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Alcoholism: Getting Past the Addiction
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Alcoholism: Diagnosis & Treatment
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Alcoholism and the Family
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Defining Alcoholism
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The symptoms of alcohol intoxication often include talkativeness and a positive mood while the drinker's blood alcohol level is rising, with depression and mental impairment when it is falling. Blood alcohol concentration (BAC) produces the following symptoms of central nervous system (CNS) depression at specific levels:
The symptoms of long-term heavy consumption of alcohol may take a variety of different forms. In spite of a long history of use for "medicinal" purposes, alcohol is increasingly recognized to be toxic to the human body.
It is basically a CNS depressant that is absorbed into the bloodstream, primarily from the small intestine. Regular consumption of large amounts of alcohol can cause irreversible damage to a number of the body's organ systems, including the cardiovascular system, the digestive tract, the central nervous system, and the peripheral nervous system. Heavy drinkers are at high risk of developing stomach or duodenal ulcers, cirrhosis of the liver, and cancers of the digestive tract. Many alcoholics do not eat properly, and often develop nutritional deficiency diseases as well as organ damage.
In addition to physical symptoms, most alcoholics have a history of psychiatric, occupational, financial, legal, or interpersonal problems as well. Alcohol misuse is the single most important predictor of violence between domestic partners as well as intergenerational violence within families. In 1994 (the latest year for which statistics are available), 79% of drivers over age 25 involved in fatal automobile accidents were intoxicated. In the states that provided data in 1994 for arrests for driving while impaired (DWI) by alcohol, about one-third of the arrested drivers had previous DWI citations. Since the early 1990s, most states have passed stricter laws against alcohol-impaired driving. These laws include such provisions as immediate license suspension for the first DWI arrest and lowering the legal blood alcohol limit to 0.08 g/dL for adults and 0.02 g/dL for drivers under 21. Penalties for repeated DWI citations include prison sentences; house arrest with electronic monitoring; license plates that identify offending drivers; automobile confiscation; and putting a special ignition interlock on the offender's car.
The diagnosis of alcoholism is usually based on the patient's drinking history, a thorough physical examination, laboratory findings, and the results of psychodiagnostic assessment.
A physician who suspects that a patient is abusing or is dependent on alcohol should give him or her a complete physical examination with appropriate laboratory tests, paying particular attention to liver function and the nervous system. Physical findings that suggest alcoholism include head injuries after age 18; broken bones after age 18; other evidence of blackouts, frequent accidents, or falls; puffy eyelids; flushed face; alcohol odor on the breath; shaky hands; slurred speech or tongue tremor; rapid involuntary eye movements (nystagmus); enlargement of the liver (hepatomegaly); hypertension; insomnia; and problems with impotence (in males). Severe memory loss may point to advanced alcoholic damage to the CNS.
Since some of the physical signs and symptoms of alcoholism can be produced by other drugs or disorders, screening tests can also help to determine the existence of a drinking problem. There are several assessment instruments for alcoholism that can be either self-administered or administered by a clinician. The so-called CAGE test is a brief screener consisting of four questions:
One "yes" answer should raise a suspicion of alcohol abuse; two "yes" answers are considered a positive screen.
Other brief screeners include the Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test, or AUDIT, which also highlights some of the physical symptoms of alcohol abuse that doctors look for during a physical examination of the patient. The Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test, or MAST, is considered the diagnostic standard. It consists
of 25 questions; a score of five or higher is considered to indicate alcohol dependency. A newer screener, the Substance Abuse Subtle Screening Inventory, or SASSI, was introduced in 1988. It can be given in either group or individual settings in a paper-and-pencil or computerized format. The SASSI is available in an adolescent as well as an adult version from the SASSI Institute.x
According to one 1998 study, some brief screeners may be inappropriate for widespread use in some subpopulations because of ethnic and sex bias. The CAGE questionnaire often yielded inaccurate results when administered to African American men and Mexican American women. The AUDIT does not appear to be affected by ethnic or gender biases. Another study of the use of alcohol screening questionnaires in women found that the AUDIT was preferable to the CAGE questionnaire for both African American and Caucasian women.
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Author Info: Rebecca J. Frey PhD, Thomson Gale, Gale, Detroit, Gale Encyclopedia of Genetic Disorders Part II, 2005 |