Richards Veronica L, Mallett Kimberly A, Turrisi Robert J, Oliver Jason A, Croff Julie M, Russell Michael A
TSET Health Promotion Research Center, Stephenson Cancer Center, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences, 4502 E. 41st St., Tulsa, OK, 74135, USA.
Department of Health Promotion Sciences, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences, Tulsa, OK, USA.
Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2025 Jun 10. doi: 10.1007/s00213-025-06830-x.
Alcohol-induced blackouts (AIBs) are common in college students and are associated with other alcohol-related consequences. Alcohol-nicotine co-use is also common in this population. Nicotine has cognitive-enhancing properties impacting multiple cognitive domains, including those impaired by alcohol (e.g., attention), but it is unclear whether nicotine affects AIB risk or the relationship between AIBs and other alcohol-related consequences.
We examined the moderating effects of nicotine use on the associations between (a) alcohol and AIBs and (b) AIBs and other consequences (total and serious: sexual, legal, or those with potential to cause great harm).
College students who reported past semester heavy drinking and at least 1 AIB (N = 79, 55.7% female, 86.1% White) wore alcohol sensors and completed daily diaries over four consecutive weekends (89.9% completion). Multilevel models were conducted to test for moderating effects of nicotine (yes/no) on the alcohol-AIB relationship and the AIB-consequence relationship, adjusting for sex, race/ethnicity, and baseline nicotine use.
Concurrent alcohol and nicotine use did not moderate the alcohol-AIB relationship, but weakened the associations between AIBs and both (1) total consequences and (2) serious consequences. On days with nicotine use, AIBs were associated with approximately 30% fewer total consequences and 50% fewer serious consequences than days without nicotine use.
College students experienced fewer total and serious consequences on AIB nights when nicotine was used compared to AIB nights when nicotine was not used. Future research should explore potential mechanisms underlying the observed effects.
酒精所致黑蒙(AIBs)在大学生中很常见,且与其他酒精相关后果有关。酒精与尼古丁共同使用在这一人群中也很常见。尼古丁具有认知增强特性,会影响多个认知领域,包括那些受酒精损害的领域(如注意力),但尚不清楚尼古丁是否会影响AIBs风险或AIBs与其他酒精相关后果之间的关系。
我们研究了尼古丁使用对以下两者之间关联的调节作用:(a)酒精与AIBs;(b)AIBs与其他后果(总体及严重后果:性方面、法律方面或那些有可能造成重大伤害的后果)。
报告上一学期酗酒且至少有一次AIB的大学生(N = 79,55.7%为女性,86.1%为白人)佩戴酒精传感器,并在连续四个周末完成每日日志(完成率89.9%)。采用多水平模型来检验尼古丁(使用与否)对酒精 - AIB关系以及AIB - 后果关系的调节作用,并对性别、种族/族裔和基线尼古丁使用情况进行了调整。
同时使用酒精和尼古丁并未调节酒精 - AIB关系,但减弱了AIBs与(1)总体后果和(2)严重后果之间的关联。在使用尼古丁的日子里,与未使用尼古丁的日子相比,AIBs所关联的总体后果减少了约30%,严重后果减少了50%。
与未使用尼古丁的AIB夜晚相比,大学生在使用尼古丁的AIB夜晚所经历的总体后果和严重后果更少。未来的研究应探索所观察到的效应背后的潜在机制。