Dependence

Distribution by Scientific Domains

Kinds of Dependence

  • activity dependence
  • age dependence
  • alcohol dependence
  • angle dependence
  • angular dependence
  • cannabis dependence
  • clear dependence
  • cocaine dependence
  • comorbid alcohol dependence
  • composition dependence
  • concentration dependence
  • condition dependence
  • critical dependence
  • cross-sectional dependence
  • current alcohol dependence
  • delayed density dependence
  • density dependence
  • diameter dependence
  • different dependence
  • distance dependence
  • dose dependence
  • drug dependence
  • dsm-iv alcohol dependence
  • duration dependence
  • economic dependence
  • energy dependence
  • ethanol dependence
  • exponential dependence
  • field dependence
  • financial dependence
  • first-order dependence
  • frequency dependence
  • functional dependence
  • greater dependence
  • hallucinogen dependence
  • heavy dependence
  • heroin dependence
  • intensity dependence
  • length dependence
  • light dependence
  • linear dependence
  • long-range dependence
  • magnetic field dependence
  • marijuana dependence
  • marked dependence
  • mass dependence
  • methamphetamine dependence
  • mutual dependence
  • negative temperature dependence
  • nicotine dependence
  • nonlinear dependence
  • number dependence
  • observed dependence
  • opiate dependence
  • opioid dependence
  • path dependence
  • ph dependence
  • physical dependence
  • physiological dependence
  • polarization dependence
  • power dependence
  • power-law dependence
  • pressure dependence
  • quadratic dependence
  • rate dependence
  • resource dependence
  • reward dependence
  • scale dependence
  • serial dependence
  • serum dependence
  • significant dependence
  • size dependence
  • solvent dependence
  • spatial dependence
  • spectral dependence
  • state dependence
  • stress dependence
  • strong dependence
  • strong temperature dependence
  • stronger dependence
  • substance dependence
  • temperature dependence
  • temporal dependence
  • thermal dependence
  • thickness dependence
  • time dependence
  • tobacco dependence
  • ventilator dependence
  • voltage dependence
  • wavelength dependence
  • weak dependence

  • Terms modified by Dependence

  • dependence criterioN
  • dependence diagnosis
  • dependence function
  • dependence questionnaire
  • dependence scale
  • dependence severity
  • dependence structure
  • dependence symptom
  • dependence syndrome
  • dependence theory
  • dependence treatment

  • Selected Abstracts


    MORE ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE THAN ABUSE IN RURAL CHINA

    ADDICTION, Issue 12 2009
    WAN-JUN GUO
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    [Commentary] THE LONG ROAD TO PHARMACOTHERAPIES FOR STIMULANT DEPENDENCE

    ADDICTION, Issue 2 2009
    JOHN MARSDEN
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    A COMPARISON OF THE FAGERSTRÖM TEST FOR NICOTINE DEPENDENCE AND SMOKING PREVALENCE ACROSS COUNTRIES: UPDATED DATA FROM SPAIN

    ADDICTION, Issue 2 2009
    MARCELA FU
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    [Commentary] THE IMPORTANCE OF REACHING A CONSENSUAL DEFINITION OF DEPENDENCE AND OF COMMUNICATING THIS KNOWLEDGE TO THE PUBLIC

    ADDICTION, Issue 7 2008
    JEAN-FRANÇOIS ETTER
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    DENSITY DEPENDENCE AND COOPERATION: THEORY AND A TEST WITH BACTERIA

    EVOLUTION, Issue 9 2009
    Adin Ross-Gillespie
    Although cooperative systems can persist in nature despite the potential for exploitation by noncooperators, it is often observed that small changes in population demography can tip the balance of selective forces for or against cooperation. Here we consider the role of population density in the context of microbial cooperation. First, we account for conflicting results from recent studies by demonstrating theoretically that: (1) for public goods cooperation, higher densities are relatively unfavorable for cooperation; (2) in contrast, for self-restraint,type cooperation, higher densities can be either favorable or unfavorable for cooperation, depending on the details of the system. We then test our predictions concerning public goods cooperation using strains of the pathogenic bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa that produce variable levels of a public good,iron-scavenging siderophore molecules. As predicted, we found that the relative fitness of cheats (under-producers) was greatest at higher population densities. Furthermore, as assumed by theory, we show that this occurs because cheats are better able to exploit the cooperative siderophore production of other cells when they are physically closer to them. [source]


