2,549 results
Search Results
2. Scientific Publications and Research Groups on Alcohol Consumption and Related Problems Worldwide: Authorship Analysis of Papers Indexed in Pub Med and Scopus Databases (2005 to 2009).
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González‐Alcaide, Gregorio, Castelló‐Cogollos, Lourdes, Castellano‐Gómez, Miguel, Agullo‐Calatayud, Víctor, Aleixandre‐Benavent, Rafael, Álvarez, Francisco Javier, and Valderrama‐Zurián, Juan Carlos
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COMPLICATIONS of alcoholism , *ALGORITHMS , *ALCOHOL drinking , *MEDLINE , *ONLINE information services , *RESEARCH funding , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background The research of alcohol consumption-related problems is a multidisciplinary field. The aim of this study is to analyze the worldwide scientific production in the area of alcohol-drinking and alcohol-related problems from 2005 to 2009. Methods A MEDLINE and Scopus search on alcohol (alcohol-drinking and alcohol-related problems) published from 2005 to 2009 was carried out. Using bibliometric indicators, the distribution of the publications was determined within the journals that publish said articles, specialty of the journal (broad subject terms), article type, language of the publication, and country where the journal is published. Also, authorship characteristics were assessed (collaboration index and number of authors who have published more than 9 documents). The existing research groups were also determined. Results About 24,100 documents on alcohol, published in 3,862 journals, and authored by 69,640 authors were retrieved from MEDLINE and Scopus between the years 2005 and 2009. The collaboration index of the articles was 4.83 ± 3.7. The number of consolidated research groups in the field was identified as 383, with 1,933 authors. Documents on alcohol were published mainly in journals covering the field of ' Substance- Related Disorders,' 23.18%, followed by ' Medicine,' 8.7%, ' Psychiatry,' 6.17%, and ' Gastroenterology,' 5.25%. Conclusions Research on alcohol is a consolidated field, with an average of 4,820 documents published each year between 2005 and 2009 in MEDLINE and Scopus. Alcohol-related publications have a marked multidisciplinary nature. Collaboration was common among alcohol researchers. There is an underrepresentation of alcohol-related publications in languages other than English and from developing countries, in MEDLINE and Scopus databases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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3. Commentary on the Paper of Walther L. et al.: Phosphatidylethanol Is Superior to CDT and GGT as an Alcohol Marker and Is a Reliable Estimate of Alcohol Consumption Level.
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Weinmann, Wolfgang, Schröck, Alexandra, and Wurst, Friedrich M.
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ALCOHOLISM , *BIOMARKERS , *CELLULAR signal transduction , *ETHANOL , *PHOSPHOLIPIDS - Abstract
The article presents the authors' views on the previously published article "Phosphatidylethanol Is Superior to CDT and GGT as an Alcohol Marker and Is a Reliable Estimate of Alcohol Consumption Level," by Walther L. and colleagues.
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- 2016
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4. Comment on the Paper by Quinn and Fromme Entitled Subjective Response to Alcohol Challenge: A Quantitative Review.
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Schuckit, Marc A.
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ALCOHOLISM risk factors , *ALCOHOL-induced disorders , *AGE factors in disease , *DOSE-response relationship in biochemistry , *DRINKING behavior , *ALCOHOL drinking , *ETHANOL , *MATHEMATICAL models , *THEORY , *GENETICS - Abstract
Background: This commentary discusses the recent paper by , placing their results into perspective. Results: Quinn and Fromme's meta-analysis is an important and useful synthesis of a complex literature. It is clear, well written, and well reasoned, with conclusions that are relevant to both the Low Level of Response Model and the Differentiator Model. Conclusions: Drs. Quinn and Fromme use a thorough and thoughtful approach, and I encourage researchers to address the important questions raised by their meta-analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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5. Why language matters in alcohol research: Reducing stigma.
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Shi, Hannah D., McKee, Sherry A., and Cosgrove, Kelly P.
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ALCOHOLISM ,SOCIAL stigma ,LANGUAGE & languages ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PATIENT compliance ,MEDICAL research - Abstract
Background: The use of pejorative or stigmatizing language to describe individuals with alcohol and drug use disorders adversely affects treatment seeking, quality of care, and treatment outcomes. In 2015, the International Society of Addiction Journal Editors released terminology guidelines that recommended against the use of words that contribute to stigma against individuals with an addictive disorder. This study examined the use of stigmatizing language in National Institutes of Health (NIH)‐funded research and reviews published by the journal, Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research (ACER) from 2010 to 2020, with the goal of sharing the results with the alcohol research community to enhance awareness. Methods: The search for stigmatizing language in ACER was limited to NIH‐funded articles made publicly available on PubMed Central (PMC). Though ACER is not an open‐access journal, original research and reviews directly funded by NIH are published to PMC for open access to the public as required by the conditions of NIH funding. ACER articles published on PMC were searched from 2010 to 2020 with specific queries for individual terms of interest including those considered pejorative ("alcoholic," "addict," and "abuser") and outdated ("alcohol dependent," "alcohol abuse," and "alcoholism"). The number of articles containing a term of interest for a given year was divided by the total number of articles published in that year to determine the percent use of each term per year. Results: Our search of research and reviews (n = 1903) published in ACER on PMC determined that although the use of pejorative and outdated terminology has decreased over time, there is continued use of the term "alcoholic" over the last decade. Specifically, in 2020, over 40% of articles searched for in PMC still included "alcoholic." The results of a separate manual search (n = 110) on the Wiley Online Database showed that approximately 30% of articles used the term "alcoholic" in a stigmatizing manner. Conclusions: Stigmatizing language can perpetuate negative biases against people with alcohol use disorder. We encourage researchers to shift away from language that maintains discriminatory conceptions of alcohol use disorder. Reducing stigma has the potential to increase rates of treatment seeking and improve treatment outcomes for individuals with alcohol use disorder. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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6. Comment on the Paper by Suffoletto et al. Entitled: Text-Message-Based Assessments and Brief Intervention for Young Adults Discharged from the Emergency Department.
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Baird, Janette, Ranney, Megan L., and Mello, Michael J.
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EARLY medical intervention , *TECHNOLOGY & ethics , *ALCOHOLISM , *INSTANT messaging ,ALCOHOL drinking prevention - Abstract
Background: This commentary discusses the importance of the recent article by Suffoletto and colleagues (in press), from the perspective of the developing role that technology such as text-messaging is serving as a means of increasing the reach of brief interventions for harmful alcohol use. Results: This study is important as it offers evidence from a well-designed study that text-messaging can be used to survey young adults about their alcohol use shows promising results for the potential efficacy of this technology to reduce alcohol use, including risky heavy episodic use. There are ethical and clinical considerations around text-messaging that need to be examined. Conclusions: Future adequately powered randomized studies are needed to show the comparative effect of new technologies, such as text-messaging, in comparison with more traditional methods of providing interventions in reducing harmful alcohol use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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7. Considering Cognitive Mentalizing Deficits as a Transient and Reversible Impairment in Alcohol Dependence: A Response to Fein's Commentary on Maurage et al.'s Paper.
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Timary, Philippe and Maurage, Pierre
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COMPLICATIONS of alcoholism , *COGNITION disorders , *THOUGHT & thinking - Abstract
A response from the author of the article "Theory of mind difficulties in patients with alcohol-dependence: beyond the prefrontal cortex dysfunction hypothesis" in volume 29 is presented.
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- 2016
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8. Editorial Commentary: Alcohol Biomarker Papers.
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Anton, Raymond F.
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BIOMARKERS , *ALCOHOLISM - Abstract
An introduction to the issue is presented in which the author discusses articles in this issue on state-of-the-art alcohol consumption biochemical markers, the development of new biochemical markers and knowledge enhancement regarding known biochemical markers.
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- 2010
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9. A Systematic Review of the Effects of Perinatal Alcohol Exposure and Perinatal Marijuana Exposure on Adult Neurogenesis in the Dentate Gyrus.
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Reid, Hannah M.O., Lysenko‐Martin, Melanie R., Snowden, Taylor M., Thomas, Jennifer D., and Christie, Brian R.
