Rosenwasser A M
Department of Psychology, University of Maine, Orono, Maine, USA.
Alcohol Res Health. 2001;25(2):126-35.
Alcohol consumption (both acute and chronic) and alcohol withdrawal have a variety of chronobiological effects in humans and other animals. These effects are widespread, altering the circadian rhythms of numerous physiological, endocrine, and behavioral functions. Thus, some of alcohol's negative health consequences may be related to a disruption of normal physiological timing. Most studies of alcohol's chronobiological effects have been conducted under natural conditions in which environmental stimuli, such as regular cycles of light and darkness, act to coordinate circadian rhythms with the environment and with each other. However, such studies cannot distinguish between effects occurring directly on the circadian pacemaker and those occurring "downstream" from the pacemaker on the physiological control systems. Studies using animals have enabled researchers to begin to examine the effects of alcohol on circadian rhythms under so-called free-running conditions in experimental isolation from potential environmental synchronizers. These studies have provided preliminary evidence that alcohol's chronobiological effects are indeed the result of direct influences on the circadian pacemaker itself. Furthermore, the effects of alcohol on animal circadian rhythms appear similar to the effects seen during administration of antidepressant drugs. Taken together with evidence that the chronobiological effects of alcohol withdrawal in human alcoholics are reminiscent of those described in depressed patients, these observations suggest that alcohol may produce antidepressantlike effects on the circadian pacemaker. One theory suggests that the effects of alcohol on the circadian pacemaker are mediated in part by alterations in serotonin, an important chemical involved in cellular communication within the circadian system. However, other neurochemical systems also are likely to be involved.
饮酒(包括急性和慢性饮酒)及戒酒在人类和其他动物身上具有多种生物钟学效应。这些效应广泛存在,会改变众多生理、内分泌和行为功能的昼夜节律。因此,酒精对健康的一些负面影响可能与正常生理时间的紊乱有关。大多数关于酒精生物钟学效应的研究是在自然条件下进行的,其中环境刺激,如光暗的规律循环,起到协调昼夜节律与环境以及彼此之间的作用。然而,此类研究无法区分直接作用于昼夜节律起搏器的效应和在生理控制系统中从起搏器“下游”产生的效应。利用动物进行的研究使研究人员能够在与潜在环境同步器实验隔离的所谓自由运行条件下,开始研究酒精对昼夜节律的影响。这些研究提供了初步证据,表明酒精的生物钟学效应确实是对昼夜节律起搏器本身直接影响的结果。此外,酒精对动物昼夜节律的影响似乎与服用抗抑郁药物时观察到的影响相似。结合人类酗酒者戒酒的生物钟学效应让人联想到抑郁症患者的相关效应这一证据,这些观察结果表明酒精可能对昼夜节律起搏器产生类似抗抑郁的效应。一种理论认为,酒精对昼夜节律起搏器的影响部分是由血清素的改变介导的,血清素是昼夜节律系统内细胞通讯中一种重要的化学物质。然而,其他神经化学系统也可能参与其中。