scholarly journals Distress tolerance and special alcohol metacognitions behave differently in the association of negative affect with alcohol‐related patterns in men with problematic alcohol use in the abstinence phase

Author(s):  
Vahid Khosravani ◽  
Farangis Sharifi Bastan ◽  
Daniel C. Kolubinski ◽  
Ali Amirinezhad ◽  
Fatemeh Ghorbani
2020 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 137-142
Author(s):  
Katherine A. Buckheit ◽  
Martin De Vita ◽  
Stephen A. Maisto

Author(s):  
Charlotte Heleniak ◽  
China R. Bolden ◽  
Connor J. McCabe ◽  
Hilary K. Lambert ◽  
Maya L. Rosen ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Ruichong Shuai ◽  
Alexandra Elissavet Bakou ◽  
Jackie Andrade ◽  
Leanne Hides ◽  
Lee Hogarth

Abstract Background Negative affect plays an important role in motivating problematic alcohol use. Consequently, training imagery-based adaptive responses to negative affect could reduce problematic alcohol use. The current study tested whether personalised online functional imagery training (FIT) to utilise positive mental imagery in response to negative affect would improve drinking outcomes in hazardous negative affect drinking students. Method Participants were 52 hazardous student drinkers who drink to cope with negative affect. Participants in the active group (n = 24) were trained online over 2 weeks to respond to personalised negative drinking triggers by retrieving a personalised adaptive strategy they might use to mitigate negative affect, whereas participants in the control group (n = 28) received standard risk information about binge drinking at university. Measures of daily drinking quantity, drinking motives, self-efficacy and use of protective behavioural strategies were obtained at baseline and 2 weeks follow-up. Results There were three significant interactions between group and time in a per-protocol analysis: the active intervention group showed increased self-efficacy of control over negative affect drinking and control over alcohol consumption and decreased social drinking motives from baseline to 2-week follow-up, relative to the control intervention group. There were no effects on drinking frequency. Conclusion These findings provide initial evidence that online training to respond to negative affect drinking triggers by retrieving mental imagery of adaptive strategies can improve drinking-related outcomes in hazardous, student, negative affect drinkers. The findings support the utility of FIT interventions for substance use.


Author(s):  
Elisa M. Trucco ◽  
Gabriel L. Schlomer ◽  
Brian M. Hicks

Approximately 48–66% of the variation in alcohol use disorders is heritable. This chapter provides an overview of the genetic influences that contribute to alcohol use disorder within a developmental perspective. Namely, risk for problematic alcohol use is framed as a function of age-related changes in the relative contribution of genetic and environmental factors and an end state of developmental processes. This chapter discusses the role of development in the association between genes and the environment on risk for alcohol use disorder. Designs used to identify genetic factors relevant to problematic alcohol use are discussed. Studies examining developmental pathways to alcohol use disorder with a focus on endophenotypes and intermediate phenotypes are reviewed. Finally, areas for further investigation are offered.


2021 ◽  
pp. 106952
Author(s):  
Lutz Wartberg ◽  
Gloria Fischer-Waldschmidt ◽  
Levente Kriston ◽  
Christina W. Hoven ◽  
Marco Sarchiapone ◽  
...  

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