    SEXUAL SELECTION, GENETIC ARCHITECTURE, AND THE CONDITION DEPENDENCE OF BODY SHAPE IN THE SEXUALLY DIMORPHIC FLY PROCHYLIZA XANTHOSTOMA (PIOPHILIDAE)

    EVOLUTION, Issue 1 2005
    Russell Bonduriansky
    Abstract The hypothesis that sexual selection drives the evolution of condition dependence is not firmly supported by empirical evidence, and the process remains poorly understood. First, even though sexual competition typically involves multiple traits, studies usually compare a single sexual trait with a single "control" trait, ignoring variation among sexual traits and raising the possibility of sampling bias. Second, few studies have addressed the genetic basis of condition dependence. Third, even though condition dependence is thought to result from a form of sex-specific epistasis, the evolution of condition dependence has never been considered in relation to intralocus sexual conflict. We argue that condition dependence may weaken intersexual genetic correlations and facilitate the evolution of sexual dimorphism. To address these questions, we manipulated an environmental factor affecting condition (larval diet) and examined its effects on four sexual and four nonsexual traits in Prochyliza xanthostoma adults. As predicted by theory, the strength of condition dependence increased with degree of exaggeration among male traits. Body shape was more condition dependent in males than in females and, perhaps as a result, genetic and environmental effects on body shape were congruent in males, but not in females. However, of the four male sexual traits, only head length was significantly larger in high-condition males after controlling for body size. Strong condition dependence was associated with reduced intersexual genetic correlation. However, homologous male and female traits exhibited correlated responses to condition, suggesting an intersexual genetic correlation for condition dependence itself. Our findings support the role of sexual selection in the evolution of condition dependence, but reveal considerable variation in condition dependence among sexual traits. It is not clear whether the evolution of condition dependence has mitigated or exacerbated intralocus sexual conflict in this species. [source]


    CONDITION DEPENDENCE OF SEXUAL ORNAMENT SIZE AND VARIATION IN THE STALK-EYED FLY CYRTODIOPSIS DALMANNI (DIPTERA: DIOPSIDAE)

    EVOLUTION, Issue 5 2004
    Samuel Cotton
    Abstract We used the stalk-eyed fly Cyrtodiopsis dalmanni to examine predictions made by condition-dependent handicap models of sexual selection. Condition was experimentally varied by manipulation of larval food availability. Cyrtodiopsis dalmanni is a highly dimorphic species exhibiting strong sexual selection, and the male sexual ornament (exaggerated eyespan) showed strong condition-dependent expression relative to the homologous trait in females and nonsexual traits. Male eyespan also showed a great increase in standardized variance under stress, unlike nonsexual traits. The inflated variance of the male ornament was primarily attributable to condition-dependent (but body-size-independent) increase in variance. Thus, evaluation of male eyespan allows females to gain additional information about male condition over and above that given by body size. These findings accord well with condition-dependent handicap models of sexual selection. [source]


    HIERARCHICAL BAYESIAN MODELLING OF SOCIAL VARIATION IN THE AGE DEPENDENCE OF DISABILITY PREVALENCE

    AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF STATISTICS, Issue 4 2005
    Patrick Graham
    Summary Motivated by a study of social variation in the relationship of functional limitation prevalence to age, this paper examines methods for modelling social variation in health outcomes. It is argued that, from a Bayesian perspective, modelling the dependence of functional limitation prevalence on age separately for each social group, corresponds to an implausible prior model, in addition to leading to imprecise estimates for some groups. The alternative strategy of fitting a single model, perhaps including some age-by-group interactions but omitting higher-order interactions, requires a strong prior commitment to the absence of such effects. Hierarchical Bayesian modelling is proposed as a compromise between these two analytical approaches. Under all hierarchical Bayes analyses there is strong evidence for an ethnic group difference in limitation prevalence in early- to mid-adulthood among tertiary-qualified males. In contrast, the single-model approach largely misses this effect, while the group-specific analyses exhibit an unrealistically large degree of heterogeneity in gender-education-specific ethnicity effects. The sensitivity of posterior inferences to prior specifications is studied. [source]


    Risk Modeling of Dependence among Project Task Durations

    COMPUTER-AIDED CIVIL AND INFRASTRUCTURE ENGINEERING, Issue 6 2007
    I-Tung Yang
    The assessments, however, can be strongly influenced by the dependence between task durations. In light of the need to address the dependence, the present study proposes a computer simulation model to incorporate and augment NORTA, a method for multivariate random number generation. The proposed model allows arbitrarily specified marginal distributions for task durations (need not be members of the same distribution family) and any desired correlation structure. This level of flexibility is of great practical value when systematic data is not available and planners have to rely on experts' subjective estimation. The application of the proposed model is demonstrated through scheduling a road pavement project. The proposed model is validated by showing that the sample correlation coefficients between task durations closely match the originally specified ones. Empirical comparisons between the proposed model and two conventional approaches, PERT and conventional simulation (without correlations), are used to illustrate the usefulness of the proposed model. [source]


