5 research outputs found
Relations Between Self-consciousness, Depressive State and Craving To Drink Among Alcohol Dependent Subjects Undergoing Protracted Withdrawal
[Aims:] In order to understand how personality traits influence the relation between
depression symptoms and craving for alcohol, self-consciousness is examined during a
withdrawal and detoxification program.
Design, Setting, Measurements and Participants: Craving, depression state, selfconsciousness
trait (trait SC) and their time-dependent improvement were investigated
among 30 inpatients during alcohol withdrawal. Craving (Obsessive and Compulsive
Drinking Scale), Depressive state (Beck Depression Inventory) and trait SC (Self-
Consciousness Scale) were assessed in alcohol-dependent patients (DSM-IV, N = 30)
at the onset (T1: day 1 or 2) and at the end (T2: day 14 to18) of protracted withdrawal
during rehabilitation.
[Findings:] A significant decrease in craving and depressive symptoms was observed
from T1 to T2 during a withdrawal and detoxification program while self-consciousness
scores remained stable. At both times, there were positive correlations between craving
and depression. Moreover, regression analyses showed that trait SC significantly
moderated the impact of depression on craving for alcohol.
[Conclusions:] During protracted withdrawal, alcohol craving decreased with the same
magnitude as depressive mood. Depressive symptoms were linked to craving to
drink but only among patients with high trait SC scores. Our results suggest that
metacognitive approaches targeting self-consciousness could decrease craving and
thus prevent relapse