Rose Abigail Katherine, Grunsell Laura
Section of Alcohol Research, Division of Psychological Medicine and Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College London, London, UK.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2008 Jun;32(6):1096-104. doi: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2008.00672.x. Epub 2008 Apr 26.
Evidence suggests that alcohol-related problems are associated with impulsivity and disinhibited behavior. Less certain is whether disinhibited behavior is due to an impulsive disposition or alcohol's ability to disinhibit some people more than others. There are a range of disinhibited behaviors associated with alcohol, including excessive alcohol consumption, bingeing. The study tested whether nondependent alcohol bingers showed more disinhibition after placebo and/or alcohol relative to nonbingers and whether this was related to enhanced motivation to drink following a priming dose of alcohol.
Twenty participants (10 bingers) attended the laboratory twice. Baseline measures included impulsivity, alcohol-related cognitions, alcohol urge, and mood. Participants were preloaded with alcohol (male: 0.6 g/kg, female: 0.5 g/kg) and placebo (counterbalanced). After a 20-minute rest, participants completed 2 impulsivity tasks (Two Choice & Time Estimation) separated by second urge and mood ratings.
Bingers did not show greater impulsivity characteristics but were more concerned about their drinking (p = 0.02) and ability to control drinking (p = 0.04). A priming effect was found: alcohol urge increased after alcohol but not placebo (p = 0.006). Bingers reported greater tolerance to the sedative (p = 0.05) and lightheaded (p = 0.04) effects of alcohol, relative to nonbingers. Binge status was not associated with impulsivity task performance, while preload type (alcohol/placebo) supported only marginal associations.
Risk of binge drinking in nondependent individuals is not strongly affected by impulsive personality characteristics or alcohol's ability to induce behavioral disinhibition. However, alcohol did lead to a priming effect and bingers were more tolerant to the sedative and lightheaded effects of alcohol relative to placebo. Risk of binge drinking is associated with the subjective effects of a priming dose of alcohol.
有证据表明,与酒精相关的问题与冲动性和行为抑制解除有关。尚不确定行为抑制解除是由于冲动性倾向,还是酒精对某些人的抑制解除能力强于其他人。与酒精相关的一系列行为抑制解除行为包括饮酒过量、暴饮暴食。该研究测试了非依赖型酒精暴饮者在服用安慰剂和/或酒精后是否比非暴饮者表现出更多的行为抑制解除,以及这是否与服用初始剂量酒精后饮酒动机增强有关。
20名参与者(10名暴饮者)到实验室参加了两次实验。基线测量包括冲动性、与酒精相关的认知、饮酒冲动和情绪。参与者预先服用了酒精(男性:0.6克/千克,女性:0.5克/千克)和安慰剂(采用平衡法)。休息20分钟后,参与者完成两项冲动性任务(二选一和时间估计),中间穿插饮酒冲动和情绪评分。
暴饮者并未表现出更强的冲动性特征,但更担心自己的饮酒行为(p = 0.02)以及控制饮酒的能力(p = 0.04)。发现了一种启动效应:服用酒精后饮酒冲动增加,但服用安慰剂后未增加(p = 0.006)。与非暴饮者相比,暴饮者对酒精的镇静作用(p = 0.05)和头晕感(p = 0.04)耐受性更强。暴饮状态与冲动性任务表现无关,而预负荷类型(酒精/安慰剂)仅支持微弱的关联。
非依赖个体的暴饮风险不受冲动性人格特征或酒精诱导行为抑制解除能力的强烈影响。然而,酒精确实导致了启动效应,并且与安慰剂相比,暴饮者对酒精的镇静和头晕作用耐受性更强。暴饮风险与初始剂量酒精的主观效应有关。