Anonymous ID: a5e594 Sept. 20, 2023, 12:21 p.m. No.19584035   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4281

'It's almost like a light switch.' Everett doctor touts potential of new drug to break meth addiction

Kim Malcolm

Andy Hurst

August 29, 2022 / 6:32 pm

 

A new solution for treating methamphetamine addiction may be in the works. At Providence Regional Medical Center in Everett, emergency room doctors are taking part in a national trial using monoclonal antibodies to treat the addiction.

 

Monoclonal antibodies became more well-known during the pandemic as a treatment for Covid, but they've been around for decades as a treatment for cancer, or even snake bites.

 

To learn more, KUOW’s Kim Malcolm spoke to Providence's Dr. Thomas Robey about how these antibodies bind to meth in the blood, allowing the body to process the drug, and wash it out.

 

This interview has been edited for clarity.

 

Dr. Thomas Robey: This is still very early in the experimental phase, but what we found so far in the initial phases of this treatment is that after receiving this drug, people's symptoms from the methamphetamine intoxication improve very quickly. So, if they were paranoid, they're less so. If they were agitated, they're less so. If they were anxious, they're less so. It's a game changer, really, if it turns out that this will end up working for our population.

 

Kim Malcolm: How do you see it changing the game?

 

As the ER doc, seeing folks who are coming in high on these drugs, or incapacitated by them, it's really difficult for us because we really don't have any treatment that can help them long term. Sure, we can treat their symptoms and help them in the short term, get them back out safely from the ER. But we really don't have any treatments that can help them recover from their addiction. And that's where this binding antibody comes into play. It acts for a long duration, and can help people get on their feet, if they're willing to quit using.

 

How would it change how I want to take meth? Or what kind of impact it would have on me?

 

This drug is an antibody that stays in your bloodstream for more than a month. The half-life is 19 days, which means that you have several weeks where this antibody will be circulating, binding to any methamphetamine that it sees in the blood. Effectively, what this means is that if you slip up in your commitment to stop using and use a little bit of meth, you're not going to get as high because the antibody is right there acting as an antidote to what you've used.

 

The advantage for this long term is that maybe you can get your housing voucher, or maybe you can get your ID, or maybe you can figure out a little bit more about other things you need in your life to try to normalize your interaction with society that doesn't involve methamphetamine.

 

How would you say the trial is going so far? What have you seen?

 

What is really amazing with this particular treatment is that folks come in affected by meth, they get the treatment, and it's almost like a light switch. Within 30 minutes to an hour they're no longer affected by the drug. They're making plans for getting clean or trying to get back into housing. That's the real promise, I think, that this agent has is that there are a lot of people out there who are using who don't want to use, but it's so hard to break the cycle. This drug may be that way to break the cycle.

moar…

https://www.kuow.org/stories/it-s-almost-like-a-light-switch-everett-doctor-touts-potential-of-new-drug-to-break-meth-addiction

Anonymous ID: a5e594 Sept. 20, 2023, 1:07 p.m. No.19584366   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4388

>>19584079

>>19584304

the seven rays was also referenced by Catholicism and other religions going way back

 

In Catholicism

 

The Annunciation

Jan van Eyck, 1434

Seven rays of light descend from the upper window

In early Christian iconography, the dove of the Holy Ghost is often shown with an emanation of seven rays, as is the image of the Madonna, often in conjunction with a dove or doves.[1][21] The Monastery of St. Catherine on Mount Sinai, circa 565, shows the Transfiguration of Christ in the apse mosaic, with "seven rays of light shining from the luminous body of Christ over the apostles Peter, James and John."[4] In the present-day Byzantine-style St. Louis Cathedral in Missouri, the center of the sanctuary has an engraved circle with many symbols of the Holy Trinity. The inscription reads: "Radiating from this symbol are seven rays of light representing the seven gifts of the Holy Ghost."[3]

During the 12th century, Saint Norbert of Xanten, founder of the Order of Canons Regular of Prémontré, discovered the spot where the relics of Saint Ursula and her companions of Saint Gereon and of other martyrs lay hidden while in a dream. In the dream that led him to this location, he was guided by "the seven rays of light … surrounding the head of the crucified Redeemer."[2]

The Annunciation is an oil painting by Early Netherlandish master Jan van Eyck, from around 1434 to 1436. The picture depicts the Annunciation by the Archangel Gabriel to the Virgin Mary that she will bear the Son of God (Luke 1:26-38). In a prominent element of the complex iconographic work, the Seven gifts of the Holy Spirit descend to her on seven rays of light from the upper window to the left, with the dove symbolising the Holy Spirit following the same path.[22] The seven rays on which the doves descend are unique elements in the painting in that they are of the heavenly realm rather than the earthly realm, with the difference shown by the artist through the use of gold leaf rather than ordinary oil paint. Only the seven rays are so treated, and — while all of the other light sources in the painting cast shadows — the seven rays do not.[23]

The Italian secret society of the late 17th century, Knights of the Apocalypse, was founded with the professed aim to defend the Catholic Church against the expected Antichrist, though it was accused of having political motives as well. They wore on their breasts a star with seven rays.[24]

moar…

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_rays