Archive for February, 2010

Dangerous Cocktail: Energy Drinks Alcohol

Monday, February 15th, 2010
Dangerous Cocktail: Energy Drinks + Alcohol
Mixing Booze With Energy Drinks Triples Risk of Getting Drunk
By Bill Hendrick
WebMD Health News
Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD

Feb. 12, 2010 — College-age drinkers who swill alcoholic energy-drink cocktails are three times more likely than alcohol-only drinkers to leave a bar drunk.

What’s more, those imbibing energy cocktails are four times more likely to attempt drunken driving, find University of Florida researchers Dennis Thombs, PhD, and colleagues.

“Combining energy drinks and alcohol can trick the brain, making people think they’re sober — or sober enough — when they’re not,” Thombs tells WebMD.

As many as 28% of college drinkers drink alcohol mixed with energy drinks in a typical month, Thombs and colleagues note.

Between 10 p.m. and 3 a.m., Thombs’ team interviewed 800 patrons leaving bars in a college partying area. They asked about their drinking and about whether they intended to drive. Then they checked their breath alcohol concentration levels.

The results are sobering.

  • 6.5% had drunk alcohol-energy drink combos.
  • 6.6% had drunk energy drinks and alcohol, but not mixed together.
  • 86% had drunk alcohol only.
  • The average breath alcohol reading for those who drank energy cocktails was 0.109, higher than the legal driving limit of 0.08. The average breath alcohol concentration for those who had alcohol only was 0.081.
  • Those who combined alcohol and energy drinks drank for longer periods of time.
  • Patrons drinking energy cocktails left bars later than those who drank alcohol only.

“Often, students drink energy drinks because they are tired and don’t start until late and want to have enough energy,” Thombs tells WebMD. “They drink these before they go out. Then there’s a group that combines alcohol and energy drinks; the most common is Red Bull and vodka.”

The phenomenon is so common, he tells WebMD, that researchers have coined an acronym for it: AMED, for alcohol-mixed-with-energy-drinks.

Study researcher Bruce Goldberger, PhD, director of toxicology at the University of Florida, says consumers of energy drinks may drink more and misjudge their capabilities because caffeine reduces drowsiness felt by more intoxicated people.

This condition is often described as “wide awake and drunk,” Goldberger says in a news release.

People often think the stimulant effect of caffeine counteracts the depressant effect of alcohol, but that’s not true. Stimulants actually aggravate intoxication.

The study notes that the market for high-caffeine-content energy drinks has grown exponentially since the introduction of Red Bull in 1997. Many such energy drinks are now on the market.

The study appears in the April issue of the journal Addictive Behaviors.

Kids More Likely to Visit Dentist if Parents Do

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010
Kids more likely to visit dentist if parents do
By DrBicuspid Staff
February 2, 2010

Whether children receive regular dental care is strongly associated with their parents’ history of seeking dental care, according to a new study in Pediatrics (February 1, 2010). The report is the first to analyze the relationship between parents’ and children’s dental visits in a nationally representative sample.

“When parents don’t see the dentist, their children are much less likely to see the dentist,” said lead author Inyang Isong, M.D., of the MassGeneral Hospital for Children (MGHfC) Center for Child and Adolescent Health Policy, in a press release. “We also found that the children of parents who have put off their own dental care for financial reasons are more likely to have their care deferred due to cost as well. It looks like strategies to promote oral health should focus on the whole family.”

Earlier investigations of the impact of parents accessing dental care focused on particular demographic groups. To see whether associations from those studies applied more broadly, researchers of the current study analyzed data from the 2007 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) and its Child Health Supplement, which are designed to collect basic health and demographic information, along with answers to questions on health topics of current interest, from a cross section of the U.S. population.

Survey responses including data regarding dental visits for both a child and parent in the same household was available for more than 6,100 matched pairs. Overall, 77% of children and 64% of parents had a dental visit in the previous 12 months. Among parents who reported seeing a dentist during the preceding year, 86% of children had also seen a dentist; but only 64% of the children of parents with no recent dental visit had seen a dentist during the previous 12 months.

