Newswise, May 12, 2016— Alcohol-induced blackouts, defined as
memory loss of all or a portion of events that occurred during a drinking
episode, are reported by approximately 50 percent of drinkers, and are
associated with a wide range of negative consequences, including injury and
death.
Identifying the factors that contribute to and result from
alcohol-induced blackouts is critical for developing effective prevention
programs.
This manuscript is an updated review of clinical research that
has focused on alcohol-induced blackouts. It outlines practical and clinical
implications of these findings and provides recommendations for future
research.
The authors conducted a comprehensive, systematic literature
review of all articles published from January 2010 through August 2015 that
examined vulnerabilities, consequences, and possible mechanisms for
alcohol-induced blackouts.
The review yielded 26 studies on alcohol-induced blackouts: 15
studies examined prevalence and/or predictors of alcohol-induced blackouts, six
publications described the consequences of alcohol-induced blackouts, and five
studies explored potential cognitive and neurobiological mechanisms underlying
alcohol-induced blackouts.
The research suggests that individual differences, not just
alcohol consumption, increase the likelihood of experiencing an alcohol-induced
blackout, and the consequences of the blackouts extend beyond those related to
the drinking episode to include psychiatric symptoms and neurobiological
abnormalities.
The authors suggest that prospective studies and a
standardized assessment of alcohol-induced blackouts are needed to fully
characterize factors associated with them and to improve prevention strategies.
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