The relationship of cognitive functioning to amount of recent and lifetimealcohol consumption in outpatient alcoholics

Citation
Md. Horner et al., The relationship of cognitive functioning to amount of recent and lifetimealcohol consumption in outpatient alcoholics, ADDICT BEHA, 24(3), 1999, pp. 449-453
Citations number
14
Categorie Soggetti
Psycology
Journal title
ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS
ISSN journal
03064603 → ACNP
Volume
24
Issue
3
Year of publication
1999
Pages
449 - 453
Database
ISI
SICI code
0306-4603(199905/06)24:3<449:TROCFT>2.0.ZU;2-H
Abstract
Previous investigations of the relationship between drinking patterns and c ognitive functioning have generally studied severely alcoholic patients, in whom the neurocognitive effects of alcohol consumption can be obscured by other medical or psychosocial factors. In the present study, cognitive func tioning was examined after a minimum of 4 days of abstinence in 69 mildly t o moderately alcohol-dependent outpatients without comorbid psychiatric, ne urologic, or systemic medical illness. Circumscribed decrements in reaction time and verbal memory were associated with higher amounts of alcohol cons umption in the 90 days prior to enrollment in the study, and amount of rece nt consumption was correlated with scores on numerous cognitive tests. In c ontrast, longer drinking history was not associated with poorer performance on any neuropsychological measures. Thus, in this group of high-functionin g, mildly to moderately alcohol-dependent outpatients, mild cognitive defic its were related to the amount of recent, but not lifetime, alcohol consump tion. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd.