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Effects of (N.E.T.) in drug addiction:
interim report
Sections
Abstract
Discussion
Details
Author: Dr Patternson
Pages: 55 to 62 Creation
Date: 1976/01/01
Dr PATTERSON,1
M.B.E., F.R.C.S.E., M.B.Ch.B.
London, England
An interim report is presented of an in-depth study of the
effects of neuro-electric therapy in the treatment of drug
addiction. It prevents withdrawal symptoms and appears to remove the
craving for the drug of addiction.
The treatment of drug addiction be electro-acupuncture was
described by Dr. Wen,1in
Hong Kong in 1973, following on a visit to China in 1972 to study
the techniques used there. He had started investigating
electro-acupuncture in order to use it a sanalgesia in his
operations, when some of the patients on whom he was experimenting
volunteered the fact that after 40 minutes of electro-acupuncture,
they lost their desire for heroin. (Hong Kong has a massive drug
problem and it is estimated that an average of 15 per cent of the
hospital's surgical patients were opiate addicts.)
The author had been involved with drug addicts on a personal
level for several years, because her husband was investigating,
filming and writing about the drug problem in the Far East on a
political and sociological level. The author was therefore able to
help Dr. Wen find addicts who were willing to be treated for their
drug dependency, and it was established that:
-
A 40-minute treatment with electro-acupuncture consistently
stopped all withdrawal symptoms for a period of time;
-
repeated treatments over a 10-day period, according to the
addicts, completely removed the desire of the addicts to take
their drug of addiction.
Dr. Wen reported on the first 40 cases in the Asian Journal of
Medicine[1]
; a single case was also described in detail by Dr. Sainsbury in the
Medical Journal of Australia[2]
and his results were witnessed by independent psychiatrists.
It is significant that over 100 cases treated in Hong Kong before
the author left there to return to the United Kingdom in July 1973,
received no counselling whatsoever, no social support, no
psychotherapy. In fact, their presence in the surgical wards (no
other hospital beds being available) was deeply resented by the
overworked surgical nurses; also the doctors treating them, all
surgeons, were frequently unavailable. In spite of this, there was
complete success in taking them off their drugs without any
medication. When some patients developed acute withdrawal symptoms
while no doctor was available, the symptoms ceased within 15 to 20
minutes of the commencement of a treatment. No follow-up of these
patients has been published so far, nor of patients who are being
treated by the same method in other centres in Australia, the United
States of America and the Far East [3]
.
1The author was Head of Surgery in the 850-bed
Chinese Hospital in Hong Kong, of which Dr. Wen was neuro-surgical
consultant.
TABLE I
TABLE II
The purpose of this preliminary report is to provide information
on follow-up of 23 cases treated in London.2In
addition, no cases who came to the author were refused treatment,
and all were very hard-core addicts, except for cases 5 and 6 in the
out-patient series. Two cases who were registered addicts had been
pronounced by several psychiatrists as being "hopeless" cases who
could never be taken off drugs. Another three cases, illegal users,
were described by friend and foe alike as being "evil" in their
drug-use and the author was warned not to treat them. These five
cases were all treated as in-patients and have progressed well.
The technique, which the author is currently researching and
developing, has been described in detail elsewhere [4]
, [5]
; it is a modification of Dr. Wen's original technique using
acupuncture needles. The author now uses only blunt electrodes,
incorporated in a comfortable headset, so that the patient is free
to move around during treatment, and especially to sleep all night
with the electrodes in situ. By using only blunt electrodes,
there is no danger of infection or hepatitis [6]
, [7]
, and the pain of repeated needling is avoided.
The electrodes make contact in the concha of each ear, and a
small electric current in the 1-2 mAmp range is passed through them
from a portable stimulator with varied wave-forms and pulse-widths,
and with a range of frequencies from 5 to 2,000 cps. The frequency
is the most significant factor in the choice of parameters of
current.
The immediate effect of this current-application in preventing or
stopping withdrawal symptoms in drug dependency without the use of
any substitute drug at all has already been demonstrated to be at
least partly neuro-chemical [8]
, [9]
, but the long-term effects in removing the craving for the drug of
addiction may eventually be shown to be due to actual reconditioning
of certain brain-circuits [10]
.