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HIPPOCAMPUS physiology ,NEURAL physiology ,CELL proliferation ,BIOLOGICAL models ,CANNABIS (Genus) ,COMPUTER software ,CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,ETHANOL ,IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY ,MICE ,NEURONS ,NEUROPHYSIOLOGY ,RATS ,SUBSTANCE abuse in pregnancy ,SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
Background: Marijuana and alcohol are both substances that, when used during pregnancy, may have profound effects on the developing fetus. There is evidence to suggest that both drugs have the capacity to affect working memory, one function of the hippocampal formation; however, there is a paucity of data on how perinatal exposure to alcohol or cannabis impacts the process of adult neurogenesis. Methods: This systematic review examines immunohistochemical data from adult rat and mouse models that assess perinatal alcohol or perinatal marijuana exposure. A comprehensive list of search terms was designed and used to search 3 separate databases. All results were imported to Mendeley and screened by 2 authors. Consensus was reached on a set of final papers that met the inclusion criteria, and their results were summarized. Results: Twelve papers were identified as relevant, 10 of which pertained to the effects of perinatal alcohol on the adult hippocampus, and 2 pertained to the effects of perinatal marijuana on the adult hippocampus. Cellular proliferation in the dentate gyrus was not affected in adult rats and mice exposed to alcohol perinatally. In general, perinatal alcohol exposure did not have a significant and reliable effect on the maturation and survival of adult born granule neurons in the dentate gyrus. In contrast, interneuron numbers appear to be reduced in the dentate gyrus of adult rats and mice exposed perinatally to alcohol. Perinatal marijuana exposure was also found to reduce inhibitory interneuron numbers in the dentate gyrus. Conclusions: Perinatal alcohol exposure and perinatal marijuana exposure both act on inhibitory interneurons in the hippocampal formation of adult rats. These findings suggest simultaneous perinatal alcohol and marijuana exposure (SAM) may have a dramatic impact on inhibitory processes in the dentate gyrus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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10. Social decision making in severe alcohol use disorder: Scoping review and experimental perspectives.
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Gautier, Mado, Pabst, Arthur, and Maurage, Pierre
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ONLINE information services ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,ALCOHOLISM ,ECONOMIC impact ,ETHICS ,PROBLEM solving ,PSYCHOLOGY of drug abusers ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,DECISION making ,SOCIAL skills ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE - Abstract
Background: Patients with severe alcohol use disorder (SAUD) demonstrate multifaceted impairments in social cognition abilities, including emotional decoding or Theory of Mind. Such impairments are associated with real‐life interpersonal difficulties, which in turn could contribute to the persistence of SAUD. However, little is known regarding how patients with SAUD make decisions in a social context and this literature has not been comprehensively reviewed. Objectives: The main aim of this paper was to conduct the first review specifically focusing on social decision‐making abilities in SAUD. Following PRISMA guidelines for scoping reviews, we describe existing knowledge regarding the difficulties experienced by patients with SAUD during social interactions. Our second objective was to propose perspectives for future research, based on the shortcomings identified in the available literature. Design: We searched three online databases (PubMed, PsycINFO, and Scopus) and identified 14 papers using behavioral tasks to assess social decision making in patients with SAUD. Results: Included studies assessed social decision making through three paradigms: (1) economic games (four papers), (2) moral dilemmas (four papers), and (3) interpersonal problem‐solving (six papers). Results indicated that patients with SAUD behave differently from controls in all three paradigms. Conclusions: Previous studies suggested large‐scale social decision‐making impairments or biases in SAUD. However, in light of the limited number of studies available and of the restricted set of processes measured, we call for the extension of this field through more ecologically relevant and model‐based paradigms in order to elucidate the underlying mechanisms of these effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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11. Trends and correlates of spatially aggregated alcohol‐involved crashes among Whites and Hispanics in California.
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Caetano, Raul, Vaeth, Patrice A. C., Gruenewald, Paul J., Ponicki, William R., Kaplan, Zoe B., and Annechino, Rachelle
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TRAFFIC accidents ,DRUGGED driving ,CENSUS ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,HISPANIC Americans ,POPULATION geography ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,ALCOHOL drinking ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,WHITE people ,ODDS ratio ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,DRUNK driving - Abstract
Aims: This paper examines trends and correlates of alcohol‐involved motor vehicle crashes (AMVCs) in California between 2005 and 2016 among Hispanic and non‐Hispanic Whites (Whites hereafter). Together these two groups comprise 76% of the state population. The paper also examines whether alcohol outlet density, percentage of Hispanics in census tract populations, and distance to the U.S./Mexico border are related to greater risks for AMVCs. The border is of interest given the greater availability of alcohol in the area. Methods: Crash data come from Statewide Integrated Traffic Records System maintained by the California Highway Patrol. Sociodemographic and community characteristics data from the U.S. Census and alcohol outlet density were aggregated to census tracts. Total motor vehicle crashes and AMVCs were related to these characteristics using hierarchical Bayesian Poisson space–time models. Results: There were over two million injury and fatality crashes during the period of analysis, of which 11% were AMVCs. About 1.7% of these crashes had fatalities. The rate of AMVCs increased among both Whites and Hispanics until 2008. After 2008, the rate among Whites declined through 2016 while the rate among Hispanics declined for 2 years (2009 and 2010) and increased thereafter. Crash distance from the border (RR = 1.016, 95% CI = 1.010 to 1.022) and percent Hispanic population (RR = 1.006; 95% CI = 1.003 to 1.009) were well‐supported results with 95% credible intervals that did not include 1. The percentages of the following: bars/pubs, males, individuals aged 18 to 29 and 40 to 49 years, U.S. born population, individuals below the 150% poverty level, unemployed, housing vacant, and housing owner‐occupied were all positively associated with AMVCs and well supported. Conclusions: Between 2005 and 2016 the rate of AMVCs in California declined among Whites but not among Hispanics. Population‐level indicators of percent Hispanic population, distance to the U.S. Mexico border, gender, age distribution, and socioeconomic stability were positively associated with crash rates, indicating that important contextual characteristics help determine the level of AMVC rates in communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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12. Statistical Approaches in Alcohol Research: A Comparative Survey of Two Major Alcohol Journals with Four Major Psychiatric Journals.
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Kirisci, Levent, Tarter, Ralph E., and Moss, Howard
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This study surveyed and compared the statistical methods used in two major alcohol journals with those used in four major psychiatric journals. The alcohol specialty journals were Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research and Journal of Studies on Alcohol. The psychiatry journals studied were the American Journal of Psychiatry, British Journal of Psychiatry, Archives of General Psychiatry, and Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavca. The aim of this study was to examine the extent to which alcohol researchers use statistical methods and their level of statistical sophistication. A second aim focused on the extent to which alcohol researchers are attentive to design and sample size issues. Comparisons between papers published in the four psychiatry journals and the two alcohol specialty journals published in 1990 revealed that the percentage of articles without any numerical results was substantially different among the journals: 21% of the psychiatry journals and 7% in the alcohol journals. There was a significant difference in favor of the alcohol journals with respect to frequency of intermediate statistical techniques. The number of papers published in the two alcohol journals using 20 or fewer subjects was similar to the four psychiatric journals. However, the alcohol journals contained more articles in which >400 subjects were studied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1994
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13. The Effects of Survey Modality on Adolescents' Responses to Alcohol Use Items.
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Livingston, Melvin D., Komro, Kelli A., and Wagenaar, Alexander C.
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PREVENTION of alcoholism ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,ALCOHOL drinking ,POISSON distribution ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SELF-evaluation ,STATISTICS ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DATA analysis ,CONTENT mining ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Background We examined differences in response to self-reported alcohol use items by survey mode, whether self-report differences were the result of modality effects or self-selection, and whether these differences varied across the treatment and control arms of a preventative intervention trial. Methods Data from an existing alcohol prevention trial were used to estimate the effect of survey modality on adolescent's self-reported alcohol use at ages 17 to 18. Estimates were derived from regression models controlling for self-reported alcohol use during 8th grade, measured using a single survey modality, as well as time invariant selection factors. Results No statistically significant survey modality effects were found. No differential effects of survey modality were observed by assigned intervention group. Conclusions We provide initial evidence that adolescent alcohol prevention trials may use multiple survey modalities when necessary to increase response rates without harming interpretation of intervention effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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14. Size does matter: An exploration of the relationship between licensed venue capacity and on‐premise assaults.
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Miller, Peter, Curtis, Ashlee, Millsteed, Melanie, Harries, Travis, Nepal, Smriti, Walker, Samantha, Chikritzhs, Tanya, and Coomber, Kerri
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RISK of violence ,CROWDS ,ASSAULT & battery ,TIME ,RISK assessment ,COMPARATIVE studies ,ALCOHOL drinking - Abstract
Aims: Venue capacity has been proposed as a factor associated with increased number of violent incidents on‐premises, though no specific research has demonstrated this association, and instead has tended to focus on the relationship between crowding and aggression. The aim of current paper is to investigate the association between venue capacity and the number of violent incidents on‐premises. Methods: Venue capacity data (the maximum capacity listed on the liquor license) were obtained for all venues in central Melbourne from 2010 until 2016. These data were then matched with police‐recorded on‐premises assaults that occurred within high‐alcohol hours (Friday and Saturday 8 pm–6 am) inside the venue. Results: Analyses were conducted on 5729 venue‐years (yearly assault counts per venue, per year) across central Melbourne. Compared with venues that have a maximum capacity of between 0 and 100 patrons, venues with higher capacities have increasingly more recorded assaults. Venues with maximum capacities between 501 and 1000 are 6.1 times more likely to have an assault recorded compared with venues with a maximum capacity between 0 and 100. Further, each additional high‐alcohol hour that a venue can be open for is associated with a 72% increase in the number of recorded assaults. Conclusions: Greater venue capacity was found to be strongly associated with an increased risk of violent incidents for any given venue. This was further exacerbated by late‐night trading which substantially adds to the risk of assaults inside the venue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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15. Self-Administered Alcoholism Screening Test: A Comparision of Conventional Versus Computer-Administered Formats.
