What can I do if I can’t stop drinking for a long time?

  Since ancient times, the Chinese have had a unique culture of drinking at the table. Because the drinking culture is so deeply rooted in China, this has led to many people having alcohol addiction, or alcohol dependence, and wanting to quit drinking completely requires not only great perseverance on the part of the quitter, but also the choice of a suitable method of quitting alcohol and perseverance in quitting drinking. So how to stop drinking the most complete effect?  Love of alcohol is not only a bad vice, it is actually a mental disorder, and is identifiable by symptoms including a strong and persistent desire to drink without regard to harmful consequences, and a lack of ability to control drinking, especially giving higher priority to drinking than to other activities and obligations, while rather a tolerance to alcohol, and also a physical withdrawal reaction that occurs when alcohol consumption is suddenly interrupted.  Somatic dependence is the repeated consumption of alcohol that causes certain physiological and biochemical changes in the central nervous system. It requires the continued presence of alcohol in the body to avoid withdrawal symptoms. Once drinking is stopped, it produces a series of somatic symptoms, such as nausea, vomiting, palpitations, sweating, etc., which can be reduced or eliminated if use is continued.  Psychological dependence, on the other hand, refers to the psychological urgency of the alcohol dependent person’s need to drink alcohol, and the satisfaction of this need is even more important than appetite, sexual desire and sleep. A strong desire to drink occurs regardless of the harm that alcohol may do to the individual’s mind or body and to 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. This dependent behavior is limited by the nuclei of brain cells that have been lesioned by the alcoholic’s years of drinking, yet these nuclei can be surgically eliminated.  Stereotactic intracerebral multi-targeted radiofrequency disruption is used to help alcoholics quit drinking. The procedure is computer-controlled by remote sensing microlocation, and the “addictive cells” are identified by analyzing the electrical signals in brain cells and supplemented with advanced image diagnostic techniques such as MRI and spiral CT. 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.