens - constant
loquacious |
Hyoscyamus 30 or 200 |
10 min(3) |
|
Delirium tremens -
inflammatory; rush of blood towards head |
Belladonna 30 |
1/2 hourly |
|
Delirium tremens -
maniacal;hallucination,illusions and fear of dark |
Stramonium 200 or 1M |
10 min(3) |
|
Mental depression and
tremors;tries to injure himself |
Cimicifuga 30 or 200 |
1/2 hourly |
|
Alcoholism(To
create Aversion) |
|
Symptoms/Problems |
Remedy |
Frequency(Doses) |
|
To create aversion to
alcoholic drinks,water causes coldness in the
stomach;water must be mixed with liquors |
Acid-sulph.30 |
4
hourly |
|
For chronic drunkards with
weak heart |
Stropanthus Q |
4
hourly,10 drops |
|
To take away craving for
alcohol |
Quercus g-s.Q |
4
hourly,30-40 drops |
|
To produce disgust for
liquor |
Angelica Q | |