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9/10/2010

Research on Alcohol After Gastric Bypass WLS and a Momentous Decision

I've been up most of the last three nights. I am reading that insomnia is the most common alcohol withdrawal symptom. I am not an exception to that rule (darn it). I've had about 6 hours of sleep in the last three nights. I hope I become so exhausted tonight that I finally sleep. Last night (well early this morning) I decided to see if I might use my
involuntary wakefulness productively, so I went into further researching the relationship between RY gastric bypass weight loss surgery and alcohol abuse/addiction. The information is far more damning than I had understood even with what I read a few days ago. It turns out the same "mechanical" changes they made to my gastrointestinal system, simultaneously set me up to become alcohol dependent. swan said to me yesterday that she'd been thinking about all this and realized that we really never saw the kinds of behaviors I was having when drinking until I resumed drinking after my surgery. What I am finding in research explains this dynamic. It also leads me to a decision that makes me terribly sad but determined. I must end my drinking. Just as when I encountered my diabetes I decided sugar was poison for me and I would never eat it again, now I have to realize that alcohol is poison for me now and I must end all consumption of it. I am way unhappy and grieving, but better to grieve the loss of my alcohol than my liver or my/our future.

I would suspect were I to come across this while reading Blogs about polyamory, BDSM, DD, adult consensual spanking, and the like I might scratch my head and say what does all this have to do with our "interest?"
The fact is, had it not been for the insistent intervention of my loves (described in all too lurid detail in the previous 16 consecutive posts) who risked much in confronting their Dominant/Master out of love for him and our family; who insisted I look at changing this, intervened, undertook to discipline me when I empowered them to, and did so firmly (boy was it firm!), argued, informed, cajoled, supported, tolerated my at times hostile reactions when appropriate, and ruthlessly failed to tolerate them when they were intolerable, I would never be at this point. Were it not for our unique family structure and our D/s dynamic which combines DD and BDSM as bDDsm, I'd still be blithely and ignorantly drinking myself to death. Instead I am well into my fourth day of complete abstinence and have committed to quit drinking the rest of my life.

The most direct definitive article I read last night was:

