1. The consumption of cigarettes, coffee and sweets in detoxified alcoholics and its association with relapse and a family history of alcoholism
- Author
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U. Tietz, Tilman Wetterling, Lothar Rink, Klaus Junghanns, Wolfgang Lange, Martin Driessen, and Jutta Backhaus
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Temperance ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Drinking Behavior ,Coffee ,Nicotine ,Food Preferences ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Dietary Sucrose ,Recurrence ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,Family ,First-degree relatives ,Risk factor ,Family history ,Psychiatry ,media_common ,Consumption (economics) ,Smoking ,Alcohol dependence ,Age Factors ,Abstinence ,After discharge ,030227 psychiatry ,Behavior, Addictive ,Alcoholism ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Follow-Up Studies ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Thirty male alcohol dependent inpatients without concurrent depressive disorder, 13 of them with a positive family history of alcohol dependence in a first degree relative (PFH), were questioned about their desire and consumption habits with respect to cigarettes, coffee, and sweets while on a three-week inpatient treatment after detoxification from alcohol. Six weeks after discharge from hospital, the patients were reassessed for relapse. Eleven patients (36.6%) had relapsed at follow-up. Relapsers were younger than abstainers. The days until relapse correlated negatively with intensity of desire to drink alcohol, desire to smoke cigarettes, and with a higher consumption of cigarettes. PFH patients did not relapse earlier but they had a stronger desire to drink coffee and eat sweets and had a higher coffee consumption.
- Published
- 2005
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