Lower Cortisol Activity is Associated with First-Time Driving while Impaired

Author:

Couture Sophie12,Ouimet Marie Claude3,Gianoulakis Christina14,Tremblay Jacques14,Kin N. M. K. Ng Ying14,Brochu Serge5,Pruessner Jens4,Dedovic Katarina16,Brown Thomas G.147

Affiliation:

1. Addiction Research Program, Douglas Hospital Research Centre, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

2. Centre jeunesse de Montréal – Institut universitaire, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

3. Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Université de Sherbrooke, Longueuil, Quebec, Canada.

4. Department of Psychiatry, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

5. School of Criminology, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

6. Social and Affective Neuroscience Laboratory, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, USA.

7. Foster Addiction Rehabilitation Centre, St. Philippe de Laprairie, Quebec, Canada.

Abstract

Driving while impaired (DWI) is a grave and persistent high-risk behavior. Previous work demonstrated that DWI recidivists had attenuated cortisol reactivity compared to non-DWI drivers. This suggests that cortisol is a neurobiological marker of high-risk driving. The present study tested the hypothesis that this initial finding would extend to first-time DWI (fDWI) offenders compared to non-DWI drivers. Male fDWI offenders ( n = 139) and non-DWI drivers ( n = 31) were exposed to a stress task, and their salivary cortisol activity (total output and reactivity) was measured. Participants also completed questionnaires on sensation seeking, impulsivity, substance use, and engagement in risky and criminal behaviors. As hypothesized, fDWI offenders, compared to non-DWI drivers, had lower cortisol reactivity; fDWI offenders also showed lower total output. In addition, cortisol activity was the most important predictor of group membership, after accounting for alcohol misuse patterns and consequences and other personality and problem behavior characteristics. The findings indicate that attenuated cortisol activity is an independent factor associated with DWI offending risk at an earlier stage in the DWI trajectory than previously detected.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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