"The New Science of Addiction
Alcoholism in People Who Had Weight-Loss Surgery Offers Clues to Roots of Dependency
By JANE SPENCER Wall Street Journal July 18, 2006; Page D1
On the heels of a five-year boom in weight-loss surgeries, researchers are observing an unusual phenomenon: Some patients stop overeating --but wind up acquiring new compulsive disorders such as alcoholism, gambling addiction or compulsive shopping.
Awareness of the issue is just beginning to surface. Some bariatric-surgery centers say they are starting to counsel patients about the issue. Substance-abuse centers, including the Betty Ford Center in Rancho Mirage, Calif., say they are seeing more bariatric-surgery patients checking in for help with new addictions. And alcohol use has become a topic of discussion on bariatric-surgery-support sites, such as Weight Loss Surgery Center, wls center.com.
Some psychologists describe it as a type of "addiction transfer," an outcome of substance-abuse treatment whereby patients swap one compulsive behavior for another. At the Betty Ford Center, about 25% of alcoholics who relapse switch to a new drug, such as opiates.
The behavior has long been explained as a psychological phenomenon as patients seek new strategies for filling an inner void. But as substance-abuse experts learn to decode the brain's addiction pathways, some researchers are coming to believe that swapping behaviors may have a neurological basis. A new wave of research suggests that the biochemical causes of compulsive eating are extremely similar to those underlying other self-destructive addictions, such as alcohol or cocaine addiction. Alcohol use in particular is a concern for bariatric patients because some versions of the surgery can change the way patients metabolize alcohol, making it far more powerful.
Exploring the overlaps between compulsive eating and other addictions is a growing focus at the National Institute on Drug Abuse, which spent$1.4 million on obesity research last year. Researchers at NIDA hope to piggyback on the drug industry's extensive research on obesity in an effort to find new compounds that might treat multiple types of impulse-control disorders at once.
"The potential is extraordinary," says Nora Volkow, NIDA director. "A drug that could condition craving behavior -- whether it's for chocolate or cocaine -- would be a gigantic market."
Dozens of clinical trials on addiction treatments are under way at the National Institutes of Health. Topiramate, an epilepsy drug marketed by Ortho-McNeil Neurologics under the name Topamax, is currently being studied for binge eating, alcohol dependence, cocaine addiction and compulsive gambling.
Bupropian, marketed by GlaxoSmithKline as the antidepressant Wellbutrin and the smoking-cessation drug Zyban, is currently being studied as a treatment for gambling, obesity, nicotine dependence and alcoholism. And Rimonabant, made by Sanofi-Aventis is being reviewed by the Food and Drug Administration as a treatment for obesity and associated health problems, but it is also being studied as a treatment for alcoholism.
Estimates on the prevalence of new addictions after weight-loss surgery vary widely. Philip Schauer, director of bariatric surgery at the Cleveland Clinic and current president of the American Society for Bariatric Surgery, estimates that only about 5% of bariatric-surgery patients develop a new compulsive behavior after surgery, such as alcoholism, compulsive shopping or smoking. He adds there is no evidence that the new addictions have any direct link to the surgery.
At U.S. Bariatric, a weight-loss surgery center with offices in Orlando and Fort Lauderdale, Fla., therapists estimate that roughly 20% of patients acquire new addictive behaviors. Melodie Moorehead, a psychologist who spoke at a session during the American Society for Bariatric Surgery Association annual meeting last month, cited preliminary data suggesting that roughly 30% of bariatric-surgery patients struggle with new addictions after surgery. But she says the issue requires further study.
One possible reason for the disparity in estimates is that alcohol problems can surface several years after the surgery, when surgeons are no longer tracking patients as closely. And some patients may not see a link between their drinking and the surgery, or report their problem to a surgeon. Roughly 140,000 bariatric surgeries are performed in this country each year.
Some bariatric doctors dismiss the issue as pure coincidence. "People don't become alcoholics as a side effect of the surgery," says Neil Hutcher, past president of the American Society for Bariatric Surgery. "They become alcoholics for the same reasons anyone becomes an alcoholic. The surgery is not a cure-all for everything transpiring inthe patient's life."
For a variety of reasons -- including the fact that alcohol is high in calories -- bariatric-surgery patients are often advised not to drink alcohol for the first six months to a year after surgery. In addition, most bariatric centers screen patients for heavy alcohol use, and exclude patients who exhibit signs of alcohol dependence.
"The surgery creates profound changes in people, both physical and mental," says Dr. Schauer. "Even though they're good changes, they could ignite problems in people with active substance-abuse problems."
Gastric bypass surgery, which accounts for 75% of all bariatric surgeries in the U.S., involves sectioning off a small portion of the stomach into a pouch that bypasses the first part of the small intestine. As a result, alcohol passes rapidly into the intestine where it is quickly absorbed into the bloodstream. "You shorten the time to the brain so much that if you liked alcohol before, you'll love it now," says Mark Gold, professor of psychiatry and neuroscience at the University of Florida College of Medicine. (Lap-band procedures, which account for 20% of U.S. weight-loss surgeries, don't have the same impact. The procedure involves restricting part of the stomach with a silicon band, but doesn't change the absorption process.)
The issue is a sensitive one for the bariatric-surgery community following a series of major studies raising questions about the long-term health benefits of the procedure. A large study of 60,000 gastric-bypass patients published in the Journal of the American Medical Association last October, found that 40.4% of patients who had the surgery were readmitted to a hospital at least once during the three years after surgery, double the 20.2% rate of hospitalizations in the three years prior to surgery. (See related article on this page about bariatric-surgery procedures.) Some in the field hope the concerns about substance abuse will add to the growing interest in psychological counseling of patients.
Some research suggests that obesity might offer some protection against other types of addictions, including alcohol. A study of 9,125 adults published earlier this month in the Archives of General Psychiatry found that obese people had a 25% decrease in likeliness for substance abuse. And in 2004, researchers at the University of Florida, Gainesville, published an study of 298 women showing that obese women have lower rates of alcohol use than the general population. The researchers theorize that food and alcohol trigger the same reward sites in the brain. Some people may feed their addictive cravings with food; others with alcohol.
Neuroimaging studies suggest that obese people and substance abusers have abnormal levels of dopamine in the brain, contributing to cravings. "They always feel something is lacking, and in order for them to feel OK, they need to use something that boosts the dopamine in brain," says Gene-Jack Wang, chairman of the Medical Department Brookhaven National Laboratory.
Bankole Johnson, chairman of the department of psychiatric medicine at the University of Virginia, says gastric-bypass surgery provides a mechanical solution that leaves the underlying neurobiological problem untreated. "It's like a thirst," says Dr. Johnson. If you're thirsty -- and there's no water -- you'll drink lemonade."

