Similar profile of cognitive impairment and recovery for Aboriginal Australians in treatment for episodic or chronic alcohol use

Similar profile of cognitive impairment and recovery for Aboriginal Australians in treatment for episodic or chronic alcohol use Journal Article

Addiction

  • Author(s): Dingwall, Kylie M., Maruff, Paul, Cairney, Sheree
  • Published: 2011
  • Publisher: Blackwell Publishing Ltd
  • Volume: 106
  • ISBN: 1360-0443

Abstract: Aims  The cognitive impairment and recovery associated with chronic alcohol abuse and subsequent abstinence is well understood. However, the recovery profile following heavy episodic or ‘binge’ use, which is common among some Australian Aboriginal users, has not been investigated thoroughly and no empirical studies have examined chronic use in this population. The aim of this study was to identify and compare cognitive impairment and recovery associated with chronic and episodic alcohol use among Aboriginal Australians. Design  Longitudinal case–control design. Setting  Residential alcohol treatment programmes in northern Australia. Participants  Forty chronic alcohol users, 24 episodic users and 41 healthy controls [mean age = 34.24; standard deviation (SD) = 9.73]. Measurements  Cognitive assessments of visual motor, attention, memory, learning and executive functions at baseline (start of treatment), then 4 weeks and 8 weeks later. Reassessment of 31% of participants an average of 11 months later (SD = 4.4) comparing those who remained abstinent (n = 5), those who relapsed (n = 11) and healthy controls (n = 19). Findings  At baseline, chronic and episodic alcohol users showed impaired visual motor, learning, memory and executive functions. With the exception of visual motor impairment, all deficits had improved to normal levels within 4 weeks. Visual motor deficits had normalized within 11 months. Performances did not differ at any time between chronic and episodic alcohol groups. Conclusions  In Aboriginal Australians, episodic drinking is associated with similar patterns of impairment and recovery as chronic alcohol use. Most cognitive deficits appear to recover within the first month of abstinence, while persisting visual motor problems recover within 1 year.

Cite this document

Suggested Citation
Dingwall, Kylie M., Maruff, Paul, Cairney, Sheree, 2011, Similar profile of cognitive impairment and recovery for Aboriginal Australians in treatment for episodic or chronic alcohol use, Volume:106, Journal Article, viewed 04 December 2024, https://www.nintione.com.au/?p=2495.

Endnote Mendeley Zotero Export Google Scholar

Share this page

Search again