W. D. Silkworth, New York, N.Y.
293
CENTRAL PARK WEST -MEDICAL RECORD MARCH 17, 1937
Alcoholism
is considered by many physicians a chronic condition that gradually
unfolds itself to a dismal end. They feel that it is a state of mind
and advise these patients that it is up to them to discontinue their
accustomed drug, which it is assumed they can do by merely making up
their minds to do so. Proper attention is not given to the
psychological problem as well as the physical condition of these
people.
Partly
as a result, the economic and social importance of alcoholism is
astounding, and only those in close touch with this phase of medicine
realize that the situation is a direct challenge to the physician,
worthy of his best efforts. It is rendered more acute by the invasion
of public bars by women and young girls, the vicious institution of
the “cocktail hour” and the “new freedom” that have resulted
from general demoralization during the post-war era. The subject now,
concerns both sexes and all ages to a degree never before
experienced, and its importance will not be fully realized until the
present generation has reached middle life.
A
heavy responsibility, therefore, rests upon the physician. No other
condition has attained such general and widespread proportions. No
other disease entails such far-reaching suffering and disaster to
families and friends, nor is there any other with which the physician
has been less able to cope with reasonable assurance of at least
minimizing its ravages. The reason for this lies not only in the
influences we have noted already, but in the fact that heretofore
alcoholism has been considered a vice within the control of the
relatively few individuals concerned and not as a disease entity in
its more subtle and damaging aspects; and all that has been expected
of the physician has been the administration of sedatives, purges and
emetics to control acute stages.
It
is our purpose to show that there is a type of alcoholism
characterized by a definite symptomatology and a fixed diagnosis
indicative of a constant and specific pathology; in short, that true
alcoholism is a manifestation of allergy. If the arguments adduced
appear to upset traditional ideas on the subject, it is because the
major points of diagnostic importance as well as the fundamental
basis of the physical and mental alterations that occur in the
victims, have not heretofore been correlated or analyzed with the
same interest that attaches to other conditions that are no more
serious but elicit more sympathy. As the result of observations of
numerous cases at Towns Hospital, New York City, over a period of
years, clinical constants have been derived and data have been
accumulated which indicate that the subject must be considered from
the constitutional and serological point of view.
We
may set it down as a fundamental proposition that alcoholism is not a
habit. Second, drunkenness and alcoholism are not synonymous.
Intoxication with alcohol, as commonly observed, is a purely
superficial manifestation of no diagnostic importance whatever in
itself; nor is the desire to take a drink, which is common to many.
The majority of people who drink alcohol apparently do so with
impunity. Prohibition revealed, among other things, how much people
desire to use alcohol on all sorts of occasions, and that this
desire, and intention, are not limited to chronic alcoholics. The
judge, the senator, the preacher, all want their alcohol on occasion.
The merchant or the broker closes transactions over a highball and
frequently indulges several times daily for many years. The clubman
and the society matron, the daily laborer, the high and the low alike
may drink daily more or less liberally of any and all sorts of liquor
during much of their life time. They may, and do, become intoxicated;
but note that in the majority of such cases alcohol exhibits only the
immediate effects of the drug, and recovery is prompt and
uncomplicated. Copious elimination, with a cold pack on the head and
a brisk shower bath on the “morning after” end the matter. Also
note, for later comparison, that if, for any reason, this type of
drinker decides to “swear off”, he experiences no more physical
or mental pang than accompanies the abandonment of any other habitual
mode of living. There is no “problem”, no struggle, no psychic
complications to be met, nothing but the transient inconvenience of
interruption in his usual customs. For one reason or another he has
decided that the inducements to stop drinking are greater than those
to continue it. He has had a one hundred percent change of mind and
his will is one hundred percent free to act accordingly.
Such
people drink from choice and not from necessity. They find in alcohol
a pleasant stimulation, a relief from anxieties, an increased warmth
of conviviality. It is not a dominant factor in their lives. They are
normal people, mentally and physically, to all intents and purposes.
