Krmpotich Theodore, Mikulich-Gilbertson Susan, Sakai Joseph, Thompson Laetitia, Banich Marie T, Tanabe Jody
From the Department of Radiology (TK, JT) and Department of Psychiatry (SMG, JS, LT, MTB, JT), University of Colorado Denver, Aurora, CO; and the Institute of Cognitive Science, University of Colorado Boulder (MTB), Boulder, CO.
J Addict Med. 2015 Jul-Aug;9(4):273-80. doi: 10.1097/ADM.0000000000000129.
Substance use disorder is characterized by impaired decision making, impulsivity, and risk taking. Pathological gambling shares many of these characteristics, and having both diagnoses may be associated with greater problems than either diagnosis alone. We investigated whether among substance-dependent individuals, comorbid pathological gambling would be associated with worse decision making, greater impulsivity, risk taking, and drug severity.
Ninety-six substance-dependent individuals were recruited from a residential treatment program and divided into 1 of the 2 groups depending on whether they met Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, criteria for pathological gambling (SDPG, n = 26) or not (SD, n = 70). Ninety-two controls were recruited from the community. Participants completed a decision-making task (modified Iowa Gambling Task), measures of impulsivity (Barratt Impulsivity Scale and Delay Discounting), and risk taking (Balloon Analog Risk Task). Decision making was analyzed using a computational model. We tested for group differences using analysis of covariance or Kruskal-Wallis and appropriate post-hoc tests.
The groups differed in decision-making parameters (P < 0.001) and self-reported impulsivity (P < 0.001). All post-hoc comparisons were significant on these measures, and indicated stepwise changes in controls, followed by SD, followed by SDPG, with SDPG performing worse on decision making and being more impulsive. Compared with SD, SDPG had greater drug severity (P < 0.001). No group differences were observed in delay discounting or risk taking.
Compared with individuals with substance dependence without pathological gambling, those with both disorders demonstrated worse decision making and significantly more drug-related symptoms. When evaluating patients with substance dependence, clinicians should consider diagnostic assessments for gambling, as the co-occurrence of both disorders may impact clinical characteristics.
物质使用障碍的特征是决策受损、冲动和冒险行为。病态赌博具有许多这些特征,同时患有这两种疾病可能比单独患有任何一种疾病带来更多问题。我们调查了在物质依赖个体中,合并病态赌博是否与更差的决策、更高的冲动性、冒险行为和更严重的药物问题相关。
从一个住院治疗项目中招募了96名物质依赖个体,并根据他们是否符合《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版中病态赌博的标准,将其分为两组之一(物质依赖合并病态赌博组,n = 26;物质依赖组,n = 70)。从社区招募了92名对照者。参与者完成了一项决策任务(改良的爱荷华赌博任务)、冲动性测量(巴拉特冲动性量表和延迟折扣)以及冒险行为测量(气球模拟风险任务)。使用计算模型分析决策过程。我们使用协方差分析或克鲁斯卡尔 - 沃利斯检验以及适当的事后检验来测试组间差异。
两组在决策参数(P < 0.001)和自我报告的冲动性(P < 0.001)方面存在差异。所有事后比较在这些测量指标上均具有显著性,表明对照组、物质依赖组、物质依赖合并病态赌博组呈逐步变化,物质依赖合并病态赌博组在决策方面表现更差且更冲动。与物质依赖组相比,物质依赖合并病态赌博组的药物问题更严重(P < 0.001)。在延迟折扣或冒险行为方面未观察到组间差异。
与没有病态赌博的物质依赖个体相比,同时患有这两种疾病的个体表现出更差的决策能力和明显更多的与药物相关的症状。在评估物质依赖患者时,临床医生应考虑对赌博进行诊断评估,因为这两种疾病的共病可能会影响临床特征。