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Davis, Leo J. and Morse, Robert M.
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The equivalence of paper-and-pencil-administered and computer-administered versions of the Self-Administered Alcoholism Screening Test (SAAST) was investigated with alcoholic inpatients and nonalcoholic psychiatric outpatients. When the two formats were administered in counterbalanced order, total score mean differences were nonsignificant. In addition, mean differences on a short-form version were also nonsignificant. Equivalence was also determined by comparing the two formats in terms of classification agreement (i.e., classification of subjects into alcoholic and nonalcoholic categories). Agreement between the two formats was 95% in both the total score and short-form versions. Implications of these results as well as the advantages and disadvantages of using computer-administered alcoholism screening tests are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
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16. Deficiencies of Clinical Trials of Alcohol Withdrawal.
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Moskowitz, Gail, Chalmers, Thomas C., Sacks, Henry S., Fagerstrom, Richard M., and Smith, Harry
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Eighty-one therapeutic trials of alcohol withdrawal were found that have been published in English since 1954; controls were randomized in 29 (RCTs). Two thousand three hundred thirteen patients were randomized. Variable pretreatment description prevented estimates of delirium tremens and convulsion prevalence, but only four deaths were reported. Endpoints were thus entirely subjective in these moderately ill patients. Protocol quality of the RCTs was graded by a previously developed system for evaluating adequacy of descriptions, blinding, and essential measurements. Mean score obtained was.49 ±.03 (1 se). (A perfect paper would score 1.00.) Data presentations and statistical analyses scored.18 ±.03. There was little evidence of improvement of scores over time. Papers lacked confidence intervals, proper handling of dropouts, and ade quate details of side effects. In five RCTs, six comparisons showed that benzodiarepines are clearly superior to placebo (p >.001), but conclusions about comparisons with other drugs were not possible. In none of eight 'negative' comparisons was the probability of a type II error ( β) considered. Discovery of more effective syptomatic agents or methods of reducing the death rate will require more rigid protocols and analyses as well as larger studies to allow the use of more critical endpoints such as occurrence of delirium tremens, convulsions, or death. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1983
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17. Alcohol and Women: A Brief Overview.
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McCaul, Mary E., Roach, Deidra, Hasin, Deborah S., Weisner, Constance, Chang, Grace, and Sinha, Rajita
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ALCOHOLISM risk factors ,BREAST tumor risk factors ,ALCOHOL-induced disorders ,EMOTIONAL trauma ,ALCOHOLISM ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,SOCIALIZATION ,WOMEN'S health ,WELL-being ,BINGE drinking ,PREGNANCY ,DIAGNOSIS ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
The article offers an overview of research paper that discussed the women-focused topics including the epidemiology of alcohol use among women, health and behavioral consequences of drinking, prenatal alcohol use and interventions, and enhanced alcohol treatment services. It also mentions the objectives of research to examine the harmful physiological and behavioral effects of alcohol in women.
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- 2019
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18. Simultaneous Alcohol and Marijuana Use Among Young Adult Drinkers: Age‐Specific Changes in Prevalence from 1977 to 2016.
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Terry‐McElrath, Yvonne M. and Patrick, Megan E.
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SUBSTANCE abuse ,AGE distribution ,CANNABIS (Genus) ,ALCOHOL drinking ,STATISTICAL reliability ,DISEASE prevalence ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HISTORY - Abstract
Background: The overall prevalence of U.S. young adult alcohol use has decreased, but little is known about historical change in related behaviors such as simultaneous alcohol and marijuana (SAM) use that may increase alcohol‐related risks and societal costs. The purpose of this paper was to examine historical change in SAM use prevalence among U.S. young adult alcohol users from 1977 to 2016, and consider the extent to which observed historical change in SAM use among alcohol users reflects co‐occurring change in marijuana use during these years. Methods: Data on past 12‐month alcohol, marijuana, and SAM use at up to 6 modal ages (19/20, 21/22, 23/24, 25/26, 27/28, and 29/30) were collected from 11,789 individuals (45.0% men) participating in the Monitoring the Future panel study. Annual prevalence estimates within modal age group were obtained; historical SAM use trends among alcohol and marijuana users were estimated. Results: From 2014 to 2016, SAM use was reported by approximately 30% of alcohol users aged 19/20 and 21/22, and 20 to 25% of alcohol users aged 23/24 through 29/30. Since the mid‐1990s, age‐specific historical trends in SAM use prevalence among alcohol users followed 1 of 4 patterns: significant increase followed by oscillating increases/decreases (at modal age 19/20), consistent and significant increases (at modal ages 21/22, 23/24, and 25/26), stability followed by increase (at modal ages 27/28), or stability (at modal ages 29/30). In contrast, SAM use trends among marijuana users primarily reflected stability, with some evidence of a decrease across time at modal ages 19/20 and 23/24. Historical change in SAM prevalence among alcohol users was strongly and positively correlated with changes in overall marijuana use prevalence. Conclusions: A growing proportion of early and mid‐young adult alcohol users reported SAM use, with the highest risk among those in the early years of young adulthood. Young adult SAM use may continue to increase in proportion to the degree that young adult marijuana use continues to increase. This paper examined historical change in simultaneous alcohol and marijuana (SAM) use prevalence among U.S. young adult alcohol users from 1977‐2016. While the overall prevalence of U.S. young adult alcohol use has decreased, a growing proportion of early and mid‐young adult alcohol users reported SAM use, with the highest risk among those in the early years of young adulthood. Young adult SAM use may continue to increase in proportion to the degree that young adult marijuana use continues to increase. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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19. Prenatal alcohol and cannabis exposure can have opposing and region‐specific effects on parvalbumin interneuron numbers in the hippocampus.
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Reid, Hannah M. O., Snowden, Taylor M., Shkolnikov, Irene, Breit, Kristen R., Rodriguez, Cristina, Thomas, Jennifer D., and Christie, Brian R.
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ALBUMINS ,MEMORY ,SUBSTANCE abuse in pregnancy ,CANNABIS (Genus) ,HIPPOCAMPUS (Brain) ,NEURONS ,ANIMAL experimentation ,IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY ,PRENATAL exposure delayed effects ,PREGNANCY outcomes ,RATS ,LEARNING ,ETHANOL ,DISEASE complications ,PREGNANCY - Abstract
Background: We recently showed that alcohol and cannabis can interact prenatally, and in a recent review paper, we identified parvalbumin‐positive (PV) interneurons in the hippocampus as a potential point of convergence for these teratogens. Methods: A 2 (Ethanol [EtOH], Air) × 2 (tetrahydrocannabinol [THC], Vehicle) design was used to expose pregnant Sprague‐Dawley rats to either EtOH or air, in addition to either THC or the inhalant vehicle solution, during gestational days 5–20. Immunohistochemistry was performed to detect PV interneurons in 1 male and 1 female pup from each litter at postnatal day 70. Results: Significant between‐group and subregion‐specific effects were found in the dorsal cornu ammonis 1 (CA1) subfield and the ventral dentate gyrus (DG). In the dorsal CA1 subfield, there was an increase in the number of PV interneurons in both the EtOH and EtOH +THC groups, but a decrease with THC alone. There were fewer changes in interneuron numbers overall in the DG, though there was a sex difference, with a decrease in the number of PV interneurons in the THC‐exposed group in males. There was also a greater cell layer volume in the DG in the EtOH +THC group than the control group, and in the CA1 region in the EtOH group compared to the control and THC groups. Conclusions: Prenatal exposure to alcohol and THC differentially affects parvalbumin‐positive interneuron numbers in the hippocampus, indicating that both individual and combined exposure can impact the balance of excitation and inhibition in a structure critically involved in learning and memory processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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20. Prevalence of fetal alcohol spectrum disorder in Greater Manchester, UK: An active case ascertainment study.
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McCarthy, Robyn, Mukherjee, Raja A. S., Fleming, Kate M., Green, Jonathan, Clayton‐Smith, Jill, Price, Alan D., Allely, Clare S., and Cook, Penny A.
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ELEMENTARY schools ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,AUTISM ,CHILD psychopathology ,FETAL alcohol syndrome - Abstract
Background: Despite high levels of prenatal alcohol exposure in the UK, evidence on the prevalence of fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD) is lacking. This paper reports on FASD prevalence in a small sample of children in primary school. Methods: A 2‐phase active case ascertainment study was conducted in 3 mainstream primary schools in Greater Manchester, UK. Schools were located in areas that ranged from relatively deprived to relatively affluent. Initial screening of children aged 8–9 years used prespecified criteria for elevated FASD risk (small for age; special educational needs; currently/previously in care; significant social/emotional/mental health symptoms). Screen‐positive children were invited for detailed ascertainment of FASD using gold standard measures that included medical history, facial dysmorphology, neurological impairment, executive function, and behavioral difficulties. Results: Of 220 eligible children, 50 (23%) screened positive and 12% (26/220) proceeded to Phase 2 assessment. Twenty had a developmental disorder, of whom 4 had FASD and 4 were assessed as possible FASD. The crude prevalence rate of FASD in these schools was 1.8% (95% CI: 1.0%, 3.4%) and when including possible cases was 3.6% (2.1%, 6.3%). None of these children had previously been identified with a developmental diagnosis. Conclusions: FASD was found to be common in these schools and most of these children's needs had not previously been identified. A larger, more definitive study that uses a random sampling technique stratified by deprivation level to select schools is needed to make inferences regarding the population prevalence of FASD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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21. Automating Standard Alcohol Use Assessment Instruments Via Interactive Voice Response Technology.
