Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research
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Sleep apnea and related disorders are not uncommon in abstinent alcoholics. We assessed the relationship between age and the presence and severity of sleep-disordered breathing in alcoholism by performing one night of polysomnography on 75 abstinent alcoholic subjects undergoing treatment for alcoholism. Sleep-disordered breathing (defined as 10 or more apneas plus hypopneas/hr of sleep) was present in 17% of 66 men aged 22-76 and in 0 of 9 women aged 28-63 years. ⋯ Sleep in subjects with sleep-disordered breathing was significantly more disturbed than in subjects without sleep-disordered breathing. Our findings suggest that sleep-disordered breathing in older male alcoholics is more prevalent than has been reported in most studies of normal men and that the increase in sleep-disordered breathing that occurs with age in alcoholics is greater than the age-related increase in sleep-disordered breathing that occurs in healthy elderly men. Furthermore, sleep-disordered breathing is a significant contributor to sleep disturbance in a substantial proportion of male alcoholics above the age of 40 years.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Alcohol. Clin. Exp. Res. · Dec 1993
Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor prevents ethanol-induced impairment in host defense in septic rats.
Ethanol is a potent immunosuppressive agent that impairs neutrophil effector function. The purpose of this study was to determine whether granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), a cytokine that increases neutrophil number and functional activity, could prevent the ethanol-induced impairment of antibacterial host defense. Rats were injected with human recombinant G-CSF for 2 days. ⋯ In acutely intoxicated rats, leukocyte migration to the inflammatory site was impaired, and the number of viable bacteria isolated from the subcutaneous pocket was markedly increased. G-CSF prevented the sepsis-induced leukopenia, increased the influx of neutrophils in to the infection site, reduced the number of bacteria in the subcutaneous lavage fluid, and decreased the incidence of bacteremia in ethanol-treated rats when compared with rats not receiving G-CSF. These results demonstrate that G-CSF is a potent immunomodulator that stimulates neutrophil recruitment selectively to the site of infection and that can be used to ameliorate the ethanol-induced impairment in bacterial host defense.
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The outcome in 165 subjects with either an unknown (n = 93) or an alcohol-related (n = 72) seizure etiology, admitted to the emergency room of a general hospital in 1977-1978, was assessed after 10 years on the basis of subsequent hospital records and death-certificate-based mortality data. Alcohol and/or drug poisoning was the most frequent cause of death in the group with alcohol-related seizures. Sixty-four percent of the deaths in this group were directly related to alcohol abuse. ⋯ We conclude that alcohol abuse is an important, though often undetected, seizure etiology carrying a poor prognosis. The difference in mortality between the groups was due more to alcoholism than to seizures. There was no difference in mortality between those with a first alcohol-related seizure and those with previous alcohol-related seizures.
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Alcohol. Clin. Exp. Res. · Aug 1992
The associations of alcohol drinking and drinking cessation to measures of the immune system in middle-aged men.
To estimate the association between the immunologic responses of the cell-mediated and humoral systems and alcohol drinking, we used data from the Vietnam Experience Study conducted by the Centers for Disease Control. That study, conducted from 1985 to 1986, was based on a random sample of 4462 male, Vietnam-era, U. S. veterans. ⋯ The results indicated that measures of immune status differed among the drinking categories and that, generally, the differences changed after adjustment for covariates. These differences consisted, as alcohol consumption increased, of higher IgA and IgM levels, relative T and CD4 lymphocytes, and the ratio of CD4 to CD8 cells, and of lower IgG levels, relative B and CD8 lymphocytes, absolute lymphocyte, and lymphocyte subset counts after adjusting for other covariates. Among former drinkers, we found no clear-cut pattern in measures of immunity for a few years after cessation and then found that values of former drinkers tended to return toward values of nondrinkers as they continued to abstain.