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Posts Tagged ‘alcoholism’

September 21st, 2009

Dr. Keith Ablow Trying to Detox David Hasselhoff

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Dr. Keith Ablow (wvah.com)

Dr. Keith Ablow (wvah.com)

David Hasselhoff snitched on by his teenager daughter again. David has been hospitalized for alcohol poisoning. This is the sixth hospital stay, but who’s counting.

According to Vitals.com, Dr. Keith Ablow is a certified psychiatrist and assistant clinical professor at Tufts University School of Medicine. He is also a New York Times bestselling author and Fox news television personality. Dr. Ablow expresses the level of difficulty and commitment that is necessary to battle with alcoholism.

What I have learned is that defeating an addiction to alcohol often takes a multidisciplinary and very aggressive approach that can include:

 

  • A period of acute detoxification in a hospital setting.
  • A longer period of rehabilitation in a healing, sober environment like the Caron Center or Fernside at McLean Hospital.
  • A very long period of outpatient treatment that is very structured and harnesses the willpower of the patient, his or her family and friends, his or her employer and even the power of the courts.
David Hasselhoff with daughter, Hayley (mtv.com)

David Hasselhoff with daughter, Hayley (mtv.com)

A real war means motivating the patient to look at his character. The idea that a person chooses alcohol over his obligations to self and others means that he is unable or unwilling to do the right thing. Lots of therapists don’t want to judge the alcoholic, but judging a man who collapses repeatedly in front of his teenage daughter and makes her worry about him dying is OK by me.David Hasselhoff seems to be a person who needs everything on the menu. I wish him and his family well. And I wish for all of them a doctor willing to go to the wall and wage war on his illness.

This booze binge came just hours after the taping of “America’s Got Talent” wrapped up for the season. The recent divorcee should have been prevented from seeing his daughters, because he’s made worse impact on Hayley than he has on his liver.

 

READ MORE ABOUT DR. KEITH ABLOW

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September 14th, 2009

Dr. George Fisher - The Personal Physician of Patrick Swayze

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Dr. George Fisher

Dr. George Fisher

Patrick Swayze succumbed to a deadly bout of metastatic cancer. Swayze was a Texas-born Hollywood movie actor whose background in ballet and gymnastics ironically gave him a physique well-suited for his roles as hunky love interest or macho action film hero. He never surpassed the popularity of his earnest, romantic blockbusters “Dirty Dancing” (1987) and “Ghost” (1990), but after suffering from alcoholism, and removing himself from Hollywood altogether, he seemed to regain new perspective that would raise the bar for his acting future. And if nothing else, his utterance of the line, “Nobody puts Baby in the corner,” from “Dirty Dancing,” virtually guaranteed big screen immortality.

His struggle with alcoholism may of been his mortality. Dr. Jeffrey Hardacre, assistant professor of surgery at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine and attending surgeon at University Hospitals Case Medical Center in Cleveland, Ohio, told FOXNews:

“There are risk factors for metastatic cancer including smoking, heavy drinking, and in some cases, people with a genetic predisposition are most at risk for pancreatic cancer.”

Patrick Swayze (exposay.com)

Patrick Swayze (exposay.com)

Patrick Swayze was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in late January 2008 and has been undergoing chemotherapy and other treatments at the Stanford University Medical Center. A Reuters article in March of 2008 reported that Swayze’s personal physician Dr. George Fisher said:

“Patrick has a very limited amount of disease and he appears to be responding well to treatment thus far.”

His medical condition rapidly deteriorated but Swayze still defied the odds in many ways – living for almost two years with this extremely deadly form of cancer. During that time, he put together a memoir with his wife and even started filming the new crime drama “The Beast,” in which he refused to take painkillers because he was worried it would affect his performance.

Dr. Jeffrey Hardacre remarked:

“If you were to look at statistics — the prognosis that is given to most patients with metastatic cancer is usually three to six months. It’s certainly has been described for people to live longer than a year — but this is outside of the norm. Most people with metastatic pancreatic cancer will not live longer than a year.  No doubt that it is a bad disease to have — but you’ve got to look at this like the glass is half full and not half empty.”

