Effects of treatment with acamprosate on beta-endorphin plasma concentration in humans with high alcohol preference.

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Effects of treatment with acamprosate on beta-endorphin plasma concentration in humans with high alcohol preference. / Kiefer, Falk; Jahn, Holger; Otte, Christian; Nakovics, Helmut; Wiedemann, Klaus.

In: NEUROSCI LETT, Vol. 404, No. 1-2, 1-2, 2006, p. 103-106.

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@article{6240cb54e7ef4e19a6ceff5d89a0d932,
title = "Effects of treatment with acamprosate on beta-endorphin plasma concentration in humans with high alcohol preference.",
abstract = "Treatment with acamprosate, a compound used for relapse prevention treatment of alcoholism, was recently shown to be associated with increased plasma concentration of beta-endorphin in rats selectively bred for high alcohol preference. The aim of our study was to prove this result in a comparative clinical study with a corresponding design. We studied 51 alcohol dependent patients following alcohol withdrawal during treatment with acamprosate versus placebo for 4 weeks. Data were analyzed for patients with high alcohol preference (HP) and low alcohol preference (LP) by dichotomizing the sample according to median alcohol intake prior to detoxification. In line with pre-clinical data, beta-endorphin plasma concentration in HP patients was significantly lower compared with LP patients. Four weeks of treatment with acamprosate resulted in a significantly increased beta-endorphin plasma concentration compared with placebo and a significant difference in HP patients but not in LP patients. In conclusion, acamprosate seems to modulate the endogenous opioid system. Our data are in accordance with the assumption that the effect of acamprosate on endorphin plasma concentrations is mainly based on the effect in the high preferring subgroup. Since beta-endorphin deficiency was earlier associated with alcohol craving and anxiety during withdrawal, abstinence maintaining effects of acamprosate might at least be partially related with the ability to modulate opioidergic activity especially in the subsample of HP patients with an attenuated opioidergic activity during this state.",
author = "Falk Kiefer and Holger Jahn and Christian Otte and Helmut Nakovics and Klaus Wiedemann",
year = "2006",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "404",
pages = "103--106",
journal = "NEUROSCI LETT",
issn = "0304-3940",
publisher = "Elsevier Ireland Ltd",
number = "1-2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Effects of treatment with acamprosate on beta-endorphin plasma concentration in humans with high alcohol preference.

AU - Kiefer, Falk

AU - Jahn, Holger

AU - Otte, Christian

AU - Nakovics, Helmut

AU - Wiedemann, Klaus

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - Treatment with acamprosate, a compound used for relapse prevention treatment of alcoholism, was recently shown to be associated with increased plasma concentration of beta-endorphin in rats selectively bred for high alcohol preference. The aim of our study was to prove this result in a comparative clinical study with a corresponding design. We studied 51 alcohol dependent patients following alcohol withdrawal during treatment with acamprosate versus placebo for 4 weeks. Data were analyzed for patients with high alcohol preference (HP) and low alcohol preference (LP) by dichotomizing the sample according to median alcohol intake prior to detoxification. In line with pre-clinical data, beta-endorphin plasma concentration in HP patients was significantly lower compared with LP patients. Four weeks of treatment with acamprosate resulted in a significantly increased beta-endorphin plasma concentration compared with placebo and a significant difference in HP patients but not in LP patients. In conclusion, acamprosate seems to modulate the endogenous opioid system. Our data are in accordance with the assumption that the effect of acamprosate on endorphin plasma concentrations is mainly based on the effect in the high preferring subgroup. Since beta-endorphin deficiency was earlier associated with alcohol craving and anxiety during withdrawal, abstinence maintaining effects of acamprosate might at least be partially related with the ability to modulate opioidergic activity especially in the subsample of HP patients with an attenuated opioidergic activity during this state.

AB - Treatment with acamprosate, a compound used for relapse prevention treatment of alcoholism, was recently shown to be associated with increased plasma concentration of beta-endorphin in rats selectively bred for high alcohol preference. The aim of our study was to prove this result in a comparative clinical study with a corresponding design. We studied 51 alcohol dependent patients following alcohol withdrawal during treatment with acamprosate versus placebo for 4 weeks. Data were analyzed for patients with high alcohol preference (HP) and low alcohol preference (LP) by dichotomizing the sample according to median alcohol intake prior to detoxification. In line with pre-clinical data, beta-endorphin plasma concentration in HP patients was significantly lower compared with LP patients. Four weeks of treatment with acamprosate resulted in a significantly increased beta-endorphin plasma concentration compared with placebo and a significant difference in HP patients but not in LP patients. In conclusion, acamprosate seems to modulate the endogenous opioid system. Our data are in accordance with the assumption that the effect of acamprosate on endorphin plasma concentrations is mainly based on the effect in the high preferring subgroup. Since beta-endorphin deficiency was earlier associated with alcohol craving and anxiety during withdrawal, abstinence maintaining effects of acamprosate might at least be partially related with the ability to modulate opioidergic activity especially in the subsample of HP patients with an attenuated opioidergic activity during this state.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 404

SP - 103

EP - 106

JO - NEUROSCI LETT

JF - NEUROSCI LETT

SN - 0304-3940

IS - 1-2

M1 - 1-2

ER -