    Dependence of Effective Marine Park Zoning on Survey Design, Data Quality, and Community Acceptance: Response to Lynch

    CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 2 2008
    ALDO S. STEFFE
    First page of article [source]


    The Interplay between Climate Variability and Density Dependence in the Population Viability of Chinook Salmon

    CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 1 2006
    RICHARD W. ZABEL
    análisis de viabilidad poblacional; especies en peligro; Oncorhynchus tshawytscha Abstract:,The viability of populations is influenced by driving forces such as density dependence and climate variability, but most population viability analyses (PVAs) ignore these factors because of data limitations. Additionally, simplified PVAs produce limited measures of population viability such as annual population growth rate (,) or extinction risk. Here we developed a "mechanistic" PVA of threatened Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) in which, based on 40 years of detailed data, we related freshwater recruitment of juveniles to density of spawners, and third-year survival in the ocean to monthly indices of broad-scale ocean and climate conditions. Including climate variability in the model produced important effects: estimated population viability was very sensitive to assumptions of future climate conditions and the autocorrelation contained in the climate signal increased mean population abundance while increasing probability of quasi extinction. Because of the presence of density dependence in the model, however, we could not distinguish among alternative climate scenarios through mean , values, emphasizing the importance of considering multiple measures to elucidate population viability. Our sensitivity analyses demonstrated that the importance of particular parameters varied across models and depended on which viability measure was the response variable. The density-dependent parameter associated with freshwater recruitment was consistently the most important, regardless of viability measure, suggesting that increasing juvenile carrying capacity is important for recovery. Resumen:,La viabilidad de poblaciones esta influida por fuerzas conductoras como la denso dependencia y la variabilidad climática, pero la mayoría de los análisis de viabilidad poblacional (AVP) ignoran estos factores debido a limitaciones en la disponibilidad de datos. Adicionalmente, los AVP simplificados producen medidas limitadas de la viabilidad poblacional tales como la tasa anual de crecimiento poblacional (,) o el riesgo de extinción. Aquí desarrollamos un AVP "mecanicista" de Oncorhynchus tshawytscha en el que, con base en datos detallados de 40 años, relacionamos el reclutamiento de juveniles en agua dulce con la densidad de reproductores, y la supervivencia en el océano al tercer año con índices mensuales de condiciones oceánicas y climáticas a amplia escala. La inclusión de la variabilidad climática en el modelo produjo efectos importantes: la viabilidad poblacional estimada fue muy sensible a las suposiciones de condiciones climáticas futuras y la autocorrelación contenida en la señal climática aumentó la abundancia poblacional promedio al mismo tiempo que incrementó la probabilidad de cuasi extinción. Sin embargo, debido a la presencia de denso densidad en el modelo no pudimos distinguir entre escenarios climáticos alternativos a través de los valores promedio de ,, lo que enfatiza la importancia de considerar medidas múltiples para dilucidar la viabilidad poblacional. Nuestros análisis de sensibilidad demostraron que la importancia de parámetros particulares varió en los modelos y dependió de la medida de viabilidad utilizada como variable de respuesta. El parámetro de denso dependencia asociada con el reclutamiento en agua dulce consistentemente fue el más importante, independientemente de la medida de viabilidad, lo que sugiere que el incremento en la capacidad de carga de juveniles es importante para la recuperación. [source]


    The Dual Mode Microwave Afterglow Apparatus for Measuring the Electron Temperature Dependence of the Electron-Ion Recombination

    CONTRIBUTIONS TO PLASMA PHYSICS, Issue 4 2008
    O. Miku
    Abstract Three dual mode microwave apparatus (one using S -band and two using X -band) have been developed to determine ambipolar diffusion and electron-ion recombination rates under conditions such that Tgas = 300K and Te is varied from 300 K to 6300 K, in the afterglow period of the dc glow discharge. TheTM010 cylindrical cavity (in S -band) and TM011 open cylindrical cavity (X -band) are used to determine the electron density during the afterglow period and a non-resonant waveguide mode is used to apply a constant microwave heating field to the electrons. To test the properties of the apparatus the neon afterglow plasma has been investigated. At Te = 300 K a value of , (Ne+2) = (1.7± 0.2) × 10,7cm3/s is obtained which is in good agreement with values of other investigators. Also similar variations of , as T,0.4e (S -band) and as T,0.42e (X -band) obeyed over the range 300 , Te , 6300K are in good agreement with some other previous measurements. The simplicity of the X-band microwave apparatus also allows the measurements of the gas temperature dependency and the study of electron attachment and may be used simultaneously with optical or mass spectrometry investigations. (© 2008 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) [source]


