Highlights
- Relationship between pain and relapse in alcohol-dependent patients was explored.
- Decrease in pain level after treatment was associated with lower risk of relapse.
- Managing pain may be useful in improving treatment outcomes of alcohol dependence.
Objective
Physical
pain is considered a potential predictor of relapse in alcohol-dependent
individuals after treatment. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether
reductions in pain level during the follow-up period after treatment were
associated with lower relapse risk.
Method
A
sample of 366 participants was recruited from alcohol treatment centers in
Warsaw, Poland. At baseline, information was obtained about pain level,
demographics, childhood abuse, impulsivity, depressive symptoms, severity of
alcohol and sleep problems. After finishing the alcohol treatment program,
patients were followed for 12 months and alcohol drinking (relapse) as well as
pain severity were evaluated.
Results
In
the followed-up group, 29.5% of patients confirmed that they drank any alcohol
during past 4 weeks. Comparing follow-up to baseline pain, 48.6% of subjects
reported an increased severity of pain, 28.8% reported the same level of pain,
22.6% reported decreased level of pain. There was a significant association
between the decrease in level of pain and the lower risk of relapse. Other
factors associated with relapse during 4 weeks prior to the follow-up were
baseline severity of depressive symptoms, low baseline social support and
number of drinking days during 4 weeks prior to entering treatment. In multivariate
analysis, a decrease in pain level was associated with a lower likelihood of
relapse (OR = 0.159; 95%CI:0.04–0.62; p = 0.008) even when controlled for other factors
associated with relapse.
Conclusions
Decreases
in pain level following treatment for alcohol dependence are associated with,
and may contribute to, a lower risk of alcohol relapse.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/ryASNT
By: A. Jakubczyk,
M.A. Ilgen, M. Kopera, A. Krasowska. A. Klimkiewicz, A. Bohnert, F.C. Blow, K.J. Brower, M. Wojnar
- Department of Psychiatry, Medical University of Warsaw, 27 Nowowiejska St., 00-665 Warsaw, Poland
Correspondence
- Corresponding author. Tel.: +48 22 825 1236; fax: +48 22 825 1315
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