We must keep in mind, also, the fact that the multitude of persons
who exhibit misbehavior conduct through faulty upbringing or
complexes, who are oppressed by a sense of humiliation or inferiority
because of unfriendly or disapproving associates or because of some
physical defect, and find that a few drinks enable them to consider
themselves the equals of any or even superior to all others, are not
to be classed as chronic alcoholics merely because they indulge in
alcohol regularly. A change of environment, a new mental attitude, or
the restoration of confidence in themselves may suffice to bring
about a totally new policy on their part. The significant point is
that under such circumstances, if they desire to stop drinking they
can do it without a struggle. They have no need to lean upon anyone
else or anything outside of themselves for support. Alcohol is not
necessary for them.
This,
we believe, is a fair view of the general drinking public, and
constitutes a familiar background against which to contrast a very
different picture. These people are not true alcoholics, but they may
become so; and it is from among them that the real alcoholics are
derived.
Let
us now contrast with this kind of drinker an entirely different type.
He is, as we have noted, a development of the class we have just
described, his history may be quite like that of the average. But
sooner or later there comes a time when he manifests changes that
place him in a classification characterized by symptoms that were
entirely lacking before, and unequivocally set him apart from the
average drinker. Whereas he formerly drank for pleasure, he now has
to drink from necessity in order to keep going. He cannot take his
liquor or leave it, as he used to do. Yet, even if he is more or less
soaked with it all day, his mind at first functions fairly well, he
transacts his business with fair efficiency and keeps up with his
obligations to his associates and the community. But he discovers
that a change has occurred in him. He finds that he has to have a
drink in the morning. Then he finds, after a little more time, that
his hand shakes; when he signs his name, for example. Later,
irritability and lack of concentration supervene. He is not the man
temperamentally that he used to be. In order to meet these changes
and increasing symptoms, he is compelled to increase the amount he
consumes, and a prolonged spree replaces a short intoxication.
PHYSICAL
SYMPTOMS OF ALCOHOLISM
The
spree is characterized by certain definite physical symptoms in all
such cases. The phenomenon of craving is prominent; there are
complete loss of appetite, insomnia, dry skin and hypermotor
activity. He has a feeling of anxiety which amounts to a nameless
terror. He presents the picture of a person who has just finished a
race but must have more stimulation to start again at once. Alcohol
in itself does not produce these symptoms in the average individual
any more than the daily use of alcohol produces a chronic alcoholic
in the absence of constitutional allergy. But note that, in sharp
contrast to the progress of these developments, he may not, in many
cases, actually be taking any more liquor on the average than one of
his associates who does not get into the same state as himself, in
whom the phenomenon of craving is not present. His friends and family
remark the alterations occurring in him. He himself, notices them and
also what is apparent to everyone else, that a very little alcohol
has an effect on him altogether out of proportion to the amount
taken, and different from what he used to expect. It is not at all
unusual, in fact it is the rule, for such a person to say, for
example: “I drank for twenty years but it never affected me this
way before.” It is to be noted here that it does not take twenty
years to form a habit. One case epitomized the whole clinical picture
in these words: “I can make more money in a day than you can in a
year. I can, and do, handle big things. I carry on transactions that
keep two or three telephones on my desk busy all day. But I can’t
take a drink any more. What is the difference between you and me? A
psychiatrist tells me it is in here (indicating his head); that I
can’t face reality.” That particular person does nothing else. He
lives in and faces reality all day.
These
changes mark the early stages of true alcoholism, and the beginning
of a chain of symptoms that show a remarkable constancy. They occur
in comparatively rapid sequence during a period of from four to six
months in the course of what had been ordinary drinking habits for
perhaps many years previously. At this point, even during periods of
partial or complete sobriety, he develops a state of anxiety
amounting to a vague fear, then depression and lack of concentration,
with gradually growing indifference or complete apathy toward his
former interests. Unreliability, changes in personality, loss of
appetite, insomnia and tachycardia follow. He is under such tension
in the effort to control himself that he has to have a drink in order
to hold himself together. At the same time, and we have observed few
exceptions to this, these individuals will tell you that they not
only have no liking for liquor but dread to take it; and, to anyone
who has watched such a person, it is obvious that this is true. But
he believes he must have it, even though he realizes that, in his
particular case, a single drink will plunge him into such a condition
that a prolonged spree will be the inevitable result. After the first
drink, and only then, does he experience the physical phenomenon of
craving.
I
can not emphasize too strongly the point that this man does not go on
a spree from pure deviltry or desire. He often has important
engagements or appointments or decisions to make the following day,
to which he has given serious consideration. The situation cannot be
duplicated in what we may call the “normal” or nonalcoholic
drinker, who is accustomed to his few drinks a day, year in and year
out, and never goes on a spree.
