Abstract
A considerable number of animal studies on the effects of dopaminergic agents on alcohol intake behavior have been performed. Acute alcohol administration in rats induces dopamine release in the caudate nucleus and in the nucleus accumbens, an effect related among others to reinforcement. It has been repeatedly suggested that D<sub>1</sub> and D<sub>2</sub> receptor activation mediates reward. As alcohol consumption and dopaminergic transmission seem to have a close relationship, all kinds of dopaminergic agents may be regarded as putative therapeutics for preventing relapse. In a prospective European double-blind multicenter clinical trial, comparing the D<sub>1</sub>, D<sub>2</sub>, D<sub>3</sub> antagonist flupenthixol and placebo in 281 chronic alcohol-dependent patients (27.4% women), the application of the Lesch typology made an outcome differentiation possible. It could be shown in which patients flupenthixol administration was followed by a significantly higher relapse rate and in which patient groups no differences were found when compared to placebo.
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