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Mundt, James C., Bohn, Michael J., King, Monica, and Hartley, Michael T.
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Background: Interactive voice response (IVR) technology integrates touch-tone telephones with computer-automated data processing. IVR offers a convenient, efficient method for remote collection of self-report data. Methods: Twenty-six subjects recruited from an outpatient alcohol treatment center completed IVR and paper/pencil versions of a demographic and drinking history questionnaire, Stages of Change Readiness and Treatment Eagerness Scale, Drinker Inventory of Consequences, Obsessive-Compulsive Drinking Scale, Alcohol Dependence Scale, and two numerical rating scales of craving and desire to drink during the prior week. Administration of the instruments in both formats was repeated 1 week later. The order of administration method was counterbalanced between subjects and reversed across data collection sessions. Scale and subscale scores from both methods were correlated within sessions. Test-retest correlations were also calculated for each method. A criterion of α= 0.01 was used to control type I statistical error. Results: Intermethod correlations within each session were significant for all of the instruments administered. Test-retest correlations for both methods were also significant, except for the numerical ratings. Scores on the Alcohol Dependence Scale obtained via IVR were significantly lower than those collected by paper/pencil. Other differences between the data collection methods or across the sessions were inconsistent. The average IVR call length was 34 min and 23 sec. Paper/pencil forms required an average of 18 min and 38 sec to complete and an additional 10 min and 17 sec for data entry. Conclusions: IVR technology provides a convenient alternative to collecting self-report measures of treatment outcomes. Both paper/pencil and IVR assessments provide highly convergent data and demonstrate good test-retest reliability. Alcohol Dependence Scale score differences between methods highlight special considerations for IVR adaptation of existing paper/pencil instruments. Benefits of IVR include procedural standardization, automatic data scoring, direct electronic storage, and remote accessibility from multiple locations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2002
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22. Integrating Person-Centered and Variable-Centered Approaches in the Study of Developmental Courses and Transitions in Alcohol Use: Introduction to the Special Section.
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Bates, Marsha E.
- Abstract
This special section consists of research from the symposium 'Integrating Person-Centered and Variable-Centered Approaches to the Study of Developmental Courses and Transitions in Alcohol Use,' presented at the 1999 Annual Meeting of the Research Society on Alcoholism. The section focuses on ways to integrate variable-centered and person-centered approaches to better understand longitudinal trajectories of alcohol use and associated problems. Our aim is to increase awareness and discussion of alternative conceptual and quantitative approaches that involve both a person-centered and a variable-centered component, and to make these methods more accessible to alcohol and other drug researchers. The first paper provides a general latent variable modeling framework within which to conceptualize developmental questions that involve the combination of continuous latent variables and categorical variables that represent classifications of individuals into meaningful subgroups. This is followed by three empirical papers that use integrative methods to examine early adult outcomes of adolescent binge drinking; potential mediators of familial alcoholism effects on alcohol and tobacco use disorder comorbidity; and the ability of psychopathology, substance use, and parental history of alcohol problems to predict individual differences in the likelihood of transitions in drinking behavior during adolescence. The section concludes with a discussion of the statistical basis for integrating person-centered and variable-centered methods, a comparison of study findings, and directions for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
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23. Towards Guidelines for Low-Risk Drinking: Quantifying the Short- and Long-Term Costs of Hazardous Alcohol Consumption.
- Author
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Stockwell, Tim
- Abstract
This paper is based on the session entitled 'Moderate Drinking Guidelines' that was held on May 13,1997 at the International Workshop on Consumption Measures and Models for Use in Policy Development and Evaluation, Bethesda, MD. The session chair was Tim Stockwell; presenters were Loran Archer, Tim Stockwell, Tom Greenfield, Susan Bondy, Eric Single, and Maria Elena Medina-Mora; and discussants were Paul Gruenewald and Harold Holder. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
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24. Evolution of the Physical Phenotype of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders from Childhood through Adolescence.
- Author
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Jacobson, Sandra W., Hoyme, H. Eugene, Carter, R. Colin, Dodge, Neil C., Molteno, Christopher D., Meintjes, Ernesta M., and Jacobson, Joseph L.
- Subjects
FETAL alcohol syndrome ,ANTHROPOMETRY ,CEPHALOMETRY ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,ETHANOL ,BIOLOGICAL evolution ,HUMAN growth ,LONGITUDINAL method ,PUBERTY ,PHENOTYPES ,STATISTICAL reliability ,DISEASE prevalence ,PRENATAL exposure delayed effects ,MULTIPLE human abnormalities ,ADOLESCENCE ,PREGNANCY - Abstract
Background: This paper reports findings from the first longitudinal study on the evolution of the physical phenotypes of fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) and partial FAS (PFAS) from early childhood through adolescence. Methods: The sample consisted of 155 children (78 males and 77 females) born to women recruited at an antenatal clinic serving a Cape Coloured (mixed ancestry) population in Cape Town, South Africa. Two expert FASD dysmorphologists, blind regarding prenatal alcohol exposure, independently evaluated each child's growth and dysmorphology at 4 clinics conducted over an 11‐year period. Case conferences were held to reach consensus regarding which children had FAS or PFAS growth and physical features using the Revised Institute of Medicine (2005) guidelines. Results: The prevalence of the physical phenotype was stable across the 4 ages for about half of the children with FAS and about one‐third of those with PFAS but more variable for the others. Test–retest reliability was substantial for the FAS phenotype, but poorer for PFAS. Two distinct patterns were seen: a "strong phenotype" that was consistently identified and a less consistent one in which dysmorphic features and/or anthropometric deficits fluctuated or diminished with age. The physical phenotype was most apparent during early childhood and least apparent during puberty, due to differences in timing of the growth spurt and the evolving adult face. Short palpebral features and small head circumference diminished with age, flat philtrum fluctuated, while thin vermilion and weight and height restriction were stable. Conclusions: Key facial features that characterize FASD in early childhood diminish or evolve in some individuals, making diagnostic examinations that rely on these characteristics most sensitive during early childhood and school age. Moreover, puberty poses classification problems due to variability in timing of the growth spurt. Given that several features and small head circumference diminished with age, many individuals would be misdiagnosed if only examined at a later age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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25. The "Why" of Drinking Matters: A Meta‐Analysis of the Association Between Drinking Motives and Drinking Outcomes.
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Bresin, Konrad and Mekawi, Yara
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PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,ALCOHOLISM ,ANXIETY ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MENTAL depression ,DRINKING behavior ,ALCOHOL drinking ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,META-analysis ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,POST-traumatic stress disorder ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: Knowledge of how drinking motives are differentially associated with alcohol use (e.g., frequency, quantity) and drinking problems is critical in understanding risky drinking and the development of alcohol use disorder. The purpose of this paper was to use meta‐analytic techniques to answer 2 overarching questions: (a) Which types of drinking motives (i.e., enhancement, coping, social, conformity) are most strongly associated with alcohol use and drinking problems? and (b) What are the most likely mechanisms (alcohol use or drinking problems) through which motives may be indirectly associated with outcomes? Method: A comprehensive literature search identified 229 studies that met inclusion criteria (254 samples; N = 130,705) with a subset containing longitudinal data (k = 5; N = 6283). Data were analyzed using 2‐stage meta‐analytic structural equation modeling. Results: Results showed that both enhancement and coping motives were the strongest predictors of drinking problems, but only enhancement motives were the strongest predictor of alcohol use. Enhancement and social motives were indirectly associated with alcohol use through drinking problems and with drinking problems through alcohol use, whereas coping motives were only indirectly associated with alcohol use through drinking problems, although the results differed for cross‐sectional and longitudinal data. Conclusion: Overall, findings from this meta‐analysis provide evidence that drinking motives differentially predict alcohol use outcomes through unique direct and indirect pathways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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26. Proximity to the Southern Border and Sociodemographic Correlates of Drinking and Driving Arrests in California.