    Therapy preference and treatment outcome in clients with mild to moderate alcohol dependence

    DRUG AND ALCOHOL REVIEW, Issue 3 2005
    SIMON J. ADAMSON
    Abstract The Brief Treatment Programme for Alcohol Dependence allocated 122 clients randomly to three different forms of brief therapy. Prior to allocation clients were asked what their preference would have been had allocation not been random. This study posed the question: did clients receiving their preferred treatment have a better outcome than those who did not? Also examined were differences in the treatment process variables of perceived effectiveness, satisfaction, rapport, engagement and number of sessions attended. The results were that there was no difference in either outcome or treatment process according to whether or not clients were allocated to their treatment of preference. It is concluded that these findings reinforce both the ethicality of the randomized controlled trial as a methodology for examining differential treatment outcomes in individual brief treatment of between one and five sessions for alcohol dependence and the validity of these findings as they might relate to real clinical settings. Finally, it is suggested that other researchers consider the inclusion of questions related to client preference. [source]


    Addiction Research Centres and the Nurturing of Creativity The Chinese National Institute on Drug Dependence, Peking University: past, present and future

    ADDICTION, Issue 9 2010
    Xi Wang
    ABSTRACT In the 25 years since drug abuse re-emerged in China in the 1980s, the National Institute of Drug Dependence (NIDD) has made many contributions to China's antidrug campaign. This present paper offers an account of the history, current status and future of drug dependence research at NIDD. NIDD was originally a research centre at Beijing Medical University, founded by the Chinese Ministry of Health to address the rapid spread of drug abuse in China. Originally, the main task of NIDD was to complete the commissions assigned by the government and university. Further developments transformed NIDD into a national research institute in the field of drug addiction that began to conduct its own research. NIDD has now created a professional team spread across several independent departments involved in neurobiological mechanisms, epidemiological surveys and monitoring, pre-clinical and clinical evaluation of new drugs (mainly analgesic drugs and detoxification drugs) and informatics and data analysis. As a university-based research institute, NIDD's funding derives mainly from grants provided by the government and financial support from international organizations. Its past and present research has a gained NIDD a reputation with both practitioners and policy makers in the field of drug addiction. In the future, NIDD will continue to engage in various aspects of drug addiction research and will enter the field of brain function. [source]


    Association of adolescent symptoms of depression and anxiety with daily smoking and nicotine dependence in young adulthood: findings from a 10-year longitudinal study

    ADDICTION, Issue 9 2010
    Maria McKenzie
    ABSTRACT Aims To examine the association of adolescent depression and anxiety symptoms with daily smoking and nicotine dependence in young adulthood. Design A prospective cohort study of adolescent and young adult health (n = 1943). Teen assessments occurred at 6-monthly intervals, with two follow-up assessments in young adulthood (wave 7, 1998; wave 8, 2001,03). Setting Victoria, Australia. Participants Students who participated at least once during the first six (adolescent) waves of the cohort study. Measurements Adolescent depression and anxiety symptoms were assessed using the Revised Clinical Interview Schedule (CIS-R). Young adult tobacco use was defined as: daily use (6 or 7 days per week) and dependent use (,4 on the Fagerstrom Test for Nicotine Dependence). Findings Among adolescent ,less than daily' smokers, those with high levels of depression and anxiety symptoms had an increased risk of reporting nicotine dependence in young adulthood [odds ratio (OR) 3.3, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.2,9.1] compared to young adults who had low levels of adolescent depression and anxiety symptoms, after adjusting for potential confounding factors. Similarly, in the adjusted model (OR 1.9, 95% CI 1.0,3.4), among adolescent ,daily' smokers, those with high levels of depression and anxiety symptoms had an almost two-fold increase in the odds of reporting nicotine dependence in young adulthood compared to young adults with low levels of adolescent depression and anxiety symptoms. Conclusions Adolescent smokers with depression and anxiety symptoms are at increased risk for nicotine dependence into young adulthood. They warrant vigilance from primary care providers in relation to tobacco use well into adulthood. [source]


    Copulas and Temporal Dependence

    ECONOMETRICA, Issue 1 2010
    Brendan K. Beare
    An emerging literature in time series econometrics concerns the modeling of potentially nonlinear temporal dependence in stationary Markov chains using copula functions. We obtain sufficient conditions for a geometric rate of mixing in models of this kind. Geometric , -mixing is established under a rather strong sufficient condition that rules out asymmetry and tail dependence in the copula function. Geometric , -mixing is obtained under a weaker condition that permits both asymmetry and tail dependence. We verify one or both of these conditions for a range of parametric copula functions that are popular in applied work. [source]


    Planning for Path Dependence?

    ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY, Issue 2 2010
    The Case of a Network in the Berlin-Brandenburg Optics Cluster
    abstract Much research on regional business clusters refers to path dependence as a central feature in the evolution of cluster structures. In many cases, however, little is known about the agentic processes and mechanisms that underlie path dependence. In this article, we explore changes in a specific network in the optics cluster in the German region of Berlin-Brandenburg to show that development of clusters can be driven by elements of both emergence and planning. In particular, we argue that current actors actively and purposively draw upon rules and resources that were shaped not only in the long and discontinuous history of the cluster but also in the recent process of network development that involves careful planning and well-structured planning tools. Using central concepts from structuration theory, we show how agency is implicated in the coordination of the network and how agency turns coordination into a self-reinforcing mechanism. The findings suggest that purposive planning involves a fundamental ambivalence in the processes and outcomes of path dependence, at the level of both the cluster and its constituent networks. [source]


    Subtypes of major depression in substance dependence

    ADDICTION, Issue 10 2009
    Mark J. Niciu
    ABSTRACT Aims This study evaluated features that differentiate subtypes of major depressive episode (MDE) in the context of substance dependence (SD). Design Secondary data analysis using pooled data from family-based and case,control genetic studies of SD. Setting Community recruitment through academic medical centers. Participants A total of 1929 unrelated subjects with alcohol and/or drug dependence. Measurements Demographics, diagnostic criteria for psychiatric and substance use disorders and related clinical features were obtained using the Semi-Structured Assessment for Drug Dependence and Alcoholism. We compared four groups: no life-time MDE (no MDE), independent MDE only (I-MDE), substance-induced MDE only (SI-MDE) and both types of MDE. Findings Psychiatric measures were better predictors of MDE subtype than substance-related or socio-demographic ones. Subjects with both types of MDE reported more life-time depressive symptoms and comorbid anxiety disorders and were more likely to have attempted suicide than subjects with I-MDE or SI-MDE. Subjects with both types of MDE, like those with I-MDE, were also more likely than subjects with SI-MDE to be alcohol-dependent only than either drug-dependent only or both alcohol- and drug-dependent. Conclusions SD individuals with both types of MDE have greater psychiatric severity than those with I-MDE only or SI-MDE only. These and other features that distinguish among the MDE subtypes have important diagnostic and potential therapeutic implications. [source]


    Repeated high-frequency transcranial magnetic stimulation over the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex reduces cigarette craving and consumption

    ADDICTION, Issue 4 2009
    Revital Amiaz
    ABSTRACT Aims To evaluate the effect of repeated high-frequency transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) of the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), combined with either smoking or neutral cues, on cigarette consumption, dependence and craving. Design Participants were divided randomly to real and sham stimulation groups. Each group was subdivided randomly into two subgroups presented with either smoking-related or neutral pictures just before the daily TMS intervention. Ten daily rTMS sessions were applied every week-day and then a maintenance phase was conducted in which rTMS sessions were less frequent. Setting Single-site, out-patient, randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled. Participants Forty-eight chronic smokers who smoked at least 20 cigarettes per day and were motivated to quit smoking. Healthy males and females were recruited from the general population using advertisements in newspapers and on internet websites. Intervention Ten daily rTMS sessions were administered using a standard figure-8 coil over the DLPFC. Stimulation included 20 trains/day at 100% of motor threshold. Each train consisted of 50 pulses at 10 Hz with an inter-train interval of 15 seconds. Measurements Cigarette consumption was evaluated objectively by measuring cotinine levels in urine samples and subjectively by participants' self-reports. Dependence and craving were evaluated by standard questionnaires. Findings Ten daily rTMS sessions over the DLPFC reduced cigarette consumption and nicotine dependence. Furthermore, treatment blocked the craving induced by daily presentation of smoking-related pictures. However, these effects tended to dissipate over time. Conclusions Multiple high-frequency rTMS of the DLPFC can attenuate nicotine craving. [source]


