Adolescent Women Induce Lower Blood Alcohol Levels Than Men in a Laboratory Alcohol Self-Administration Experiment

Background Adolescence is a critical period for the development of alcohol use disorders; drinking habits are rather unstable and genetic influences, such as male sex and a positive family history of alcoholism (FH), are often masked by environmental factors such as peer pressure. Methods We investi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research clinical and experimental research, 2016-08, Vol.40 (8), p.1769-1778
Hauptverfasser: Jünger, Elisabeth, Gan, Gabriela, Mick, Inge, Seipt, Christian, Markovic, Alexandra, Sommer, Christian, Plawecki, Martin H., O'Connor, Sean, Smolka, Michael N., Zimmermann, Ulrich S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Adolescence is a critical period for the development of alcohol use disorders; drinking habits are rather unstable and genetic influences, such as male sex and a positive family history of alcoholism (FH), are often masked by environmental factors such as peer pressure. Methods We investigated how sex and FH modulate alcohol use in a sample of 18‐ to 19‐year‐olds from the Dresden Longitudinal Study on Alcohol use in Young Adults. Adolescents reported their real‐life drinking in a TimeLine Follow‐Back interview. They subsequently completed a training and an experimental session of free‐access intravenous alcohol self‐administration (i.v. ASA) using the computer‐assisted alcohol infusion system to control for environmental cues as well as for biological differences in alcohol pharmacokinetics. During i.v. ASA, we assessed subjective alcohol effects at 8 time points. Results Women reported significantly less real‐life drinking than men and achieved significantly lower mean arterial blood alcohol concentrations (aBACs) in the laboratory. At the same time, women reported greater sedation relative to men and rated negative effects as high as did men. A positive FH was associated with lower real‐life drinking in men but not in women. In the laboratory, FH was not linked to i.v. ASA. Greater real‐life drinking was significantly positively associated with higher mean aBACs in the laboratory, and all i.v. ASA indices were highly correlated across the 2 sessions. Conclusions We conclude that adolescent women chose lower aBACs because they experienced adverse alcohol effects, namely sedation and negative effects, at lower aBACs than men. A positive FH was not apparent as risk factor for drinking in our young sample. The i.v. ASA method demonstrated good external validity as well as test–retest reliability, the latter indicating that a separate training session is not required when employing the i.v. ASA paradigm. In a sample of 82 adolescents (18 to 19 years), we tested the effects of Family History of alcoholism (negative = FHN vs. positive = FHP) and sex (men vs. women) on free‐access intravenous alcohol self‐administration measured by the mean arterial Blood Alcohol Concentration (aBAC). Our findings suggest no role for FH as a risk factor for alcohol consumption in that age group, but imply that young women preferentially self‐infuse alcohol to lower aBACs than men when asked to produce pleasant alcohol effects, F(1, 78) = 10.0, p 
ISSN:0145-6008
1530-0277
DOI:10.1111/acer.13122