I wish I'd understood this when I resumed drinking last October.

Thank you everyone who has supported us through all this.

Tom

Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you've imagined.

10 comments:

  1. weirdgirl9:07 AM

    wow - some interesting stuff there, Tom.

    i can totally relate to your grief - for a time i was very sad about *losing* alcohol from my life, but gradually replaced it with much more productive, creative (and cheaper!!!) past-times. Since becoming sober i have put both the money i would have spent on drinking and the braincells i would have lost, to good use and returned to tertiary education.

    i look forward to reading of YOUR exploits in this new chapter of your life :)

    congratulations to you and big hugs to swan and T

    :) weirdgirl

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  2. I am SO relieved that you are finding information to help you.. and that you are now on a path to improved health and living :)

    Hang in there.. the road will still be a bit bumpy .. but I know you can do this !!!

    morningstar

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  3. Impish111:16 AM

    I respect your courage in continuing your research, and looking dead in the eye that which you dread the most. Reading here, hearing you describe how sad and unfulfilled your life would be without drinking, seeing you totally unable, or unwilling, to consider living without it certainly gave me concern that perhaps this was more than a problem to be controlled. I did hope perhaps the time you spent working unsuccessfully was helping frame the scope of the problem for you, and therefore, the solution. So many are pulling for you all, and wishing you well. Stay strong, and keep on with your difficult work. Good thoughts for you all.

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  4. I'm thrilled to read your latest post.
    I understand you are much less than thrilled but in the long run your life will be much better with no alcohol.
    Not easy in any way whatsoever... but worth every hard second!

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  5. hugs. I can understand how hard it is.. it's not about the alchohol content exactly is it, it's about the whole ritual and image and idea of drinking?

    brave desicion, we're all rooting for you :)

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  6. I absolutely believe that all those compulsive/addictive behaviours are related. I think some people are prone to addiction and in some ways food is actually not as destructive as some others. And I am not surprised they are regonizing and researching these linkages.

    And I understand the grieving process that you go through.

    Good luck, and yes, brave decision as mamacrow says,
    sin

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  7. Leonard10:29 PM

    YES!!! Congratulations!

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  8. I was very worried about all of you..am less so now. This still will not be an easy road, but it is one the 3 of can travel together, and succeed. abby

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  9. Anonymous1:55 AM

    Thanks for posting this very fascinating information. Years ago I knew a woman who lost significant weight following bypass surgery, only to turn to compulsive gambling which seemed even more destructive than the weight had been. She was drinking as well.

    I know that if I had to give up food, I would need a strong recovery program in order to avoid simply replacing it with something else. In fact years ago I switched from smoking pot to overeating and gained 100 lbs.

    In desperation, I have recently begun to consider weight loss surgery, so this article comes just in the nick of time for me. Without food and without real recovery, I will likely just turn to something else, perhaps something even more unhealthy.

    Thanks for the insight. Best of luck to you.

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  10. I was all the best in your campaign to stop drinking...

    If somehow I can be of assistance please let me know...

    I know you will succeed.

    Warren

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