| Literature DB >> 26257163 |
Jurriaan Witteman1, Hans Post, Mika Tarvainen, Avalon de Bruijn, Elizabeth De Sousa Fernandes Perna, Johannes G Ramaekers, Reinout W Wiers.
Abstract
The present study investigated the nature of physiological cue reactivity and craving in response to alcohol cues among alcohol-dependent patients (N = 80) who were enrolled in detoxification treatment. Further, the predictive value with regard to future drinking of both the magnitude of the physiological and craving response to alcohol cues while in treatment and the degree of alcohol-cue exposure in patients' natural environment was assessed. Physiological reactivity and craving in response to experimental exposure to alcohol and soft drink advertisements were measured during detoxification treatment using heart rate variability and subjective rating of craving. Following discharge, patients monitored exposure to alcohol advertisements for five consecutive weeks with a diary and were followed up with an assessment of relapse at 5 weeks and 3 months post-discharge. The results indicated that the presence of alcohol cues such as the portrayal of the drug and drinking behaviour induced physiological cue reactivity and craving. Additionally, cue reactivity and craving were positively correlated, and cue reactivity was larger for patients with shorter histories of alcohol dependence. Further, patients reported a substantial daily exposure to alcohol cues. The magnitude of cue reactivity and the craving response to alcohol cues at baseline and degree of exposure to alcohol cues in patients' natural environment did not predict relapse. It is concluded that the presence of alcohol cues such as portrayal of alcoholic beverages and drinking behaviour induces cue reactivity and craving in alcohol dependence through a conditioned appetitive response.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26257163 PMCID: PMC4562995 DOI: 10.1007/s00213-015-4027-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychopharmacology (Berl) ISSN: 0033-3158 Impact factor: 4.530
Patient characteristics (N = 79)
| Variable | |
|---|---|
| Age in years, M (SD) | 46.3 (10.8) |
| Male gender, % | 70 |
| Admission-baseline test interval in days, M (SD) | 9.3 (4.3) |
| Baseline test-discharge interval in days, M (SD) | 4.6 (2.5) |
| Duration of detoxification treatment in days, M (SD) | 14.1 (4.3) |
| No. of DSM-IV alcohol-dependence symptoms, M (SD) | 6.1 (0.9) |
| No. of standard units of alcohol/day in previous year, M (SD) | 13.1 (7.4) |
| AUDIT score, M (SD) | 25.5 (4.7) |
| Duration of problematic alcohol use in years, M (SD) | 13.9 (9.9) |
| Polysubstance users, % | 21.3 |
| Cannabis use in previous year, % | 32.9 |
| Cocaine use in previous year, % | 18.1 |
| Tobacco use in previous year, % | 84.7 |
| MDMA use in previous year, % | 2.6 |
| Hallucinogen use in previous year, % | 1.3 |
| Stimulant use in previous year, % | 6.4 |
| Tranquillizer use in previous year, % | 8.9 |
| Opiate use in previous year, % | 1.3 |
| Volatile organic compound (VOC) use in previous year, % | 5.1 |
| Other substance use in previous year, % | 2.5 |
| Psychopharmacologically active agent prescribed, % | 25.0 |
Fig. 1Mean EVHRV HF power during cue exposure and baseline in the block of alcohol and soft drink advertisement. Error bars indicate the 95 % confidence interval
Fig. 2Mean craving score after alcohol and soft drink advertisement exposure. Error bars indicate the 95 % confidence interval
Fig. 3Scatterplot of the increase in EVHRV HF power during alcohol-cue exposure (as compared to pre-cue baseline) in alcohol advertisement (y-axis) against the craving scores after exposure to alcohol advertisement (x-axis)
Fig. 4Scatterplot of the increase in EVHRV HF power during alcohol-cue exposure in alcohol advertisement (y-axis) against the number of problem-drinking years (x-axis)
Fig. 5Mean number of self-reported exposures to soft-drink and alcohol advertisements per day for each of the five monitoring weeks. Error bars indicate the 95 % confidence interval