Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 26, Issue 2 , Pages 167-176, August 1995

Alcohol Use Before and After Traumatic Head Injury☆☆★★

Received 14 March 1994; received in revised form 20 December 1994 and 6 February 1995; accepted 15 February 1995.

Abstract 

See related editorial, "Alcohol and Injury in the Emergency Department: Opportunities for Intervention."

Study objective: To determine (1) the significance of blood alcohol level in the emergency department in history of alcohol abuse and (2) the significance of habitual alcohol use in head-injured patients before and after injury.

Design: Inception cohort study with 1-year follow-up. Setting: Level I trauma center. Participants: One hundred ninety-seven hospitalized adult head-injury survivors with a broad spectrum of head-injury severity. Results: Alcohol use and behavioral problems associated with alcohol use were assayed before injury and in the month and year after injury. The patients' blood alcohol levels in the ED were also examined. Preinjury alcohol abuse was frequent; 42% of the subjects were legally intoxicated while in the ED. The amount of drinking and magnitude of reported preinjury alcohol problems decreased soon after the injury but was followed by an increase by 1 year, although the amount of drinking did not return to the preinjury level (P<.0001). Patients with more severe head injuries decreased their drinking more than did those with less severe head injuries. The patients' blood alcohol levels in the ED were a good indicator of the magnitude of their preinjury alcohol problems (r =.51 to .59; each, P<.001). Conclusion: Preinjury habitual alcohol abuse is frequent in head- injured patients. Blood alcohol levels in the ED are indicative of history of problem drinking and might serve as a basis for treatment referral. The first weeks after injury in hospitalized patients may provide an opportunity to begin interventions because head-injured patients drink less at that time. [Dikmen SS, Machamer JE, Donovan DM, Winn HR, Temkin NR: Alcohol use before and after traumatic head injury. Ann Emerg Med August 1995;26:167-176.]

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 From the Departments of Rehabilitation Medicine*, Neurological Surgery, Biostatistics§ and Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciencesn–and the Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.

☆☆ This study was supported by grants HS04146, HS05304, and HS06497 from the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research; by grant H133B80081 from the National Institute of Disability and Rehabilitation Research; and by grant NS 19643 from the National Institutes of Health.

 Address for reprints: Sureyya Dikmen, PhD, Rehabilitation Medicine, Box 356490, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, 206-685-7529, Fax 206-685-3244

★★ Reprint no. 47/1/66178

PII: S0196-0644(95)70147-8

Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 26, Issue 2 , Pages 167-176, August 1995