Driving impairment due to sleepiness is exacerbated by low alcohol intake
Open Access
- 22 August 2003
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by BMJ in Occupational and Environmental Medicine
- Vol. 60 (9) , 689-692
- https://doi.org/10.1136/oem.60.9.689
Abstract
Aims: To assess whether low blood alcohol concentrations (BACs), at around half the UK legal driving limit, and undetectable by police roadside breathalysers, further impair driving already affected by sleepiness, particularly in young men, who are the most “at risk” group of drivers for having sleep related crashes. Methods: Twelve healthy young men drove for two hours in the afternoon, in an instrumented car on a simulated motorway. In a repeated measures, counterbalanced design, they were given alcohol or placebo under conditions of normal sleep or prior sleep restriction. Measurements were: driving impairment (lane drifting), subjective sleepiness, and EEG measures of sleepiness. Results: Whereas sleep restriction and alcohol each caused a significant deterioration in all indices, the combined alcohol and sleep restriction further and significantly worsened lane drifting (which typifies sleep related crashes). This combined effect was also reflected to a significant extent in the EEG, but not with subjective sleepiness. That is, alcohol did not significantly increase subjective sleepiness in combination with sleep loss when compared with sleep loss alone. Conclusions: Modest, and apparently “safe” levels of alcohol intake exacerbate driving impairment due to sleepiness. The sleepy drivers seemed not to have realised that alcohol had increased their sleepiness to an extent that was clearly reflected by a greater driving impairment and in the EEG.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Simulated driving performance following prolonged wakefulness and alcohol consumption: separate and combined contributions to impairmentJournal of Sleep Research, 2000
- Alcohol Elimination: Faster in Women?Alcohol, Clinical and Experimental Research, 2000
- Peril, chance, adventure: concepts of risk, alcohol use and risky behavior in young adultsAddiction, 1999
- Counteracting driver sleepiness: Effects of napping, caffeine, and placeboPsychophysiology, 1996
- A Field Study of Sleep Disturbance: Effects of Aircraft Noise and Other Factors on 5,742 Nights of Actimetrically Monitored Sleep in a Large Subject SampleSleep, 1994
- Sleepiness and Ethanol Effects on Simulated DrivingAlcohol, Clinical and Experimental Research, 1994
- Reduction of alcohol‐induced performance impairment by prior ingestion of foodBritish Journal of Psychology, 1992
- A New Method for Measuring Daytime Sleepiness: The Epworth Sleepiness ScaleSleep, 1991
- Time-of-day effects of alcohol intake on simulated driving performance in womenErgonomics, 1991
- Effects on vigilance performance and sleepiness of alcohol given in the early afternoon (‘post lunch’) vs. early eveningErgonomics, 1991