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Caetano, Raul, Vaeth, Patrice A. C., Gruenewald, Paul J., Ponicki, William R., Kaplan, Zoe B., and Annechino, Rachelle
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CRIMINALS ,DRUNK driving ,HISPANIC Americans ,POPULATION geography ,RACE ,DRUGGED driving ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,STATISTICAL models ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: About 30% of all motor vehicle fatalities in the United States are associated with alcohol‐impaired motor vehicle crashes. Arrests for drinking and driving (Driving under the influence [DUI]) are 1 of the most important deterrence actions to minimize DUI. This paper examines trends and population‐level correlates of drinking driving arrests (DUI) from 2005 to 2017 in California. Methods: Arrest data come from the Monthly Arrest and Citation Register compiled by the California Department of Justice. Sociodemographic and community characteristic data from the U.S. Census, alcohol outlet density, and distance to the U.S.–Mexico border from Law Enforcement Reporting Areas (LERA) centroids were aggregated at the level of 499 LERA contributing to the report. Reported arrest rates were related to area sociodemographic characteristics using hierarchical Bayesian Poisson space–time models. Results: Both among men and women rates showed an upward trend until 2008, decreasing after that year. DUI arrest rates were greater among Hispanics than Whites for the 2 younger age groups, 18 to 29 (p < 0.001) and 30 to 39 years (p < 0.001). DUI arrest rates in LERA areas are positively related to proximity to the California/Mexico border; a higher percent of bar/pub outlets; a higher percent of Hispanic population; a higher percent of population 18 to 29, 30 to 39, and 40 to 49 years of age; a higher percent of US‐born population; a higher percent of population with annual income of $100,000 or more; a higher percent of population 150% below the federal poverty line; and a higher level of law‐enforcement activities. Conclusions: Results of this analysis of spatial correlates of DUI arrests overlap well with the literature on individual‐level data and arrest rates. The decrease in arrest rates as distance to the California/Mexico border increases is potentially associated with the greater availability of alcohol in the border area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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27. Wearable Transdermal Alcohol Monitors: A Systematic Review of Detection Validity, and Relationship Between Transdermal and Breath Alcohol Concentration and Influencing Factors.
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Egmond, Kelly, Wright, Cassandra J. C., Livingston, Michael, and Kuntsche, Emmanuel
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PATIENT monitoring equipment ,BREATH tests ,CINAHL database ,ALCOHOL drinking ,ETHANOL ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,MEDLINE ,SKIN physiology ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,WEARABLE technology - Abstract
Background: Research on alcohol consumption mostly relies on self‐reported data, which are subject to recall bias. Wearable transdermal alcohol concentration (TAC) monitors address this limitation by continuously measuring the ethanol excreted via the skin. This systematic review aims to provide an overview of TAC monitors' reliability to detect alcohol consumption and methods to estimate breath alcohol concentration (BrAC) and number of standard drinks consumed in a given time frame. Methods: The databases MEDLINE, PsycINFO, SCOPUS, Engineering Village, and CINAHL were systematically searched to identify 1,048 empirical research papers published from 2013 onwards, of which 13 were included after full‐text screening. The selected studies included 3 TAC monitors: SCRAM™, WristTAS™, and Skyn™. Results: TAC measures of SCRAM, WrisTAS, and Skyn are found to be positively correlated with BrAC (r = 0.56 to 0.79) and/or self‐reports (r = 0.62). Using the AMS criteria for detection results in low sensitivity, adjusted criteria can increase the sensitivity of the SCRAM from 39.9 to 68.5%. The WrisTAS and an early prototype of the Skyn showed high failure rates (17 to 38%). Recent advances toward transforming the TAC data into more clinically relevant measures have led to the development of mathematical models and the BrAC Estimator Software. Using TAC data, both approaches produce estimates explaining 70 to 82% of actual BrAC and self‐reported drinking or to highly correlate with the actual BrAC measures (β = 0.90 to 0.91). Conclusions: Transdermal alcohol monitors offer an opportunity to measure alcohol consumption in a valid and continuous way with mathematical models and software estimating BrAC values improving interpretation of TAC data. However, the SCRAM seems unable to detect low‐to‐moderate drinking levels using the thresholds and criteria set by the manufacturer. Moreover, the WrisTAS and the Skyn prototype show a high failure rate, raising questions about reliability. Future studies will assess the validity of new‐generation wristbands, including the next Skyn generations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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28. Announcement.
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ALCOHOLISM ,AWARDS ,MEDICAL research ,SERIAL publications - Abstract
The article focuses on Clinical and Experimental Research (ACER), the journal of the Research Society on Alcoholism (RSA) and the International Society for Biomedical Research on Alcoholism (ISBRA), has pleased to announce awards for an outstanding paper has published in ACER by an early career investigator. Topics include the role of the early career investigator in the project and write-up of the manuscript, and the potential impact of the research report on the field.
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- 2020
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29. To Infuse or Ingest in Human Laboratory Alcohol Research.
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Cyders, Melissa A., Plawecki, Martin H., Corbin, William, King, Andrea, McCarthy, Denis M., Ramchandani, Vijay A., Weafer, Jessica, and O'Connor, Sean J.
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ALCOHOLS (Chemical class) ,ALCOHOL drinking ,LABORATORIES ,SAFETY ,SELF medication - Abstract
Human alcohol laboratory studies use two routes of alcohol administration: ingestion and infusion. The goal of this paper was to compare and contrast these alcohol administration methods. The work summarized in this report was the basis of a 2019 Research Society on Alcoholism Roundtable, "To Ingest or Infuse: A Comparison of Oral and Intravenous Alcohol Administration Methods for Human Alcohol Laboratory Designs." We review the methodological approaches of each and highlight strengths and weaknesses pertaining to different research questions. We summarize methodological considerations to aid researchers in choosing the most appropriate method for their inquiry, considering exposure variability, alcohol expectancy effects, safety, bandwidth, technical skills, documentation of alcohol exposure, experimental variety, ecological validity, and cost. Ingestion of alcohol remains a common and often a preferable, methodological practice in alcohol research. Nonetheless, the main problem with ingestion is that even the most careful calculation of dose and control of dosing procedures yields substantial and uncontrollable variability in the participants' brain exposures to alcohol. Infusion methodologies provide precise exposure control but are technically complex and may be limited in ecological validity. We suggest that alcohol ingestion research may not be the same thing as alcohol exposure research; investigators should be aware of the advantages and disadvantages that the choice between ingestion and infusion of alcohol invokes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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30. Suicide, Alcohol Intoxication, and Age Among Whites and American Indians/Alaskan Natives.
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Caetano, Raul, Kaplan, Mark S., Kerr, William, McFarland, Bentson H., Giesbrecht, Norman, and Kaplan, Zoe
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SUICIDE risk factors ,AGE distribution ,NATIVE Americans ,VETERANS ,RACE ,RISK assessment ,WHITE people ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,ALCOHOL-induced disorders ,ALCOHOLIC intoxication - Abstract
Background: Among American Indians/Alaskan Natives (AI/ANs), suicides are disproportionately high among those younger than 40 years of age. This paper examines suicide and alcohol intoxication (postmortem BAC ≥ 0.08 g/dl) by age among Whites and AI/ANs to better understand the reasons for the high rate of suicide among AI/ANs for those younger than 40. Methods: Data come from the restricted 2003 to 2016 National Violent Death Reporting System (NVDRS), with postmortem information on 79,150 White and AI/AN suicide decedents of both genders who had a BAC test in 32 states of the United States. Results: Among Whites, 39.3% of decedents legally intoxicated are younger than 40 years of age, while among AI/ANs the proportion is 72.9% (p < 0.001). Multivariable logistic regression with data divided by age shows that in the 18 to 39 age group, AI/ANs are about 2 times more likely than Whites to have a postmortem BAC ≥ 0.08. Veteran status compared to nonveteran, and history of alcohol problems prior to suicide were also associated with BAC ≥ 0.08. Suicide methods other than by firearm and a report of the presence of 2 or more suicide precipitating circumstances were protective against BAC ≥ 0.08. Results for the age group 40 years of age and older mirror those for the younger group with 1 exception: Race/ethnicity was not associated with BAC level. Conclusions: The proportion of suicide decedents with a BAC ≥ 0.08 is higher among AI/ANs than Whites, especially among those 18 to 39 years of age. However, acute alcohol intoxication does not fully explain differences in suicide age structure between AI/ANs and Whites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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31. Predicting Risky Drinking Outcomes Longitudinally: What Kind of Advance Notice Can We Get?
- Author
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Zucker, Robert A., Wong, Maria M., Clark, Duncan B., Leonard, Kenneth E., Schulenberg, John E., Cornelius, Jack R., Fitzgerald, Hiram E., Homish, Gregory G., Merline, Alicia, Nigg, Joel T., O'Malley, Patrick M., and Puttler, Leon I.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,ALCOHOLISM ,ALCOHOL drinking ,DISEASES ,DRINKING behavior ,TEENAGERS ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
This paper summarizes the proceedings of a symposium presented at the 2005 Research Society on Alcoholism meeting in Santa Barbara, California, that spans the interval from toddlerhood to early middle adulthood and addresses questions about how far ahead developmentally we can anticipate alcohol problems and related substance use disorder and how such work informs our understanding of the causes and course of alcohol problems and alcohol use disorder. The context of these questions both historically and developmentally is set by Robert Zucker in an introductory section. Next, Maria Wong and colleagues describe the developmental trajectories of behavioral and affective control from preschool to early adolescence in a high risk for alcoholism longitudinal study and demonstrate their ability to predict alcohol and drug outcomes in adolescence. Duncan Clark and Jack Cornelius follow with a report on the predictive utility of parental disruptive behavior disorders in predicting onset of alcohol problems in their adolescent offspring in late adolescence. Next, Kenneth Leonard and Gregory Homish report on adult development study findings relating baseline individual, spouse, and peer network drinking indicators at marriage onset that distinguish different patterns of stability and change in alcohol problems over the first 2 years of marriage. In the final paper, John Schulenberg and colleagues, utilizing national panel data from the Monitoring the Future Study, which cover the 18- to 35-year age span, show how trajectories of alcohol use in early adulthood predict differential alcohol abuse and dependence outcomes at age 35. Finally, Robert Zucker examines the degree to which the core symposium questions are answered and comments on next step research and clinical practice changes that are called for by these findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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32. Integrating Person-Centered and Variable-Centered Analyses: Growth Mixture Modeling With Latent Trajectory Classes.
