Personality
Traits and Craving among Pathological Gamblers and
Alcoholics
There are two types of addiction-related
craving: one is physical, which is related to withdrawal;
and the other is memory-based, consisting of a desire
that persists long after withdrawal has been subdued.
A study in the August issue of Alcoholism: Clinical
& Experimental Research compares craving between
pathological gamblers and alcoholics, correlating
craving with personality. Results indicate that
gamblers and alcoholics have distinctive personality
traits that affect their cravings.
"Personality, and temperament in particular,
is defined as the usual basic emotional reactions
and preferences towards both external and internal
stimuli," said Hermano Tavares, coordinator
of the Impulse Control Disorder Unit at the University
of São Paulo in Brazil, and corresponding
author for the study. "Craving is also defined
in terms of the desire to use a drug and previous
memories of pleasure superimposed upon a negative
emotional state. So, both concepts involve emotional
regulation and motivation. The idea of our study
was to investigate if specific personality traits
could influence the craving experience among alcoholics
and pathological gamblers, making it stronger, hence
rendering more vulnerability to addiction."
Study subjects (49 pathological gamblers, 101 alcoholics)
were recruited from individuals seeking outpatient
treatment at community agencies and a hospital-based
treatment center in Calgary, Alberta between April
2001 and November 2002, as well as through local
advertising. All participants were diagnosed according
to Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
IV criteria, rated their cravings (for either alcohol
or gambling), answered a semi-structured interview,
and completed the Temperament and Character Inventory
and Beck Scales for anxiety and depression.
"Both alcohol and gambling craving were directly
related to clinical symptoms of depression and anxiety,
and inversely related to length of abstinence,"
said Tavares. "However, alcohol and gambling
cravings did not share temperament roots, pointing
to different roles of both on emotional regulation.
In other words, our study suggests that people turn
to either alcohol or gambling for different reasons."
Tavares said that positive emotions and negative
emotions are two separate, distinct and independent
dimensions, possibly regulated by different brain
systems. "We found that alcohol craving was
based on the temperament factor responsible for
negative emotions," he said. "This suggests
that those individuals who are especially vulnerable
to negative emotions are the ones who will miss
alcohol the most when trying to abstain. Conversely,
gambling craving correlated to the temperament factor
responsible for positive emotions. This suggests
that those individuals who naturally lack positive
emotions and require intense stimuli to experience
elation are the ones who will miss gambling the
most when trying to abstain."
"Thus, gambling seems to be more of a stimulant
and anti-depression measure," added Sheila
Blume, former medical director of Addiction Programs
at South Oaks Hospital in Amityville, New York.
"For alcoholics, craving correlated more with
anxiety and harm avoidance, which indicates that
alcohol is more of an anti-anxiety measure. Of course,
these are not exclusive. Alcoholics also drink and
crave alcohol while depressed, and gamblers may
crave when anxious, but these are statistical differences
that can be helpful in understanding patients and
in treatment planning."
Both Tavares and Blume dismissed the lay notions
of "unhappiness" or "sadness"
as factors in addiction.
"Unhappiness is too vague a concept,"
said Tavares. "Clinically speaking, anxiety
is regarded as a state of negative emotionality
and heightened arousal, while depression is best
described as high negative emotions and low positive
emotions. Heightened arousal and low positive emotions
respectively differentiate anxiety from depression,
and negative emotions are shared by both. Alcohol
seems to provide a lessening of negative emotions
and may be used as a 'tool' to deal with tensions
and nervousness, that is, anxiety. Gambling seems
to act as a 'fix' for individuals who are by nature
partially deprived of feelings such as joy and elation,
and require stronger stimuli to achieve emotional
equilibrium and counterbalance depression."
"These findings are not dissimilar to the
findings of others in the field with clinical populations,"
said Blume. "This is not the same as saying
that all addicts have the same 'addictive personality'
but there are some traits that tend to show up in
alcoholics, drug addicts and pathological gamblers
more strongly than in the general population. What
is novel about this study is their correlation of
these traits as well as emotional states with craving.
To my knowledge, this has not been done before with
alcoholics and pathological gamblers."
Tavares added that "it is important to say
that not all individuals with similar personality
profiles will develop alcohol or gambling problems,
but they may be at greater risk if the environment
does not provide the opportunity to learn how to
adjust their nature. Being impulsive, prone to negative
emotions, or requiring greater stimulation to attain
joy may require special attention as these people
could be at risk for a wider variety of addictive
behaviors. Perhaps a combination of traits, rather
than the identification of an isolated one, is a
better strategy to re-start investigating the validity
of the 'addictive personality structure,'"
he said.
Blume suggested that future research look at the
neurological basis of craving, as well as the mechanisms
of how it works on a basic level. "We need
better physiological measurements of craving and
better anti-craving strategies," she said.
Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research
(ACER) is the official journal of the Research Society
on Alcoholism and the International Society for
Biomedical Research on Alcoholism. Co-authors of
the ACER paper, "A Comparison of Craving Between
Pathological Gamblers and Alcoholics," were:
Monica L. Zilberman of the Department of Psychiatry
at the University of São Paulo; David C.
Hodgins of the Department of Psychology at the University
of Calgary; and Nady el-Guebaly of the Department
of Psychiatry at the University of Calgary. The
study was funded by the Brazilian National Council
on Research and Development, and the Alberta Gaming
Research Institute.
Source: Medical News Today
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