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Post Info TOPIC: Quinine?


Senior Member

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Quinine?


Can anyone tell me what role quinine plays in the treatment of alcoholism?  My A is taking it and I am not quite sure what it is supposed to do.  I have google it and came up with too many hits to even guess which one I should be looking at.

Thanks all,
lilms

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Two things:
1. Recovery is a process, not an event.....and....
2. You only get to go around once. Leave em laughing and make it worth your while


Senior Member

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I cant say that I have ever heard of it being used as part of an A's recovery. I have been around program for almost 30 yrs and have never heard it mentioned before. I would be interested in what you find out.
Karen

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Nobody cares how much you know until they know how much you care. Love you all! Karen


~*Service Worker*~

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Maybe only he is suppose to know and your HP will inform you when the time is right.   Sounds snooty?  Just repeating what was passed on to me while checking up on the Alcoholic.  Passed on in love with some ((((hugs)))) wink



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Member

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Quinine was used for malaria mostly. But it is meant to be a muscle relaxant also so if the doctor thought the might get muscle cramps as a part of his withdrawals he might perscribe it. It's also meant to be found in small quantaties in tonic water.

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Senior Member

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the muscle relaxant thing makes sense

thanks

__________________
Two things:
1. Recovery is a process, not an event.....and....
2. You only get to go around once. Leave em laughing and make it worth your while


Senior Member

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My A, an adult child is a hypochondriac. I knew this was used for malaria and so did she. In one of her stark raving sober moments she has decided she has some dreaded disease. My answer is ask the Doctor why you are taking this. Being the holidays Doc is not around. Hence my visiting my friends here to see if anyone had any insight.
I don't have time to take inventory nor do I desire to.
I am still baffled tho. Nothing has come across my desk about this being used in addiction treatment.

lilms

__________________
Two things:
1. Recovery is a process, not an event.....and....
2. You only get to go around once. Leave em laughing and make it worth your while


~*Service Worker*~

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Posts: 3131
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Kate has it.  I take it for horrendous muscle cramps.

Lots of times going thru withdrawal brings  horrible muscle cramps. To be honest I cannot remember what causes them to cramp. for me it is needing calcium.

I thought it had something to do with addicts end up not having the natural endorphins to mask pain.

but i am not sure. My A was always wiggling his legs and feet.

yep Kate gets the booby prize. hugs,debilyn


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~*Service Worker*~

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here's what I found.  Can't help it, I'm a research junkie.

This medication is used to treat a parasite infection of the red blood cells (malaria caused by Plasmodium falciparum). Quinine sulfate belongs to a class of drugs known as antimalarials. It works by killing the form of the malaria parasite that infects the red blood cells. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) warns that quinine should not be used to treat leg cramps. It has not been shown to work for this use and may cause serious side effects.
 

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has banned the sale of all non-approved brands of quinine because of the risk of serious side effects or death. As of December 2006, Qualaquin is the only brand of quinine that is approved by the FDA.

Quinine can cause serious or life-threatening side effects, and is approved for use only in treating malaria. Some people have used quinine to treat leg cramps, but this is not an FDA-approved use. Do not use quinine to treat any medical condition if your doctor did not prescribe quinine for that condition. Do not purchase quinine on the Internet or from vendors outside of the United States. Using this medication improperly or without the advice of a doctor can result in serious side effects or death.

Do not use this medication if you have ever had an allergic reaction to quinine or similar medicines such as mefloquine (Lariam) or quinidine (Cardioquin, Quinidex, Quinaglute).

You should not take quinine if you have a history of "Long QT syndrome", or if you have glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G-6-PD) deficiency, myasthenia gravis, or optic neuritis (inflammation of the nerves in your eyes).

Call your doctor at once if you have a weak pulse, if you faint or collapse, if you have fever, confusion, pale or yellowed skin, dark colored urine, hearing or vision loss, purple spots under your skin, a blistering or peeling skin rash, or if you urinate less than usual or not at all.

No medication is 100% effective in treating malaria. For best results, keep using the medication as directed. Talk with your doctor if you have fever, vomiting, or diarrhea during your treatment.



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Member

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I tried to find the page where I found it metioned in home detox information for carers (nurses) but I can't find it again sorry. It was mentioned in relation to detoxing though.

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~*Service Worker*~

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Cramps, my A took it for them he's a surveyor, well at least he was when he managed to have a job.

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