Results 351 to 360 of about 4,496,597 (381)
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Archives of General Psychiatry, 1997
OBJECTIVE To study patterns of co-occurrence of lifetime DSM-III-R alcohol disorders in a household sample. METHODS Data came from the National Comorbidity Survey (NCS), a nationally representative household survey.
Ronald C. Kessler+5 more
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OBJECTIVE To study patterns of co-occurrence of lifetime DSM-III-R alcohol disorders in a household sample. METHODS Data came from the National Comorbidity Survey (NCS), a nationally representative household survey.
Ronald C. Kessler+5 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Alcohol Control Policies, Alcohol Consumption, and Alcoholism
The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 1981This study evaluates the implications of two alcoholism prevention models. The single distribution (log-normal) model posits that the average level of consumption in a society is sufficient to account for the rate of alcoholism; the sociocultural model suggests that variables other than consumption account for alcoholism.
Wyatt C. Jones+2 more
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Alcohol dementia and alcohol delirium in aged alcoholics
Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 1996Abstract In the present study, 126 alcoholics aged 60 years or older were compared with 104 alcoholics aged 35–45 years. No dementia was found in the younger group, whereas 62.7% of the aged patients had dementia; the dementia being irreversible in 32.9% of such patients.
Akihide Karasawa+5 more
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2005
Alcohol consumption affects overall mortality. Light to moderate alcohol consumption reduces the risk of coronary heart disease; epidemiological, physiological and genetic data show a causal relationship. Light to moderate drinking is also associated with a reduced risk of other vascular diseases and probably of type 2 diabetes.
Hendriks, H.F., Tol, A. van
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Alcohol consumption affects overall mortality. Light to moderate alcohol consumption reduces the risk of coronary heart disease; epidemiological, physiological and genetic data show a causal relationship. Light to moderate drinking is also associated with a reduced risk of other vascular diseases and probably of type 2 diabetes.
Hendriks, H.F., Tol, A. van
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Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), 2006
CONTEXT Alcohol dependence treatment may include medications, behavioral therapies, or both. It is unknown how combining these treatments may impact their effectiveness, especially in the context of primary care and other nonspecialty settings ...
R. Anton+19 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
CONTEXT Alcohol dependence treatment may include medications, behavioral therapies, or both. It is unknown how combining these treatments may impact their effectiveness, especially in the context of primary care and other nonspecialty settings ...
R. Anton+19 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
REACTION TO ALCOHOL AS A PREDICTOR OF ALCOHOLISM
Clinical Neuropharmacology, 1992This paper describes an 8- to 12-year follow-up of 454 men originally studied at age 20. The sample consists of matched pairs of drinking (but not alcohol dependent) men, half of whom have an alcoholic biological father and half of whom are controls. When originally studied in their early 20s, approximately 40% of the sons of alcoholics demonstrated ...
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Acta Medica Scandinavica, 1975
Chronic pancreatitis is frequently observed in men drinking approximately 2 g·kg<sup>-1</sup>day<sup>-1</sup> during a mean of 17 years. The diet of these patients is abnormally rich in fat and protein. Giving alcohol and a similar diet to dogs and rats, it has been possible to reproduce chronic alcoholic pancreatitis.
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Chronic pancreatitis is frequently observed in men drinking approximately 2 g·kg<sup>-1</sup>day<sup>-1</sup> during a mean of 17 years. The diet of these patients is abnormally rich in fat and protein. Giving alcohol and a similar diet to dogs and rats, it has been possible to reproduce chronic alcoholic pancreatitis.
openaire +7 more sources
Timeline Follow-Back A Technique for Assessing Self-Reported Alcohol Consumption
, 1992L. Sobell, M. Sobell
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