In addition, among parents who put off their own dental care because of financial considerations, 27% of their children also had dental care deferred. In contrast, only 3% of children whose parents had not put off their own care had their dental care deferred.

“Even when children are covered by medical insurance, it appears that financial barriers are influencing parents’ decisions about accessing dental care for their children,” Dr. Isong stated. “We’re now in the process of looking at the impact of dental insurance — something not addressed by the NHIS — and other enabling resources on the relationship between parents’ and children’s receipt of dental care.”

Copyright © 2010 DrBicuspid.com

When dentists fear children

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010
When dentists fear children
By Laird Harrison
Senior Editor
February 3, 2010

In a series of three articles and videos during February — Children’s Dental Health Month — DrBicuspid.com is exploring what dental professionals can do to make early childhood visits pleasant and productive for patient and provider alike.

Even if they understand directions, toddlers often refuse to follow them. They squirm, cry, puke, and wet their pants during dental visits. What teeth they have will fall out no matter what you do. So it’s no wonder that many dental professionals don’t want to deal with them.

“The general practice community may find it very intimidating,” said John Rutkauskas, D.D.S., CEO of the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry (AAPD). The AAPD recommends that children see a dentist by the end of their first year or within six months of the eruption of their first tooth. But surveys suggest most kids aren’t making it to the dentist that early.

What’s stopping them?

The ADA supports the first-year or first-tooth recommendation, as does the American Association of Public Health Dentistry.

One study of Medicaid children in North Carolina found that the earlier a child’s first dental visit, the less likely the child was to need restorative or emergency dental visits over the next five years and the lower the cost of caring for the child’s oral health during that time (Pediatrics, October 2004, Vol. 114:4, pp. e418-e423).

But the policy first promulgated by the AAPD in 2001 has yet to take hold. In September of 2009, only 36% (± 3%) of 914 of Americans with children younger than age 12 agreed with the first-year or first-tooth recommendation, according to a Delta Dental survey.

One reason may be that primary care physicians aren’t completely with the program. Despite the Pediatricsstudy, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) only recommends that kids at high risk for caries see a dentist in the first year. Kids at low and moderate risk can wait until age 3, according to the AAP.

But most people aren’t even following this recommendation. University of Iowa researchers writing in Pediatric Dentistry (January/February 2002, Vol. 24:1, pp. 64-68) reported that only 31% of children whose caregivers they surveyed had seen a dentist by age 3.

Other research suggests that children’s fear is the biggest reason general dentists refer patients to pediatric specialists (International Journal of Paediatric Dentistry, November 2007, Vol. 17:6, pp. 407-418). So how can you ease that anxiety?

The distracting dentist

Practitioners who specialize in treating children make their practices welcoming by letting the kids and their parents know what to expect, said Brian Quo, D.D.S., M.A., a Palo Alto, CA, pediatric dentist. Some pediatric specialists even offer a dental appointment without an examination, just to make friends.

Dental practices can decorate walls with posters of cartoon characters and furnish the waiting room, or even the operatory, with child-sized furniture, books, and toys. All this can make the office feel more inviting and familiar to its youngest visitors.

During the appointment, pediatric experts employ three key techniques: distraction, praise, and “tell, show, do.”

With distraction, the idea is to take the child’s mind off a procedure that might feel uncomfortable or frightening. Some dentists now employ electronic entertainment by using such devices as iPods, Game Boys, video goggles, or TV screens.

But when the entertainment comes from a human being, it’s more likely to build rapport. Distraction can be as simple as asking a child to find his or her belly button just before you inject an anesthetic, asking about the child’s interests, or suggesting that the child count how many seconds a procedure is taking.

Leticia Mendoza-Sobel, D.D.S., a pediatric dentist in Piedmont, CA, and an assistant professor at the University of the Pacific Arthur A. Dugoni School of Dentistry, has made a name for herself by telling her patients stories, singing songs, and playing games.

The approach helps her as much as it does the patients. “I love children. They let me be myself and act silly,” she said.

Next week: Perhaps the simplest, yet most powerful, technique for calming kids is “tell, show, do.” The second article in this series will demonstrate how to make this approach work in your practice.

Copyright © 2010 DrBicuspid.com