Blog
What Makes Naltrexone the Ozempic For Alcohol
Find out why naltrexone is considered the Ozempic for alcohol reduction. Explore similarities between the medications and how they influence new treatments.
Naltrexone vs GLP-1 For Alcohol Use Disorder
Explore the similarities and differences between GLP-1 medications and naltrexone when used for alcohol use disorder. Effectiveness, side effects and more.
The Sinclair Method Naltrexone Dose Recommendations
Before beginning The Sinclair Method understand how naltrexone dosage plays a role in success rates and how often the medication is taken for maximum effects.
How to Stop Drinking Every Night Without White-Knuckling It
Nightly drinking is a habit loop, not a character flaw. Here are six practical steps to break it for good, where naltrexone fits, plus a key safety note.
Zepbound and Alcohol: How Drinking Affects Your Weight Loss
See how alcohol calories stall Zepbound weight loss, why drinks hit harder, what the cravings research shows, and where naltrexone fits in for drinking.
Does Naltrexone Cause Weight Gain?
Worried naltrexone will make you gain weight? It isn't a known effect of the 50mg tablet. Here is the evidence and what really moves the scale.
Alcohol and Thyroid: How Drinking Affects Your Hormones
Alcohol lowers T3 and T4, blunts the TSH signal, and may shrink the thyroid. See the full picture, the moderate-drinking nuance, and what cutting back helps.
Naltrexone and Coffee: What You Need to Know
Can you drink coffee on naltrexone? We cover safety, interactions, nausea management, and practical tips for enjoying coffee while taking naltrexone medication.
Alcohol and Anger: Understanding the Brain Chemistry Behind Rage
Discover why alcohol triggers anger and aggression. Learn the science and evidence-based solutions to manage anger and reduce drinking.
© Copyright 2026 Choose Your Horizon Inc. is a platform that provides services to affiliated psychiatric medical practices which are independently owned and operated, and in no way owns, directs, or controls the mental healthcare clinicians providing care. The contents of this website should not be used as medical advice in place of a licensed psychiatric clinician. If you are in a life-threatening situation, don’t use this site. Call, text, or chat 988 or 1-800-273-TALK (8255) to get immediate help.