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Behavioural correlates of alcohol intoxication

Addiction, 1993
AbstractAlcohol is used in most cultures despite knowledge of the physical, psychological and social problems associated with its abuse. Behavioural impairment is a function of several factors, including blood alcohol concentration (BAC) and the rate of alcohol metabolism by alcohol dehydrogenase and the microsomal ethanol‐oxidizing system.
C A, Naranjo, K E, Bremner
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ALCOHOLIC INTOXICATION

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1938
The increasing popularity of high speed automobiles during the past decade has raised the problem of alcoholism above the level of morality and made it an issue of life and death. In 1936 motor vehicle deaths totaled 37,800. There were also 1,300,000 nonfatal traffic injuries, about 100,000 of them representing disabilities of a permanent character. In
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Osmometry in the Evaluation of Alcohol Intoxication

Clinical Toxicology, 1972
(1972). Osmometry in the Evaluation of Alcohol Intoxication. Clinical Toxicology: Vol. 5, No. 3, pp. 343-363.
H M, Redetzki   +3 more
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Mood change with alcohol intoxication

British Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 1980
The effects of increasing blood alcohol concentration (BAC) on a set of six mood variables were investigated in 10 men and 10 women subjects. The Profile of Mood States (POMS) was used to assess mood states, and blood alcohol levels were determined by breathalyser readings.
B J, Robbins, P L, Brotherton
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The Identification of Alcohol Intoxication by Police

Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 2001
Background: The identification of alcohol intoxication by police, bartenders, social hosts, and potential passengers is an important issue in the prevention of alcohol‐related driving accidents. This study examines the ability of police officers to correctly identify and make ratings of the sobriety of target drinkers presented on video.Methods ...
J, Brick, J A, Carpenter
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Alcoholics' perceptions of cues to intoxication

Journal of Substance Abuse, 1996
This study examined whether alcoholic participants perceive cues to self-judgment of intoxication along the internal-external dichotomy used in the research literature on blood alcohol level discrimination. Twenty-eight participants diagnosed as alcohol dependent participated.
W J, Burroughs, J G, Williams
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Recognition of intoxication by alcohol counselors

Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 1988
Recent studies have found that police officers, bartenders, social drinkers, and trained interviewers are often unable to recognize when others are intoxicated. The present two studies were conducted to evaluate: (a) the recognition ability of alcohol counselors compared to mental health counselors, and (b) the recognition ability of less-experienced ...
N, Carroll, H, Rosenberg, S, Funke
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Triiodothyronine in Acute Alcoholic Intoxication

Nature, 1959
REPORTS in the lay press of the sobering effect of triiodothyronine in intoxicated humans suggested to us the desirability of investigating the effect of this compound on acute alcoholic intoxication under controlled conditions in the laboratory. To this end varying doses of triiodothyronine (3,3′,5-triiodo-L-thyronine as either the free acid or the ...
H, NEWMAN, M E, SMITH
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Acute Alcohol Intoxication, the Disulfiram Reaction, and Methyl Alcohol Intoxication

1974
At the outset the difference between alcoholic intoxication and the alcohol withdrawal syndrome must be clarified. Intoxication is the well-known clinical effect of alcohol on the body, mediated through its tranquilizing and sedating effect on the central nervous system, beginning with mood changes and progressing through psychomotor retardation and ...
Robert Morgan, Edward J. Cagan
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Blood Alcohol Levels and Intoxication

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1970
To the Editor.— Lowenstein et al (213:1899, 1970) suggest that blood alcohol levels of 184 mg/100 ml "represent a moderately and mildly intoxicated level, respectively." Most investigators of alcohol and alcoholism would think that these levels represent, in the nonalcoholic, a state of advanced intoxication.
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