    Further evidence for an association between the gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor A, subunit 4 genes on chromosome 4 and Fagerström Test for Nicotine Dependence

    ADDICTION, Issue 3 2009
    Arpana Agrawal
    ABSTRACT Aims A previous association analysis identified polymorphisms in gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor A, subunit 4 (GABRA4) and GABRA2 to be associated with nicotine dependence, as assessed by a score of 4 or more on the Fagerström Test for Nicotine Dependence (FTND). In the present report, we extend the previous study by expanding our genotyping efforts significantly for these two genes. Design In 1049 cases (FTND of 4 or more) and 872 controls (smokers with FTND of 0) from the United States and Australia, we examine the association between 23 GABRA4 and 39 GABRA2 recently genotyped single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and nicotine dependence using logistic regression-based association analyses using the genomic analysis package PLINK. Results Two and 18 additional SNPs in GABRA4 and GABRA2, respectively, were associated with nicotine dependence. The SNPs identified in GABRA4 (P -value = 0.002) were restricted to introns 1 and 2, exon 1 and the 5, end of the gene, while those in GABRA2 localized to the 3, end of the gene and spanned introns 9,3, and were in moderate to high linkage disequilibrium (as measured by r2) with each other and with previously studied polymorphisms. Conclusion Our findings demonstrate consistently the role of GABRA4 and GABRA2 in nicotine dependence. However, further research is needed to identify the biological influence of these intronic variations and to isolate functionally relevant polymorphisms neighboring them. [source]


    Drug use and perceived treatment need among newly sentenced prisoners in England and Wales

    ADDICTION, Issue 2 2009
    Duncan Stewart
    ABSTRACT Aims To investigate pre-custody levels of drug use among newly sentenced prisoners and factors associated with perceived drug treatment need. Design, setting and participants A sample of 1457 prisoners was recruited to a general purpose longitudinal survey of convicted prisoners starting a new sentence. Measurements Data were collected by structured interviews on reception to prison. Measures were taken of illicit drug use, drug treatment history, current treatment needs, psychological health and a range of social problems. Findings Life-time use of heroin, crack cocaine, cocaine powder, amphetamines or cannabis was reported by 79% of prisoners. Cannabis was the drug reported most commonly, but approximately a third had used heroin or crack cocaine during the year before custody. Nearly half of recent drug users reported wanting help or support with a drug problem during their sentence. Dependence on heroin and cocaine, previous drug treatment, employment, accommodation and psychological health problems were all associated positively with perceived treatment need. Conclusions The prevalence of pre-custody drug use among this sample of newly sentenced prisoners was high. Because treatment need was associated with a range of drug, health and social factors, assessment and referral to appropriate interventions should occur as soon as possible on reception. Treatment should be coordinated with other services and support. [source]


    Randomized controlled trial of a brief intervention for problematic prescription drug use in non-treatment-seeking patients

    ADDICTION, Issue 1 2009
    Anne Zahradnik
    ABSTRACT Aims Dependence on or problematic use of prescription drugs (PD) is estimated to be between 1 and 2% in the general population. In contrast, the proportion of substance-specific treatment in PD use disorders at 0.5% is comparatively low. With an estimated prevalence of 4.7%, PD-specific disorders are widespread in general hospitals compared to the general population. Brief intervention delivered in general hospitals might be useful to promote discontinuation or reduction of problematic prescription drug use. Design A randomized, controlled clinical trial. Setting Internal, surgical and gynaecological wards of a general and a university hospital. Participants One hundred and twenty-six patients fulfilling criteria for either regular use of PD (more than 60 days within the last 3 months) or dependence on or abuse of PD, respectively, were allocated randomly to two conditions. Intervention Subjects received two counselling sessions based on Motivational Interviewing plus an individualized written feedback (intervention group, IG) or a booklet on health behaviour (control group, CG). Measurements The outcome was measured as reduction (>25%) and discontinuation of PD intake in terms of defined daily dosages (DDD). Findings After 3 months, more participants in the IG reduced their DDD compared to the participants in the CG (51.8% versus 30%; ,2 = 6.17; P = 0.017). In the IG 17.9%, in the CG 8.6% discontinued use of PD (,2 = 2.42; P = 0.17). Conclusions Brief intervention based on Motivational Interviewing is effective in reducing PD intake in non-treatment-seeking patients. [source]


    Evaluating the validities of different DSM-IV-based conceptual constructs of tobacco dependence,