- Author
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Muthén, Bengt and Muthén, Linda K.
- Abstract
Background: Many alcohol research questions require methods that take a person-centered approach because the interest is in finding heterogeneous groups of individuals, such as those who are susceptible to alcohol dependence and those who are not. A person-centered focus also is useful with longitudinal data to represent heterogeneity in developmental trajectories. In alcohol, drug, and mental health research the recognition of heterogeneity has led to theories of multiple developmental pathways. Methods: This paper gives a brief overview of new methods that integrate variable- and person-centered analyses. Methods discussed include latent class analysis, latent transition analysis, latent class growth analysis, growth mixture modeling, and general growth mixture modeling. These methods are presented in a general latent variable modeling framework that expands traditional latent variable modeling by including not only continuous latent variables but also categorical latent variables. Results: Four examples that use the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY) data are presented to illustrate latent class analysis, latent class growth analysis, growth mixture modeling, and general growth mixture modeling. Latent class analysis of antisocial behavior found four classes. Four heavy drinking trajectory classes were found. The relationship between the latent classes and background variables and consequences was studied. Conclusions: Person-centered and variable-centered analyses typically have been seen as different activities that use different types of models and software. This paper gives a brief overview of new methods that integrate variable- and person-centered analyses. The general framework makes it possible to combine these models and to study new models serving as a stimulus for asking research questions that have both person- and variable-centered aspects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
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33. Impacts of Changing Marijuana Policies on Alcohol Use in the United States.
- Author
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Guttmannova, Katarina, Lee, Christine M., Kilmer, Jason R., Fleming, Charles B., Rhew, Isaac C., Kosterman, Rick, and Larimer, Mary E.
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CANNABIS (Genus) ,DRUG control ,ALCOHOL drinking ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,MEDLINE ,ONLINE information services ,RESEARCH funding ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Background Marijuana policies are rapidly evolving. In the United States, recreational use of marijuana is now legal in 4 states and medical marijuana is legal in 23 states. Research evaluating such policies has focused primarily on how policies affect issues of price, access to, use, and consequences of marijuana. Due to potential spillover effects, researchers also need to examine how marijuana policies may impact use and consequences of alcohol. Methods The current paper is a critical review of articles evaluating alcohol outcomes associated with marijuana decriminalization, medical marijuana legalization, and nonmedical or recreational marijuana legalization. We identified articles and reports through (1) online searches of EBSCO host database including Academic Search Premier, Econlit, Legal Collection, Medline, PsycARTICLES, and Psyc INFO, as well as PubMed and Google Scholar databases; (2) review of additional articles cited in papers identified through electronic searches; and (3) targeted searches of state and local government records regarding marijuana law implementation. We reviewed studies with respect to their data sources and sample characteristics, methodology, and the margin of alcohol and marijuana use, timing of policy change, and the aspects of laws examined. Results The extant literature provides some evidence for both substitution (i.e., more liberal marijuana policies related to less alcohol use as marijuana becomes a substitute) and complementary (i.e., more liberal marijuana policies related to increases in both marijuana and alcohol use) relationships in the context of liberalization of marijuana policies in the United States. Conclusions Impact of more liberal marijuana policies on alcohol use is complex, and likely depends on specific aspects of policy implementation, including how long the policy has been in place. Furthermore, evaluation of marijuana policy effects on alcohol use may be sensitive to the age group studied and the margin of alcohol use examined. Design of policy evaluation research requires careful consideration of these issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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34. The Ability of Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging to Predict Heavy Drinking and Alcohol Problems 5 Years Later.
- Author
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Schuckit, Marc A., Smith, Tom L., Paulus, Martin P., Tapert, Susan F., Simmons, Alan N., Tolentino, Neil J., and Shafir, Alexandra
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ALCOHOLISM risk factors ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,STATISTICAL correlation ,ALCOHOL drinking ,ETHANOL ,FRONTAL lobe ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,OXYGEN ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICS ,T-test (Statistics) ,DATA analysis ,SECONDARY analysis ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Background Low levels of alcohol responses (low LRs) are genetically influenced phenotypes that are identified before alcohol dependence and predict future heavy drinking and alcohol problems. A recent paper described 13 LR-related blood oxygen level-dependent ( BOLD) response contrast patterns observed during an emotional face recognition task that might reflect cognitive processes contributing to LR and that might themselves predict adverse alcohol outcomes ( Paulus et al., Biol Psychiatry 2012; 72: 848). This paper evaluates the predictive implications of those functional magnetic resonance imaging (f MRI) patterns. Methods Of 120 subjects from Paulus and colleagues (2012), 114 (57 low and high LRs; ~50% females) were interviewed 5 years later at age 25. Correlations between baseline f MRI patterns and alcohol-related outcomes were evaluated, and regression analyses were used to determine if BOLD response contrasts incremented over LR in predicting outcomes. Results Baseline f MRI patterns in 5 of 13 baseline regions of interest correlated with adverse outcomes. Such patterns in insular regions, particularly the left anterior insula, and the right frontal gyrus, added to LR in predicting alcohol problems. The relationships remained robust when exact binomial procedures were used, but, reflecting the small sample size, it was not possible to adequately consider Bonferroni corrections. Conclusions The data suggest that f MRI BOLD response contrasts predicted heavier drinking and alcohol problems 5 years later, even after considering baseline low LRs. Future work will focus on whether f MRI results can predict outcomes in larger samples and among young nondrinkers, as well as how the imaging results increase understanding of the processes through which LR operates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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35. Author Guidelines.
- Abstract
The article provides guidelines for submission of papers to the journal "Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research," the official publication of the Research Society on Alcoholism and International Society for Biomedical Research on Alcoholism.
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- 2015
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36. Symposium: Alcohol-Induced Hepatic Fibrosis: Mechanisms Introduction to the Symposium.
- Author
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Purohit, Vishnudutt
- Published
- 1999
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37. Modeling the Distribution and Consequences of Alcohol Consumption.
- Author
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Gruenewald, Paul J.
- Abstract
This paper is based on the session 'Modeling the Distribution and Consequences of Alcohol Consumption' that was held on May 12-14, 1997 at the International Workshop on Consumption Measures and Models for Use in Policy Development and Evaluation, Bethesda, MD. The session chair was Paul J. Gruenewald; presenters were Timo Alanko, Bryan Johnstone, Paul J. Gruenewald, Susan Bondy, Thomas Harford, Raul Caetano, and Maria Elena Medina-Mora; and the discussants were Jiirgen Rehm and Bryan Johnstone. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
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38. Evaluating Competing Models of Alcohol-Related Harm.
- Author
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Greenfield, Thomas K.
- Abstract
This paper summarizes 'Evaluating Competing Models of Alcohol-Related Harm' of the International Workshop on Consumption Measures and Models for Use in Policy Development and Evaluation, May 12-14, 1997, Bethesda, MD. The session chair was Thomas Greenfield; presenters were Gerald Williams, Thomas Greenfield, Lorraine Midanik, Kathryn Graham, Jürgen Rehm, Anders Romelsjö, Deborah Dawson, Klaus Mäkelä, Tim Stockwell, and Paul Gruenewald; and discussants were Tim Stockwell, Timo Alanko, and Eric Single. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
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39. Genetic Tools in the Study of Drug Self-administration.
- Author
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George, Frank R.
- Abstract
Recent studies have shown that large genetic differences exist in the extent to which orally delivered ethanol will come to serve as a positive reinforcer under operantly defined conditions. In addition, these studies suggest that a significant correlation exists between results from two-bottle choice studies of ethanol drinking and operant self-administration studies of ethanol functioning as a reinforcer. The present paper reports further genetic influences on ethanol self-administration which were found using Long Sleep and Short Sleep mice, bred selectively for high and low duration of loss of the righting reflex in responses to ethanol, respectively. It was possible to establish ethanol as a reinforcer in Long Sleep mice but not in Short Sleep mice. These results indicate that neurosensitivity to ethanol may determine the absolute amount of ethanol consumption but is not highly related to the ability of ethanol to serve as a positive reinforcer. In addition, this paper presents genetic correlations which indicate that ( a) ethanol preference and self-administration are highly correlated across genotype; ( b) sensitivity to ethanol and self-administration of this drug are not highly genetically correlated; ( c) ethanol is not self-administered in operant studies solely for its caloric value; and ( d) there exist important genetic determinants of drug reinforced behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988
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40. A Pilot Follow‐Up Study of Older Alcohol‐Dependent COGA Adults.
