Frontiers in Psychiatry (Sep 2017)

Neuropsychological Impairment in Detoxified Alcohol-Dependent Subjects with Preserved Psychosocial Functioning

  • Catherine Martelli,
  • Catherine Martelli,
  • Catherine Martelli,
  • Amélie Petillion,
  • Marine Brunet-Lecomte,
  • Rubén Miranda Marcos,
  • Rubén Miranda Marcos,
  • Sandra Chanraud,
  • Sandra Chanraud,
  • Ammar Amirouche,
  • Ammar Amirouche,
  • Ammar Amirouche,
  • Alexia Letierce,
  • Nikoleta Kostogianni,
  • Hervé Lemaitre,
  • Hervé Lemaitre,
  • Hervé Lemaitre,
  • Henri-Jean Aubin,
  • Henri-Jean Aubin,
  • Henri-Jean Aubin,
  • Lisa Blecha,
  • Lisa Blecha,
  • Lisa Blecha,
  • Michel Reynaud,
  • Michel Reynaud,
  • Michel Reynaud,
  • Jean-Luc Martinot,
  • Jean-Luc Martinot,
  • Jean-Luc Martinot,
  • Jean-Luc Martinot,
  • Amine Benyamina,
  • Amine Benyamina,
  • Amine Benyamina

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2017.00193
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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BackgroundChronic alcoholism and its related cognitive impairments are associated with increased social, relational, and professional deficits which have a variable overall impact on social integration. These impairments are known to have varying severities and have rarely been studied among healthy alcohol-dependent subjects with preserved psychosocial functioning. Thus, the objective of this study is to describe neuropsychological performance in this particular population.MethodTwenty-nine socially adjusted alcohol-dependent men, hospitalized for a first or second withdrawal and abstinent for 3 weeks minimum, were compared to 29 healthy non-alcoholic controls. All subjects underwent clinical and psychiatric examination, neuropsychological tests of memory (M), working memory (WM), and executive functions (EF). Comparisons were performed using Student’s t-tests or Mann–Whitney U tests.ResultsNo group differences were found on the Self-Reported Social Adjustment Scale (SAS-SR) or in the Mini-Mental State Examination. Compared to controls, patients had greater episodic, spatial, and WM deficits as well as slightly altered executive functions. In contrast, their executive functions (spontaneous flexibility, criteria generation, rule maintenance, and inhibitory control) were relatively preserved.ConclusionOur sample of socially and professionally integrated alcoholic patients shows fewer cognitive deficits than described in previous studies. Our results suggest that early on, alcohol-dependent subjects develop compensatory adaptation processes to preserve social function and adaptation. Minor cognitive impairments should be screened early in the disease to integrate cognitive interventions into the health-care plan to thus eventually prevent further socio-professional marginalization.

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