    ADDICTION, Issue 7 2008
    Peter S. Hendricks
    ABSTRACT Aim To compare the concurrent and predictive validities of two subsets of DSM-IV criteria for nicotine dependence (tolerance and withdrawal; withdrawal; difficulty controlling use; and use despite harm) to the concurrent and predictive validity of the full DSM-IV criteria. Design Analysis of baseline and outcome data from three randomized clinical trials of cigarette smoking treatment. Setting San Francisco, California. Participants Two samples of cigarette smokers (n = 810 and 322), differing with regard to baseline characteristics and treatment received, derived from three randomized clinical trials. Measurements DSM-IV nicotine dependence criteria were measured at baseline with a computerized version of the Diagnostic Interview Schedule for DSM-IV (DIS-IV). Additional baseline measures included the Fagerström Test of Nicotine Dependence (FTND), number of cigarettes smoked per day, breath carbon monoxide (CO) level, the Minnesota Nicotine Withdrawal Scale (MNWS), the Michigan Nicotine Reinforcement Questionnaire (M-NRQ) and the Profile of Mood States (POMS). Seven-day point-prevalence abstinence was assessed at week 12. Findings Full DSM-IV criteria displayed greater concurrent validity than either of the two subsets of criteria. However, DSM-IV symptoms accounted for only a nominal amount of the variance in baseline smoking-related characteristics and were unrelated to smoking abstinence at week 12. Cigarettes smoked per day was the only significant predictor of abstinence at week 12. Conclusions Although the findings do not provide a compelling alternative to the full set of DSM-IV nicotine dependence criteria, its poor psychometric properties and low predictive power limit its clinical and research utility. [source]


    Anaerobic biodegradation of alkanes by enriched consortia under four different reducing conditions

    ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 3 2001
    Chi Ming So
    Abstract Enrichments of alkane-degrading microorganisms were established under sulfate-reducing, denitrifying, iron-reducing, and methanogenic conditions using an estuarine sediment. The sulfate-reducing and denitrifying enrichments mineralized [1- 14C]hexadecane to 14CO2. Degradation was coupled to sulfate reduction and denitrification, as indicated by the ratios of hexadecane degraded to the electron acceptors reduced. Dependence of hexadecane degradation by the sulfate-reducing enrichments on sulfate reduction was also shown. The results indicate the existence of diverse microbial communities capable of alkane degradation in the sediment studied. [source]


    European Union scientific production on alcohol and drug misuse (1976,2000)

    ADDICTION, Issue 8 2005
    Xavier Sánchez-Carbonell
    ABSTRACT Background Alcohol and drug misuse is a social and health phenomenon of great relevance in the European Union (EU). One indicator of scientific production in a given area is the analysis of publications included in bibliographic databases. Scientific production on alcohol and drug misuse was analysed in EU member countries, and comparisons were made between countries. Methods Analysis of articles on alcohol and drug misuse published during the period 1976,2000 by institutions based in a country of the EU, indexed by PsycINFO. Results A total of 4825 citations was retrieved. Great Britain published 38.6%, while Sweden, Germany and Spain accounted for a further 30%. The articles dealt with drug and alcohol usage (12.8%), substance abuse (53.5%) and drug and alcohol rehabilitation (34.5%). The articles were published in 13 different languages, more than three-quarters being in English. Spanish was the second language, and was followed by French, German, Dutch and Italian. The articles were published in 521 different journals, and 62 of these published more than 10 articles. The journals publishing most were Addiction, Alcohol and Alcoholism and Drug and Alcohol Dependence. Sixty-eight per cent of the articles were signed by more than one author, and the index of collaboration, between 1996 and 2000, was 3.24. Discussion and conclusions PsycINFO is useful for making comparisons between countries, because it includes the name and country of the institution. The number of publications in the EU on alcohol and drug misuse increased over the quarter-century analysed. The most used language was English, as it also is for PsycINFO as a whole, and a tendency towards its increased use was observed. Classification of the articles by subject by the Classification Code is too general, and makes it difficult to distinguish between the areas it proposes. Production tends to be concentrated in journals dealing specifically with drug dependence and psychiatry. The index of collaboration is similar to that found in other scientific areas. [source]


    Neuroscience of Psychoactive Substance Use and Dependence

    ADDICTION, Issue 10 2004
    KARL MANN
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Cannabis Use and Dependence: Public Health and Public Policy

    ADDICTION, Issue 6 2004
    JOHN WITTON
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Probabilities of alcohol high-risk drinking, abuse or dependence estimated on grounds of tobacco smoking and nicotine dependence