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Chan, Grace, Kramer, John R., Schuckit, Marc A., Hesselbrock, Victor, Bucholz, Kathleen K., Edenberg, Howard J., Acion, Laura, Langbehn, Douglas, McCutcheon, Vivia, Nurnberger, John I., Hesselbrock, Michie, Porjesz, Bernice, Bierut, Laura, Marenna, Bethany C., Cookman, Angella, and Kuperman, Samuel
- Subjects
ALCOHOL drinking ,ALCOHOLISM ,INTERNET ,INTERVIEWING ,LONGITUDINAL method ,CLASSIFICATION of mental disorders ,RISK-taking behavior ,TELEPHONES ,DEATH certificates ,PILOT projects ,ALCOHOLIC intoxication ,GENETICS - Abstract
Background: Alcohol consumption and problems are increasing among older adults, who are at elevated risk for alcohol‐related accidents and medical problems. This paper describes a pilot follow‐up of older adults with a history of alcohol dependence that was designed to determine the feasibility of conducting a more extensive investigation. Methods: The sample consisted of previously assessed subjects in the Collaborative Studies on the Genetics of Alcoholism who: (i) were age 50+; (ii) had lifetime DSM‐IV AD; and (iii) had DNA available. Individuals were located through family contacts, Internet searches, and death registries. A brief telephone interview assessed demographics, health, and alcohol involvement. Results: Of the total sample (N = 2,174), 36% were contacted, 24% were deceased, and 40% were not yet located. Most (89%) contacted subjects were interviewed, and 99% of them agreed to future evaluation. Thirty percent of interviewed subjects reported abstinence for 10+ years, 56% reported drinking within the past year, and 14% last drank between >1 and 10 years ago. There were no age‐related past‐year differences in weekly consumption (overall sample mean: 16 drinks), number of drinking weeks (30.8), maximum number of drinks in 24 hours (8.1), or prevalence of weekly risky drinking (19%). Among those who drank within the past 5 years, the 3 most common alcohol‐related problems were spending excessive time drinking or recovering (49%), drinking more/longer than intended (35%), and driving while intoxicated (35%); and about a third (32%) received some form of treatment. Conclusions: Over a 1‐year period, we located 60% of individuals last seen an average of 23 years ago. The majority of contacted individuals were interviewed and willing to be evaluated again. Although the proportion of individuals currently drinking diminished with age, subjects exhibited troublesome levels of alcohol consumption and problems. Our findings suggest the importance and feasibility of a more comprehensive follow‐up. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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41. Performance of the Self‐Report of the Effects of Alcohol Questionnaire Across Sexes and Generations.
- Author
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Schuckit, Marc A., Smith, Tom L., Rana, Brinda K., Mendoza, Lee Ann, Clarke, Dennis, and Kawamura, Mari
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DIAGNOSIS of alcoholism ,SIBLINGS ,STATISTICAL correlation ,FATHER-child relationship ,INTERGENERATIONAL relations ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MOTHER-child relationship ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SELF-evaluation ,SEX distribution ,TIME ,BINGE drinking ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation - Abstract
Background: Low level of responses (low LRs) to alcohol established using the Self‐Report of the Effects of Alcohol (SRE) questionnaire are genetically influenced phenotypes related to heavy drinking and alcohol problems. To date, most studies using SREs focused on scores for the number of drinks needed for effects across the first 5 times of drinking (SRE‐5), and few evaluated scores that also included the prior 3 months and heaviest drinking periods (SRE‐T). This paper evaluates characteristics of SRE‐5 and SRE‐T within and across generations. Methods: Data were extracted from 407 participants across 2 generations of 107 families in the San Diego Prospective Study (SDPS). Pearson's product–moment correlations for SRE‐5 and SRE‐T were determined across first‐degree relatives both within and across generations and sexes, as well as correlations of each measure to maximum drinking quantities and alcohol problems. Results: Responding to 4 hypotheses, first the analyses demonstrated significant within‐generation positive correlations for both SRE measures across brother–brother and sister–sister pairs as well as cross‐generation correlations for fathers and sons, although correlations for mothers and daughters were not robust. Second, both SRE‐5 and SRE‐T correlated with maximum drinks and alcohol problems for both sexes and both generations. Third, within parental and offspring generations SRE‐T correlated more robustly than SRE‐5 to maximum drinks and alcohol problems. Fourth, across generations SRE values for sons were more closely related to drinking quantities and problems than for their fathers, but the mother–daughter SRE relationships to adverse alcohol characteristics were not different. Conclusions: Both the SRE‐5 and SRE‐T offered useful information about propensities toward heavier drinking and alcohol problems in SDPS families. Correlations with adverse alcohol outcomes were greater for the more broad‐based SRE‐T, but both scores appeared to be genetically influenced and continue to operate in a robust manner in both generations of these families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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42. Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders: A Review of the Neurobehavioral Deficits Associated With Prenatal Alcohol Exposure.
- Author
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Mattson, Sarah N., Bernes, Gemma A., and Doyle, Lauren R.
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ACADEMIC achievement ,FETAL alcohol syndrome ,CHILD development ,INTELLECT ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,LEARNING ,MEMORY ,NEUROLOGIC manifestations of general diseases ,EXECUTIVE function ,PRENATAL exposure delayed effects ,DISEASE complications ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
In utero alcohol exposure can disrupt the development of the fetal brain and result in a wide range of neurobehavioral outcomes collectively known as fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD). This paper provides a comprehensive review of the cognitive and behavioral outcomes of prenatal alcohol exposure, including domains of general intelligence, executive functioning, language development, learning and memory, adaptive functioning, academic performance, and concurrent psychopathology. In addition, the current status of the neurobehavioral profile of FASD and its potential as a diagnostic tool will be discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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43. The Challenges of Improving Statistical Practice in Alcohol Treatment Research.
- Author
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Harris, Alex H.S., Boden, Matthew T., Finlay, Andrea K., and Rubinsky, Anna D.
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CLINICAL trials ,DATA analysis ,MAXIMUM likelihood statistics ,ALCOHOL-induced disorders - Abstract
Background This commentary discusses the paper by Hallgren and Witkiewitz (2013) which evaluated 5 methods for addressing missing data in clinical trials of interventions for alcohol use disorders. The authors conclude that commonly used methods (e.g., complete case analysis, single imputation methods) can produce misleading results and that better alternatives exist (e.g., multiple imputation [MI]). The problems of using inferior approaches are well-known and well-illustrated by the analysis in this paper, which serves as an educational reminder to use more statistically justified practices. Methods Findings of this paper are put in context of the broader statistical literature. Strategies to promote common usage of superior missing data methods are discussed. Results Solving the poor uptake of statistically justified missing data methods will require a multilevel diagnosis of the problem and likely a multifaceted response, perhaps including the establishment, publication, and enforcement of standards by scientific funding and regulatory agencies, scientific journals, and graduate program accreditation bodies. Conclusions Little disagreement exists regarding the importance of addressing missing data in a statistically justified manner (e.g., with MI or other maximum likelihood methods). However, as with the implementation of other evidence-based practices, knowing what should be done does not alone make it happen. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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44. Sex Differences in Peer Selection and Socialization for Alcohol Use from Adolescence to Young Adulthood and the Influence of Marital and Parental Status.
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Windle, Michael and Windle, Rebecca C.
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SOCIALIZATION ,FRIENDSHIP ,AFFINITY groups ,HIGH schools ,ADAPTABILITY (Personality) ,ALCOHOLISM ,SELF-evaluation ,INTERVIEWING ,REGRESSION analysis ,SEX distribution ,PARENTING ,SURVEYS ,MARITAL status ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background: Peer selection and socialization influences for alcohol and other substance use have been a prominent area of research especially, though not exclusively, across adolescence. This study used 4‐wave prospective data from 1,004 young adults to evaluate selection and socialization influences for young adults' alcohol use and friends' alcohol use from late adolescence to later young adulthood, and incorporated the time‐varying predictors of marital and parental status. In addition, sex differences in peer selection and socialization processes were tested. Methods: Participants were recruited from high schools, and assessments were based on self‐reports initially collected in adolescence (at age 17.0 years) via paper‐and‐pencil surveys and in young adulthood at ages 23.8, 28.9, and 33.5 years via computer‐based individual interviews (computer‐assisted personal interview and audio computer‐assisted self‐interviewing). Initial sampling included a 76% participation rate, and the retention rate was 83%. Cross‐lagged panel regression models were used to evaluate hypotheses about peer selection and socialization. Results: Findings indicated that friend selection processes were stronger than socialization processes across adolescence to young adulthood. Adopting marital and (especially) parental roles was negatively associated with young adults' alcohol use and percentage of friends using alcohol, and the magnitude of these relationships was stronger and more consistent for females. Conclusions: These findings indicated that across the adolescence‐to‐young adulthood transition, peer selection processes were more influential than peer socialization. Marital and parental roles were associated with both lower young adult alcohol use and a lower percentage of friends using alcohol, with stronger role‐related effects for females relative to males. Do you select friends who drink similarly (selection effect) or does your shared drinking with friends increase your alcohol use (socialization effect)? Longitudinal data from 1004 young adults were used to evaluate these effects for young adults' and friends' alcohol use from adolescence to young adulthood. Friend selection effects were stronger than socialization effects. Adopting marital and parental roles was associated with a decrease in young adults' and friends' alcohol use; findings were stronger for females than males. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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45. Daily Drinking Is Associated with Increased Mortality.
