Chinese Tree Offers Hope For Alcoholics
Posted: January 17th, 2012 | Author: Michael Courtenay | Filed under: Medical Research, Science, Science News | Tags: Alcohol, Alcoholism, DHM, Dihydromyricetin, Dr Jing Liang, Hovenia Dulcas, medicine, Rehab, Treatment, UCLA, University of California, World Health Organization | Comments Off
Researchers at the University of California – UCLA – are investigating a 500-year-old Chinese hangover cure in the hope they can put its properties into a pill to help alcoholics and stave off hangovers. Alcoholism is a huge problem globally, killing 2.5 million people each year according to the World Health Organization. There has been serious research recently looking for drugs that stop people drinking, or at least encourage them to drink less.
In an article published in the latest issue of the Journal of Neuroscience, they describe how dihydromyricetin blocks the action of alcohol on the brain and neurons and also reduces voluntary alcohol consumption, with no major side effects, in an early study with rats. Only an estimated 13 percent of people identified as having an alcohol use disorder receive medical treatment, partly due to a lack of effective medications without major side effects. Read the full article »»»»





















