Sixty patients, recognized as chronic alcoholics on the grounds of the case history and with a score above 11 of the Munich Alcoholism Test (MALT) have been treated with metadoxine or placebo for thirty days according to a double blind randomized design. In the group treated with active drug there has been a significant reduction higher than in the controls of the scores relating to the abstinence symptomatology, in particular regarding the neuropsychic residual symptomatology (anxiety, depression, insomnia) after the first week of treatment, a reduced requirement of benzodiazepines and/or neuroleptics, and a significant decrement higher than in the controls of the score of MALT at the end of treatment. Furthermore, metadoxine seems to make easy the maintenance of abstinence, at least at short term.