Author:
ROBINSON JANE E.,HEATON ROBERT K.,O'MALLEY STEPHANIE S.
Abstract
Thirty codependent cocaine and alcohol users were
compared with age-, education-, race-, and sex-matched
cocaine abusers (N = 30) and normals (N
= 30) using an extended Halstead-Reitan Neuropsychological
Test Battery to determine whether cocaine abusers with
alcohol dependence were more cognitively impaired than
singly addicted cocaine abusers. Tests were grouped and
analyzed according to 8 major ability areas. Participants
who abused both cocaine and alcohol did not differ from
normals on the majority of test measures. An unexpected
but consistent finding was the poorer performance of the
cocaine sample relative to cocaine and alcohol abusers
on measures of complex psychomotor and simple motor functioning
(ps < .001). Pure cocaine abusers, but not
abusers of both cocaine and alcohol, also performed more
poorly than normals on a measure of global neuropsychological
functioning (p < .01). These results are consistent
with previous reports of generally mild cognitive dysfunction
in cocaine abusers. The findings also suggest that cocaine
and alcohol abusers of relatively young ages may be less
cognitively impaired than demographically comparable cocaine
abusers. Evidence from studies of vascular functioning
in abusers of cocaine and alcohol alone and in combination
is discussed as possible explanation for these findings.
(JINS, 1999, 5, 10–19.)
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Clinical Psychology,General Neuroscience
Cited by
55 articles.
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