When
a man gets into this state, it is a remarkable and noteworthy fact
that he needs only a comparatively small amount to keep him more or
less interested in affairs. All he wants, and must have, is a drink
every so often. It is as if these small pushes were enough, in
contrast to the ordinary “drunk” who finishes the bottle at one
sitting, becomes intoxicated and goes on his way again, apparently
none the worse, after the drug has been eliminated. These small
pushes that propel the true alcoholic through his day, are one phase
of a vicious cycle, apparently, culminating in complete debauch,
after which the cycle begins again.
ALCOHOLISM
A TRUE ALLERGIC STATE
The
inevitable conclusion is that true alcoholism is an allergic state,
the result of gradually increasing sensitization by alcohol over a
more or less extended period of time. The constancy of the symptoms
and progress is too fixed to permit any other explanation. Some are
allergic from birth, but the condition usually develops later in
life. The development and course of these cases are quite comparable
with the history of hay fever patients in many respects. One may
enjoy absolute freedom for many years from any susceptibility to
pollen. Year after year, however, there gradually develops a
sensitivity to it in certain individuals, culminating at last in
paroxysms of hay fever that persist indefinitely when the condition
is fully established.
It
is noteworthy also, that such patients may be deprived of liquor
altogether for a long period, a year or longer for example, and
become apparently normal. They are still allergic, however, and a
single drink will develop the full symptomatology again.
There
is another class of allergics who exhibit periodicity. At certain
regular intervals, predictable in a given case almost to a day,
varying from a few months to a year, these patients desire liquor.
After a prolonged spree, they are apparently normal during the
succeeding interval. These alternating cycles have a tendency to
shorten the intervals between debauches, and these patients, also,
deny any craving. Certainly it seems absurd to think that a man
should have a craving only on certain fixed dates. Rather, we must
take into consideration the fact that a manic depressive cycle is
normal to all individuals. The ordinary person “down in the dumps”
cheers up on a drink or several drinks, if that mode appeals to him,
gets into a merry, or mellow, mood, takes a cold shower in the
morning and is done with it. The manic-depressive type who is
allergic, however, goes on a spree and must carry it, willy-nilly, to
a finish that may require a week or more, until a complete nerve and
mental demoralization brings it to a termination through sheer
exhaustion and inability to stand anymore abuse for the time being.
We also have the constitutional psychopaths who become allergic to
alcohol, and are emotionally unstable and inadequate. The prognosis
in these cases is most unfavorable.
PHYSICAL
AND PSYCHOLOGICAL TREATMENT
The
physical treatment of these patients has heretofore been
unsatisfactory. But if we recognize the condition as a species of
anaphylaxis occurring in persons constitutionally susceptible to
sensitization by alcohol, the problem resolves itself into two
factors. First, the revitalizing and normalizing of cells, and
second, the energizing of the normalized cells into producing their
own defensive mechanism. As long ago as 1916, Professor Bechhold of
Leipzig University, in his textbook on Colloids in Biology and
Medicine, said: “Some day, chronic alcoholism may possibly receive
a physicochemical explanation from the change in the condition of the
body colloids.” On the mental side, from our point of view, the
situation is a practical one and must be met through the medium of
intelligence and not emotion. Nothing is to be gained by substituting
one emotion for another. The patient cannot use alcohol at all for
physiological reasons. He must understand and accept the situation as
a law of nature operating inexorably. Once he has fully and
intelligently grasped the facts of the matter he will shape his
policy accordingly.
It
is true, of course, that psychologically much assistance can be
given. Wrong methods of thinking can be corrected. Extroversion
rather than introversion can be encouraged; but fundamentally this
individual must stand on his own platform, come what will - social
and financial troubles, heredity, etc., notwithstanding.
In
a subsequent paper, we shall discuss special therapeusis applicable
to the treatment of the allergic type of case, describe some of the
outstanding results that we have seen from this line of approach in
this hospital and discuss moral psychology, the necessity for
discriminating between those who must be hospitalized and those who
can be treated at home. The complications to be met and other factors
influencing treatment are so numerous and require so much space that
it is not practicable to include a discussion of them in this paper.
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