Laboratory research has been conducted into the electro-chemical
effects of the currents used in order to determine the modus
operandi, and to establish accurate parameters of current for
treatment. The results of the first year's research in alcohol
studies have shown to be of potential significance for clinical
application in alcoholism, and similar studies are planned for other
drugs such as heroin, methadone and barbiturates.
Two series of consecutive, unselected cases are summarized in
tables 1 and 2. The first series were given in-patient treatment;
the second series were treated as out-patients because of lack of
appropriate residential facilities, and their drugs were therefore
easily obtainable at any time during the course of treatment. The
follow-up reports refer to mid-December 1975, and are based on
personal interview and the reports of family and close friends.
It is obvious from these brief records that a short initial
period of in-patient therapy is preferable.
The follow-up in this brief outline is confined to [1]
drug recidivism and [2]
improvement in attitude and behaviour as estimated by the doctor and
by relatives or close friends of the drug addict.
It must be strongly emphasised that, in order to prevent
recidivism, this neuro-electric therapy is only part of the total
treatment of an addict; of equal importance is the intensive
counselling on the rebuilding of their lives, during the therapy
period. However, evidence is emerging that the addict is
significantly more receptive to such counselling or to psychotherapy
when receiving simultaneous N.E.T., than in any other method of
withdrawal from drugs.
All the cases described received some counselling during the
therapy period, usually insufficient because of lack of time and
personnel. None received any structured rehabilitation, and the
long-term results have been remarkably successful notwithstanding
this deficiency. It is hoped that adequate rehabilitation will be
available in the future.
An important side-effect of the N.E.T. was regularly observed,
viz. that the sleep pattern returned to normal far more rapidly than
is usual in withdrawal of narcotics. This is a major problem to the
addict in other methods of withdrawal, the sleep pattern taking 40
to 60 days to return to normal, with a consequent risk of addiction
to sedatives. There is also a consistent increase in optimism, in
contra-distinction to the usual depression.
Addiction to barbiturates, alcohol and nicotine will be reported
in a later series, as will dependency on tranquillizers and
sedatives among the middle-aged.
References
001
H.L. Wen and S.Y.C. Cheung. "Treatment of Drug Addiction by
Acupuncture and Electrical Stimulation", Asian Journal of Medicine,
9, 138-141, 1973. 002
M.J. Sainsbury. "Acupuncture in Heroin Withdrawal", Medical
Journal of Australia, 2, 102-105, 1974. 003
Peter G. Bourne. "Acupuncture in the Treatment of Narcotic
Addiction", Paper presented at 31st International Congress on
Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Bangkok, Thailand, February,
1975. 004
Dr Patterson. "Electro-Acupuncture in Alcohol and Drug
Addictions", Clinical Medicine, 81 (1), 9-13, 1974.
005
Dr Patterson. "Acupuncture and Neuro-Electric Therapy in
Treatment of Drug and Alcohol Addictions", Australian Journal of
Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, 2 (3), 90-95, August, 1975.
006
K.F. Hussain. "Serum Hepatitis Associated with Repeated
Acupuncture", Letter to British Medical Journal, 1974 (Vol. 3),
41-42, July 6, 1975. 007
P. Alexander, G. Hamilton Fairley and D.W. Smither. "Repeated
Acupuncture and Serum Hepatitis", Letter to British Medical Journal,
(Vol. 3), 466, 1974. 008
Peking Medical College, Research Group of Acupuncture
Anaesthesia. "The Role of Some Neurotransmitters of Brain in Finger
Acupuncture Analgesia", Scientia Sinica , 17 (1), 112-130,
1974. 009
D.J. Mayer. "Pain Inhibition by Electrical Brain Stimulation:
Comparison to Morphia", Neuro-Sciences Research Progress Bulletin ,
13 (1), 94-100, 1975. 010
Dr Patterson. " Addictions Can Be Cured ", Berkhamsted,
England: Lion Publishing, 1975.
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