The Effects of Cognitive Impulsivity on the Duration of Remission in Alcohol-Dependent Patients.

Stanislav A Galkin
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Abstract

Background: Cognitive impulsivity manifesting in impaired inhibitory control and decision-making impulsivity is observed both in alcohol-dependent and substance-dependent individuals and may affect the ability to maintain long-term (persistent) remission.

Aim: To evaluate the effects of cognitive parameters of impulsivity on the duration of remission in alcohol-dependent patients.

Methods: The study included 83 patients with alcohol dependence and 51 mentally healthy study subjects as the control group. The distribution of patients by duration of remission was based on the DSM-5 criteria. Patients were divided into two groups according to the duration of their most recent remission: patients with early remission (n=48) and patients with sustained remission (n=35). Impulsivity was assessed using the Go/No-Go task, which included a response inhibition component (inhibitory control). Choice impulsivity was assessed using two cognitive tests that encompass its separate components: decision-making under risk (Cambridge Gambling Task, CGT), and decision making under uncertainty (Iowa Gambling Task, IGT).

Results: The study groups (patients and the controls) differed significantly in all domains of impulsivity: decision making under risk [GT: decision making quality (H(2, N=134)=30.233, p <0.001) and decision-making time (H(2, N=134)=18.433, p <0.001)] and decision making under uncertainty [IGT: selecting cards from "losing" decks (H(2, N=134)=9.291, p=0.009)]. The group of patients with sustained alcohol remission was characterized by longer decision times in CGT compared to the group of patients with early remission (z=2.398, p=0.049). Decision quality in CGT (z=0.673, p=0.999) and IGT scores (z=1.202, p=0.687) were not statistically significantly different between the groups of patients with sustained and early remission from alcohol dependence. The assessment of impulsive actions showed that the study groups were significantly different in terms of their ability to suppress their dominant behavioral response when performing the GNG task [false presses when seeing the "No-Go" signal (H(2, N=134)=28.851, p <0.001)]. The group of patients in sustained remission from alcohol dependence was characterized by better suppression of the behavioral response to the "No-Go" signal relative to the patients in early remission [H(2, N=134)=2.743, p=0.044)]. The regression analysis showed that the decision-making quality (t=2.507, р =0.049) and decision-making time (t=3.237, р=0.031) and the number of false presses when seeing the "No-Go" signal in the GNC task had a statistically significant impact on the duration of remission (t=3.091, р =0.043).

Conclusion: The results of this study indicate that impaired decision-making processes and the ability to inhibit the dominant behavioral response have a significant impact on the ability of alcohol-dependent patients to maintain long-term remission.

认知冲动对酒精依赖症患者缓解期的影响。
背景:目的:评估冲动性认知参数对酒精依赖症患者缓解时间的影响:研究包括 83 名酒精依赖症患者和 51 名精神健康的研究对象作为对照组。根据 DSM-5 标准,按缓解持续时间对患者进行分配。根据最近一次缓解的持续时间将患者分为两组:早期缓解患者(48 人)和持续缓解患者(35 人)。冲动性通过 "去/不去 "任务进行评估,该任务包括反应抑制部分(抑制控制)。选择冲动性通过两个认知测试进行评估,这两个测试包括两个独立的组成部分:风险决策(剑桥赌博任务,CGT)和不确定性决策(爱荷华赌博任务,IGT):研究组(患者和对照组)在冲动性的所有领域都存在显著差异:风险决策[GT:决策质量(H(2,N=134)=30.233,p p=0.009)]。与早期缓解患者组相比,持续酒精缓解患者组在 CGT 中的决策时间更长(z=2.398,p=0.049)。CGT(z=0.673,p=0.999)和 IGT 评分(z=1.202,p=0.687)的决策质量在酒精依赖持续缓解组和早期缓解组之间没有显著的统计学差异。对冲动行为的评估显示,研究组在执行 GNG 任务[看到 "No-Go "信号时误按键(H(2, N=134)=28.851, p p=0.044)]时抑制其主导行为反应的能力方面存在显著差异。回归分析表明,决策质量(t=2.507,р=0.049)和决策时间(t=3.237,р=0.031)以及在 GNC 任务中看到 "No-Go "信号时误按的次数对缓解持续时间有显著的统计学影响(t=3.091,р=0.043):本研究结果表明,决策过程受损和抑制主导行为反应的能力对酒精依赖症患者保持长期缓解的能力有重大影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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