Naltrexone moderates the association of alcohol use and affect among adolescent drinkers in daily life.
Ryan W CarpenterHollis C KarolySamuel N MeiselRobert MirandaPublished in: Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research (2022)
These findings support the idea that naltrexone can disrupt the association between affect and alcohol use, effects that emerge later in drinking episodes. Greater attention to the effects of naltrexone on affect and reinforcement may help to tailor psychotherapy to maximize the benefits of naltrexone. However, in the present study, as most drink reports were in the first 2 h of the drinking episode and participants reported affect only at the first three end-drink reports of a drinking episode (limiting the number of drinks reported), we had reduced power to detect effects in the continuation phase. Thus, replication of the findings is needed using a design that assesses the impact of naltrexone across the entire episode.