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Release Date: Sep. 15, 2004
SWEET TOOTH, BEHAVIORAL PROBLEMS TIED TO ALCOHOLISM
By Aaron Levin, Science Writer
Health Behavior News Service
Men who have a sweet tooth and who have trouble controlling their behavior
are more prone to alcoholism, and these factors combined were better predictors
of the disease than any single individual trait, a recent analysis has found.
Patients with a history of alcoholism
on the father’s side of the family
are more likely to have a preference for sweets than those without such a history,
says Alexey B. Kampov-Polevoy, M.D., Ph.D., of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine
in New York. Those with the strongest attraction to sweet taste were linked
five times more often to a family history of alcoholism than those who disliked
sweet tastes.
The research appears in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental
Research.
The 165 participants in the study were part of a residential treatment program
for alcohol abuse or drug dependence. Each person took a taste test measuring
response to five different concentrations of a sugar solution and also completed
a personality questionnaire.
This psychological test measured “novelty seeking,” a trait that
reflects a person’s inability to control harmful behavior. This trait
may trigger early experimentation with alcohol, resulting in heavy drinking,
alcohol abuse and alcohol dependence, Kampov-Polevoy says.
Among those who preferred sweets,
the odds of being an alcoholic increased as “novelty-seeking” scores
rose. Among those who disliked sweets, the change in personality score was
minimal and there was no such correlation
with alcoholism.
Combining the personality scores with sweet preference status correctly classified
alcohol dependence almost two-thirds of the time, Kampov-Polevoy says.
Biologically, there may be a connection
between the preferences for alcohol and sweet-tasting things, he says: “The
rewarding effect of both alcohol and sweet taste is mediated by the same
brain mechanism, particularly the brain
opioid system.”
Genetic malfunctions of the brain
opioid system inherited from an alcoholic father appear to make people more
sensitive to the effects of alcohol. Adding
the malfunction to the behavioral control problems revealed by the personality
test may predict alcoholism, although these two factors aren’t enough
to make such a prediction separately.
The study was funded by
the Skipper Bowles Center for Alcohol Studies, University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill.
# # # FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829 or www.hbns.org.
Interviews: Contact Alexey B. Kampov-Polevoi at (919) 824-8349 or kampov@earthlink.net.
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research: Contact Mary Newcomb at (317)
375-0819 or mnewcomb-acer@earthlink.net, or visit www.alcoholism-cer.com.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Ira R. Allen
Director of Public Affairs
202.387.2829
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