Sommer Christian, Seipt Christian, Spreer Maik, Blümke Toni, Markovic Alexandra, Jünger Elisabeth, Plawecki Martin H, Zimmermann Ulrich S
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus, Technische Universität Dresden, Dresden, Germany.
Department of Psychiatry, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2015 Jun;39(6):1057-63. doi: 10.1111/acer.12716. Epub 2015 Apr 23.
While the utility of experimental free-access alcohol self-administration paradigms is well established, little data exist addressing the question of whether study participation influences subsequent natural alcohol consumption. We here present drinking reports of young adults before and after participation in intravenous alcohol self-administration studies.
Timeline Follow-back drinking reports for the 6 weeks immediately preceding the first, and the 6 weeks after the last experimental alcohol challenge were examined from subjects completing 1 of 2 similar alcohol self-administration paradigms. In study 1, 18 social drinkers (9 females, mean age 24.1 years) participated in 3 alcohol self-infusion sessions up to a maximum blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of 160 mg%. Study 2 involved 60 participants (30 females, mean age 18.3 years) of the Dresden Longitudinal Study on Alcohol Use in Young Adults (D-LAYA), who participated in 2 sessions of alcohol self-infusion up to a maximum BAC of 120 mg%, and a nonexposed age-matched control group of 42 (28 females, mean age 18.4 years) subjects.
In study 1, participants reported (3.7%) fewer heavy drinking days as well as a decrease of 2.5 drinks per drinking day after study participation compared to prestudy levels (p < 0.05, respectively). In study 2, alcohol-exposed participants reported 7.1% and non-alcohol-exposed controls 6.5% fewer drinking days at poststudy measurement (p < 0.001), while percent heavy drinking days and drinks per drinking day did not differ.
These data suggest that participation in intravenous alcohol self-administration experiments does not increase subsequent real-life drinking of young adults.
虽然实验性自由获取酒精自我给药范式的效用已得到充分证实,但关于研究参与是否会影响随后的自然酒精消费这一问题的数据却很少。我们在此呈现了年轻成年人在参与静脉酒精自我给药研究之前和之后的饮酒报告。
对完成两种相似酒精自我给药范式之一的受试者,检查了首次实验酒精挑战前6周以及最后一次实验酒精挑战后6周的时间线追溯饮酒报告。在研究1中,18名社交饮酒者(9名女性,平均年龄24.1岁)参与了3次酒精自我输注疗程,最高血酒精浓度(BAC)达160mg%。研究2涉及德累斯顿青年成人酒精使用纵向研究(D-LAYA)的60名参与者(30名女性,平均年龄18.3岁),他们参与了2次酒精自我输注疗程,最高BAC达120mg%,以及一个由42名(28名女性,平均年龄18.4岁)受试者组成的未暴露年龄匹配对照组。
在研究1中,与研究前水平相比,参与者报告称研究参与后重度饮酒天数减少了(3.7%),且每个饮酒日饮酒量减少了2.5杯(分别为p<0.05)。在研究2中,酒精暴露组参与者在研究后测量时报告的饮酒天数减少了7.1%,未暴露对照组减少了6.5%(p<0.001),而重度饮酒天数百分比和每个饮酒日饮酒量并无差异。
这些数据表明,参与静脉酒精自我给药实验不会增加年轻成年人随后的实际生活饮酒量。