CUE-EXPOSURE TO ALCOHOL-ASSOCIATED STIMULI REDUCES AUTONOMIC REACTIVITY, BUT NOT CRAVING AND ANXIETY, IN DEPENDENT DRINKERS
Data(s) |
01/05/1995
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Resumo |
<p>A controlled trial was conducted of cue-exposure with dependent drinkers in treatment. All subjects were engaged in an insight-orientated therapy programme, and responses to an alcohol-associated, compared with a neutral, stimulus were assessed at the beginning and end of treatment. Compared with a control group, which did not receive intervening cue-exposure sessions, subjects who received such interventions manifested reductions in heart rate, salivation and arousal responses to the alcohol-associated, compared with the neutral, stimulus. They did not, however, show similar reductions in subjective estimates of craving and anxiety. These results and the desynchrony in reductions in cue-reactivity across response domains are discussed in terms of their implications for cue-exposure in treatment and recent theoretical conceptualizations of the relationship between autonomic reactivity, craving and drinking behaviour.</p> |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Direitos |
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess |
Fonte |
MCCUSKER , C G , BROWN , K & McCusker , C 1995 , ' CUE-EXPOSURE TO ALCOHOL-ASSOCIATED STIMULI REDUCES AUTONOMIC REACTIVITY, BUT NOT CRAVING AND ANXIETY, IN DEPENDENT DRINKERS ' Alcohol and Alcoholism , vol 30 , no. 3 , pp. 319-327 . |
Tipo |
article |