    ADDICTION, Issue 6 2003
    Ulrich John
    ABSTRACT Aims, To estimate probabilities of alcohol high-risk drinking, alcohol abuse and alcohol dependence on grounds of smoking-behaviour related variables and single nicotine dependence criteria. Design, Cross-sectional population-based study. Setting, Adult population of a region in north Germany. Participants, Cigarette smokers (n = 2437) among a random sample of 4075 females and males aged 18,64, drawn in 1996. Measurement, Smoking, nicotine dependence according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Psychiatric Disorders (DSM-IV) and the Fagerström Test for Nicotine Dependence (FTND); increasing alcohol-related harm (ARH): high-risk drinking, DSM-IV alcohol abuse, remitted and current alcohol dependence diagnosed by the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI). Findings, Having smoked 30 cigarettes or more per day, onset of smoking at the age of 17 or younger, nicotine dependence and single nicotine dependence criteria revealed odds ratios higher than 4.0 for alcohol dependence. For alcohol dependence, a logistic regression model showed an increased odds ratios for male gender, smoking for 25 years or more, no attempt to quit or cut down, continuation of smoking despite problems, craving for nicotine, withdrawal experience 1 day or longer, smoking first cigarette in the morning 5 minutes or less after waking. The probability of increasing ARH was more likely in males, smokers for 25 years or more, no attempt to quit or cut down, continuation of smoking despite problems and smoking first cigarette in the morning 5 minutes or less after waking. Conclusions, Gender and single nicotine dependence criteria show particularly high probabilities of alcohol dependence and increasing ARH. Interventions need to take these connections into account. [source]


    GENETIC STUDY: FULL ARTICLE: Incorporating age at onset of smoking into genetic models for nicotine dependence: evidence for interaction with multiple genes

    ADDICTION BIOLOGY, Issue 3 2010
    Richard A. Grucza
    ABSTRACT Nicotine dependence is moderately heritable, but identified genetic associations explain only modest portions of this heritability. We analyzed 3369 SNPs from 349 candidate genes and investigated whether incorporation of SNP-by-environment interaction into association analyses might bolster gene discovery efforts and prediction of nicotine dependence. Specifically, we incorporated the interaction between allele count and age at onset of regular smoking (AOS) into association analyses of nicotine dependence. Subjects were from the Collaborative Genetic Study of Nicotine Dependence and included 797 cases ascertained for Fagerström nicotine dependence and 811 non-nicotine-dependent smokers as controls, all of European descent. Compared with main effect models, SNP × AOS interaction models resulted in higher numbers of nominally significant tests, increased predictive utility at individual SNPs and higher predictive utility in a multi-locus model. Some SNPs previously documented in main effect analyses exhibited improved fits in the joint analysis, including rs16969968 from CHRNA5 and rs2314379 from MAP3K4. CHRNA5 exhibited larger effects in later-onset smokers, in contrast with a previous report that suggested the opposite interaction (Weiss et al. 2008). However, a number of SNPs that did not emerge in main effect analyses were among the strongest findings in the interaction analyses. These include SNPs located in GRIN2B (P = 1.5 × 10,5), which encodes a subunit of the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor channel, a key molecule in mediating age-dependent synaptic plasticity. Incorporation of logically chosen interaction parameters, such as AOS, into genetic models of substance use disorders may increase the degree of explained phenotypic variation and constitutes a promising avenue for gene discovery. [source]


    Iron(III) Chelation: Tuning of the pH Dependence by Mixed Ligands

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 14 2003
    Anne-Marie Albrecht-Gary
    Abstract The iron(III) chelating properties of two heteropodands with 8-hydroxyquinoline and catechol binding groups were examined and compared to those of the corresponding homopodal analogues, O-TRENSOX and TRENCAMS. Like the parent homopodands, the two heteropodands are based on the TREN scaffold and the chelating units are connected by amide groups, TRENSOX2CAMS having two 8-hydroxyquinoline and one catechol arms and TRENSOXCAMS2 one 8-hydroxyquinoline and two catechol moieties. The aqueous coordination chemistry of these ligands was examined by potentiometric and spectrophotometric methods in combination with 1H NMR spectroscopy. The respective pFeIII values showed a cooperative effect of the mixed chelating units. Moreover, the pFeIII dependence on pH showed that the mixed ligands exhibit a higher complexing ability than the parent ligands over the pH range 5,9 which is of biological relevance. This result could be of great interest for medical applications. (© Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2003) [source]