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Hartz, Sarah M., Oehlert, Mary, Horton, AC, Grucza, Richard A., Fisher, Sherri L., Culverhouse, Robert C., Nelson, Karl G., Sumerall, Scott W., Neal, Paul C., Regnier, Patrice, Chen, Guoqing, Williams, Alexander, Bhattarai, Jagriti, Evanoff, Bradley, and Bierut, Laura J.
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CARDIOVASCULAR disease related mortality ,MORTALITY risk factors ,DRINKING behavior ,ALCOHOL drinking ,SELF-evaluation ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) ,TUMORS ,SECONDARY analysis - Abstract
Background: There is evidence that low‐level alcohol use, drinking 1 to 2 drinks on occasion, is protective for cardiovascular disease, but increases the risk of cancer. Synthesizing the overall impact of low‐level alcohol use on health is therefore complex. The objective of this paper was to examine the association between frequency of low‐level drinking and mortality. Methods: Two data sets with self‐reported alcohol use and mortality follow‐up were analyzed: 340,668 individuals from the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) and 93,653 individuals from the Veterans Health Administration (VA) outpatient medical records. Survival analyses were conducted to evaluate the association between low‐level drinking frequency and mortality. Results: The minimum risk drinking frequency among those who drink 1 to 2 drinks per occasion was found to be 3.2 times weekly in the NHIS data, based on a continuous measure of drinking frequency, and 2 to 3 times weekly in the VA data. Relative to these individuals with minimum risk, individuals who drink 7 times weekly had an adjusted hazard ratio (HR) of all‐cause mortality of 1.23 (p < 0.0001) in the NHIS data, and individuals who drink 4 to 7 times weekly in the VA data also had an adjusted HR of 1.23 (p = 0.01). Secondary analyses in the NHIS data showed that the minimum risk was drinking 4 times weekly for cardiovascular mortality, and drinking monthly or less for cancer mortality. The associations were consistent in stratified analyses of men, women, and never smokers. Conclusions: The minimum risk of low‐level drinking frequency for all‐cause mortality appears to be approximately 3 occasions weekly. The robustness of this finding is highlighted in 2 distinctly different data sets: a large epidemiological data set and a data set of veterans sampled from an outpatient clinic. Daily drinking, even at low levels, is detrimental to one's health. This study evaluated the association between mortality and frequency of light drinking (1–2 drinks). In both an epidemiological dataset (NHIS) and a clinical outpatient dataset (VA), we found increased risk of all‐cause mortality among those who drank 4 or more times weekly relative to those who drank less frequently. This suggests that frequent low‐level drinking increases mortality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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46. Commentary on Rossheim and Thombs (2011): Artificial Sweeteners, Caffeine, and Alcohol Intoxication in Bar Patrons.
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Marczinski, Cecile A.
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ALCOHOL drinking risk factors ,ALCOHOLIC beverages ,BREATH tests ,CAFFEINE ,CARBONATED beverages ,CONSUMERS ,DRINKING behavior ,ETHANOL ,RESTAURANTS ,SEX distribution ,SWEETENERS ,SPORTS drinks - Abstract
Background: This commentary discusses the paper by Rossheim and Thombs (Alcohol Clin Exp Res 35, 2011), which examined the relationship between type of alcohol mixer (regular caffeinated cola, diet caffeinated cola, energy drink, or no mixer) and breath alcohol readings in bar patrons. Methods: The significance of the findings of this study and new unaddressed questions for the field are discussed. Results: reported that breath alcohol concentration readings were highest when patrons reported the consumption of caffeine mixers that were artificially sweetened (i.e., diet cola), after adjusting for potential confounds. Women were more likely to consume diet cola-caffeinated mixed drinks. Conclusions: The findings from this field study raise several new interesting questions. Given the reported gender difference in consumption of diet cola-caffeinated mixed drinks, more research is needed regarding gender differences in gastric emptying time for alcoholic beverages mixed with artificially sweetened versus sucrose sweetened caffeinated drinks. In addition, the recent explosion in the energy drink market has resulted in the availability of sugar-free or diet versions of most energy drink products. The implications of mixing diet energy drinks with alcohol are unknown. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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47. Introduction to the Symposium.
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Pawlowski, Albert A.
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- 1992
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48. Alcohol Use Disorder and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: An Introduction.
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Back, Sudie E. and Jones, Jennifer L.
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ALCOHOLISM risk factors ,ALCOHOLISM treatment ,POST-traumatic stress disorder ,TREATMENT of post-traumatic stress disorder ,SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,BEHAVIOR therapy ,ETHNIC groups ,MEDICAL screening ,MENTAL health ,RACE ,PSYCHOLOGY of military personnel ,PSYCHOLOGY of veterans ,COMORBIDITY ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,PATIENT dropouts - Abstract
The article provides information on association of mental health disorders with alcohol use disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder. Topics discussed include correlations between racial and ethnic minority communities for these diseases; issues focusing on alcohol misuse; and alcohol involvement.
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- 2018
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49. Apremilast Alters Behavioral Responses to Ethanol in Mice: II. Increased Sedation, Intoxication, and Reduced Acute Functional Tolerance.
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Blednov, Yuri A., Da Costa, Adriana J., Harris, R. Adron, and Messing, Robert O.
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ANESTHESIA ,ANIMAL experimentation ,ANXIETY ,ATAXIA ,AVOIDANCE (Psychology) ,CONDITIONED response ,CONVALESCENCE ,SEIZURES (Medicine) ,ALCOHOL drinking ,ETHANOL ,FOOD preferences ,HUMAN locomotion ,LITHIUM ,MICE ,MOVEMENT disorders ,REFLEXES ,SACCHARIN ,TASTE ,TASTE disorders ,APREMILAST ,ALCOHOLIC intoxication ,PHARMACODYNAMICS - Abstract
Background: In our companion paper, we reported that the phosphodiesterase type 4 inhibitor apremilast reduced ethanol (EtOH) intake and preference in different drinking models in male and female C57BL/6J mice. In this study, we measured the effects of apremilast on other behaviors that are correlated with EtOH consumption. Methods: The effects of apremilast (20 mg/kg) on the following behaviors were studied in male and female C57BL/6J mice: locomotor response to a novel situation; EtOH‐ and lithium chloride (LiCl)‐induced conditioned taste aversion (CTA) to saccharin; conditioned place preference (CPP) and conditioned place avoidance (CPA) to EtOH; severity of handling‐induced convulsions after EtOH administration; EtOH‐induced anxiolytic‐like behavior in the elevated plus maze; duration of EtOH‐induced loss of righting reflex (LORR); recovery from EtOH‐induced motor impairment on the rotarod; and acute functional tolerance (AFT) to EtOH's ataxic effects. Results: Apremilast did not change the acquisition of EtOH‐induced CPP, severity of acute withdrawal from EtOH, or EtOH's anxiolytic‐like effect. Apremilast did not alter the extinction of EtOH‐ or LiCl‐induced CTA, but may interfere with acquisition of CTA to EtOH. Apremilast increased the acquisition of CPA to EtOH, reduced locomotor responses to a novel situation, and prolonged the duration of LORR and the recovery from acute motor incoordination induced by EtOH. The longer recovery from the ataxic effect may be attributed to reduced development of AFT to EtOH. Conclusions: Our results suggest that apremilast increases the duration of EtOH intoxication by reducing AFT. Apremilast also reduces some aspects of general reward and increases EtOH's aversive properties, which might also contribute to its ability to reduce EtOH drinking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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50. A double‐hit model reveals individual and synergic consequences of prenatal and adolescent postnatal ethanol exposure.
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Pautassi, Ricardo Marcos and Fabio, María Carolina
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BIOLOGICAL models ,ALCOHOLISM ,PRENATAL exposure delayed effects ,ALCOHOL drinking ,BEHAVIOR modification - Abstract
In the article, the authors discuss how prenatal ethanol alcohol (EtOH) exposure (PEE) can be used as a sign of EtOH involvement among adolescent people. Also cited are the association of PEE with various neuropsychological deficits and mental disorders like fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD), mental retardation, and autism spectrum disorder, the generator of alcoholism hypothesis, and the double hit exposure protocols.
- Published
- 2022
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