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Release Date: Oct. 29, 2004
POOR DECISION-MAKING DOESN’T DERAIL RECOVERING ALCOHOLICS
By Aaron Levin, Science Writer
Health Behavior News Service
Recovering alcoholics can remain sober for years despite poor decision-making
abilities, a new study says.
The study used a test
that gauged participants’ abilities to make sound
choices between short-term rewards and the long-term negative consequences
of their decisions. Subjects included abstaining alcoholics who had not drunk
alcohol for an average of 6.6 years and a control group of non-alcoholics.
Compared to non-abusing control subjects, lower scores on the test did not
lead the abstaining alcoholics to such a lack of self-control that they started
drinking again, says George Fein, Ph.D., of Neurobehavioral Research Inc. in
Corte Madera, Calif.
“Although these abstinent alcoholics remain susceptible to making poor
decisions,” Fein says, “they somehow manage to compensate for their
deficits by recruiting other mechanisms of behavioral control that enable them
to resist drinking.”
The study appears in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research.
The decision-making deficits may result from the effects of long-term alcoholism
on the brain or may reflect some pre-existing factor that led to alcoholism
and continues even with abstinence, Fein says.
Fein and two colleagues
used the Simulated Gambling Task, a test originally designed to measure socially
deviant
behavior in patients with damage to a
part of the brain called the ventromedial prefrontal cortex. Such patients
can’t see negative long-term consequences of short-term rewards.
In the test, subjects
playing for fake money must choose between decks of cards that offer either
small immediate
rewards and small negative consequences
or large rewards but even larger long-term losses. Over the long run, choosing
from the “good” decks of cards leads to modest gains, while picking
from the “bad” decks leads to big losses. The abstinent alcoholics
did worse than the controls on the test and men did worse than women.
This reflects difficulties
with real-life choices that drug and alcohol abusers make, Fein says. “Users persist in behaviors that have short-term benefits — like
intoxication — despite long-term major negative consequences.”
The degree of impairment was associated with the number of years spent drinking
heavily, but not with the time elapsed since they had stopped drinking. However,
it was not clear if the test results were due to difficulties in thinking or
in motivation. The abstaining alcoholics also had worse scores on tests of
social deviance.
Fein’s team is now
examining brain scans of his subjects to see if they had any abnormalities
in their
ventromedial prefrontal cortexes. They also
speculate that alcoholics who cannot remain abstinent may have even more impaired
decision making on the Simulated Gambling Task and even more abnormal psychological
profiles.
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Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829 or www.hbns.org.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Ira R. Allen
Vice President of Public Affairs
202.387.2829
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