How do I stop being addicted to alcohol? What are the methods?

  Alcohol can act directly on the nervous system, and long-term drinking behavior can cause lesions in the drinker’s nervous system, resulting in alcohol dependence. Alcohol addiction, like drug addiction, is a substance dependence resulting from long-term exposure to a substance, and both can be treated through brain surgery. The purpose of this brain surgery is to eradicate the mind addiction, i.e., the desire to drink alcohol, which is a form of mental dependence.  What is psychiatric dependence from alcohol? Psychological dependence, also known as psychological dependence, is a psychologically urgent need to drink alcohol that is even more important for the alcoholic to satisfy than appetite, sexual desire, or sleep. A strong desire to drink occurs regardless of the harmful effects of alcohol on the individual’s mind or body and on the family or society, leading to an unstoppable search for alcohol. The emergence of this apparent psychiatric dependence often follows the development of severe physical dependence, which is made apparent by the patient’s fear of withdrawal symptoms.  These two aspects interact to make the alcoholic unable to control himself and keep drinking heavily. What can be done to help the alcoholic stop drinking for good? If you are addicted to drinking, this means that you are mentally and physically dependent on the substance alcohol, which is medically known as substance dependence. Substance dependence simply means that after using a substance or several substances, your body and mind become dependent on the substance or substances, which is what we usually call “addiction”, and if you do not use these substances, you will feel physically unwell and your mental cravings will become more obvious. The only way to say goodbye to alcohol for good is through surgical withdrawal.  Surgical sobriety is a minimally invasive procedure called stereotactic intracerebral multi-targeted radiofrequency disruption, which is performed through remote microdetection, computer control, and analysis of electrical signals in brain cells, supplemented by advanced diagnostic imaging techniques such as MRI and spiral CT, in order to identify the “addictive cells” that lead to long-term alcohol dependence, and then insert a Then, a 3-micron electrode is inserted and heated to eliminate the addictive cells in the patient’s brain to achieve the purpose of quitting alcohol, with a surgical efficiency of 91%.