And it seems Swayze did just that — living life to the fullest right until the very end.

Vitals.com has more information on Dr. Jefferey Hardacre and Dr. George Fisher

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August 17th, 2009

Dr. Dan Blazer Reveals Binge Drinking Is Not Only Among the Youth

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Binge drinking on the rise among baby boomers and older

Binge drinking on the rise among baby boomers and older generations (ntnews.com.au)

Binge drinking, as was always associated with the college youth, is now a growing epidemic among the baby boomers and older generations. A newly released study by Duke University Medical Center researchers has shown that out of tested 11,000 Americans, 23 percent of men aged 50 to 64 have admitted to binge drinking, along with 9 percent of women.

The same study revealed that 19 percent of men and 13 percent of women in the same age bracket engage in what is one step away from bingeing, or heavy and at-risk drinking.

What constitutes as binge drinking is having five or more drinks on one occasion, at least one day in the past month.

Research shows that having one glass of wine with dinner is quite normal and actually has health benefits in the long run.  However, exceeding the normal amount has significant health complications, especially among the aging generations with weakening immune systems.

“They might be at risk when driving, or it could affect anxiety or blood pressure medication.  There are a number of possible health problems, and they are going to be at a greater risk,” said Dr. Dan Blazer, the lead researcher of the Duke Medical Center study, where he is a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences.

“People need to know that sitting down and drinking five cocktails or seven or eight beers is not without consequence,” Blazer said. “It’s a condition that could fly under the radar, but it can lead to problems.”

“We feel that our findings are important to the public health of middle-aged and elderly persons as they point to a potentially unrecognized problem that often ‘flies beneath’ the typical screen for alcohol problems in psychiatry practices.”

This study also revealed that men who reported binge drinking also had a higher risk of illegal drug use compared to men who drank but did not binge, while female binge drinkers had a heightened likelihood addiction to prescription drug abuse.

According to Vitals.com, Dr. Dan Blazer is a geriatric psychiatrist and finished his medical degree at University of Tennessee College of Medicine.  Since 2002, he has been renowned as America’s Top Doctor.

READ MORE ABOUT DR. DAN BLAZER

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April 28th, 2009

Dr. Bankole Johnson Reveals Medication to Treat Alcoholism

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Dr. Bankole Johnson

Dr. Bankole Johnson

When Dr. Bankole Johnson presented his idea of a drug to cure alcoholism almost two decades ago, his peers laughed him out of the room. However, no one is laughing now.

Studies conducted by Johnson have shown that Topiramate, a drug normally used to treat epilepsy, along with psychiatric treatment can help alcoholics treat their addiction. The medication helps reduce the cravings and anxiety associated with withdrawal symptoms and can potentially reset the brain’s chemistry.

“Most people assume addiction has to do with moral willpower,” says Johnson. “However there is a biological component to alcoholism- just as there is with diabetes or high blood pressure. It’s a disease of the brain.”

One of the benefits of this medication is that it’s effective on alcoholics that are still drinking; they do not have to be sober.  This is important since alcoholics mostly look for help during a crisis. With proper treatment, Johnson feels they do not have to go to AA or rehab. He is also conducting studies to see how this drug works with cocaine and methamphetamine treatment.

Johnson, according to Vitals, graduated from University of Glasgow Medical School and is now chairman of The Department of Psychiatry and Neurobehavioral Sciences at the University Of Virginia School Of Medicine.

He was inducted in the Texas Hall of Fame in 2003 for his contributions to science, mathematics and technology. He also received national media attention for his appearance in the HBO original documentary “Addiction” that won a special Emmy Award. He was recently interviewed by Sanjay Gupta in an hour-long program “Addiction: Life on the edge.”

Although the drug hasn’t been officially approved to treat alcoholism, the medical community is in agreement that medications like Topiramate will become a critical piece of helping alcoholics beat their addiction and salvage their lives.

Learn more about Dr. Bankole Johnson.

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