Worried a Loved One’s Drinking May Be Alcoholism? Here’s Information on Treating the Disease

Worried a Loved One’s Drinking may be alcoholism? Is there a difference between alcohol abuse and alcoholism? Can alcoholism successfully be treated?

Information on Treating the Disease for Those Worried a Loved One’s Drinking May be Alcoholism

Thanks to late 20th and 21st century brain and addiction-related research findings, it is now understood that alcoholism is a chronic, often relapsing brain disease (one of the brain diseases of addiction). What does that mean — brain disease?

By its simplest definition, a disease is something that changes cells in a negative way. All diseases – cancer, diabetes, heart disease, HIV-Aids, to name a few – affect some type of cell in our bodies. This is because every organ inside our bodies (heart, brain, liver, eye, kidney, lung, stomach) is made up of cells. Some diseases affect many organs. Some affect one or two. Alcoholism affects cells in many organs but of particular concern is its effect on cells in the brain. This is because the brain controls everything we think, feel, say and do, and its alcohol’s affect on the brain that changes the way a person thinks, feels and behaves.

How is it a brain disease? First of all — alcoholism is not alcohol abuse [watch 10-minute video linked below], however it gets its start with alcohol abuse. In fact, all alcohol abusers go through a period of alcohol abuse but not all alcohol abusers become alcoholics. Taking it from here, then… The chemical and structural changes in brain cells and neural networks brought about by alcohol abuse [repeated binge drinking, routine heavy social drinking], coupled with the brain cell and neural network changes brought about by the five key risk factors for developing the disease (genetics, social environment, childhood trauma, mental illness and early use), cause the disease of alcoholism to actually change brain functioning. With alcoholism (vs. alcohol abuse), the brain embeds addiction-related neural networks around the characteristics of the disease, which include: cravings, loss of control, physical dependence and tolerance. The nature of these characteristics and the neural networks embedded around them makes it impossible for an alcoholic to drink any amount without kick-starting their disease.  An explanation of how alcohol hijacks the brain will be presented in an upcoming post.

The good news is the brain can heal from the disease of alcoholism. However, this same 21st century brain and addiction-related research now shows that treating alcoholism must follow the same treatment protocols as treating any other disease, such as cancer, diabetes or heart disease.  Instead of the old acute care model (i.e., 28-day rehab), treating addiction must follow the disease management model, which is a three-pronged approach and involves: 1) detox/stabilization, 2) rehabilitation (rehab) – commonly referred to as “treatment,” and 3) continuing care.

Number 3, continuing care, is especially important because part of the disease of alcoholism (addiction) is that it is relapsing. The very nature of this disease causes chemical and structural changes in areas of the brain that are vital to a person’s ability to think straight, behave normally and act responsibility. Because alcoholism is a brain disease, it is highly unlikely that all aspects of healing the brain can be completed in 10, 28 or even 60 days during part 2, rehab. Yes, a great start can be made, but a continuing care (a.k.a. an after care) plan that extends “treatment” for at least a full year is critical. Just as a person with diabetes, heart disease or cancer has a continuing care program/plan to help them continue their recovery once the acute care treatment (e.g., surgery, radiation, chemo) is complete, so too must the alcoholic.

To be most effective, a continuing care plan should go far beyond the “typical” urine testing and 12-step meeting attendance monitoring. It should include specific strategies that outline how the alcoholic is going to maintain abstinence and a productive, enjoyable life after the detox/stabilization and rehabilitation phases have been completed. It helps to think of it as relapse prevention. And it especially helps if it includes plans for how to integrate with the family; for how to deal with the fall-out of not dealing with “life” while in their addiction (e.g., credit destruction, parenting issues, relationships problems, foreclosure, lost jobs, lost friendships — the “life” situations than can trigger a person who is in early recovery [day 29, 30, 45 or 72, for example] to relapse); and for what the family needs in order to help themselves and in that process, help their loved one.

Why so specific a Continuing Care Plan for Treating Alcoholism?

Any number of cues – sound, sight, memory, the smell of alcohol, an emotion, a stressful person or situation will trigger the alcoholic’s embedded addiction-related neural networks. Therefore, planning how to prevent and/or handle such cues is critical. Let’s face it, treatment for a heart disease patient or diabetic doesn’t stop after the person is stabilized, nor is it assumed a patient’s diabetes or heart disease goes away after the rehabilitation effort. Instead, those patients are counseled, provided education and behavioral modification strategies, and then they are given a continuing care plan and follow-up with further modifications, if necessary. This same approach must be used with treating alcoholism. For as you can imagine by now, healing, developing and changing neural networks takes time.

For more information about the disease of alcoholism — of addiction in general — visit The Addiction Project produced by HBO in collaboration with the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), the National Institute on Drug Addiction (NIDA), and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

For more information on the drinking patterns that lead to alcohol abuse, watch this 10-minute video, “How Much is Too Much? At-Risk Drinking Patterns Explained.”

 


 

Lisa Frederiksen

Lisa Frederiksen

Author | Speaker | Consultant | Founder at BreakingTheCycles.com
Lisa Frederiksen is the author of hundreds of articles and 12 books, including her latest, "10th Anniversary Edition If You Loved Me, You'd Stop! What you really need to know when your loved one drinks too much,” and "Loved One In Treatment? Now What!” She is a national keynote speaker with over 30 years speaking experience, consultant and founder of BreakingTheCycles.com. Lisa has spent the last 19+ years studying and simplifying breakthrough research on the brain, substance use and other mental health disorders, secondhand drinking, toxic stress, trauma/ACEs and related topics.
Share This

Leave a Comment