Department of Psychobiology, Faculty of Psychology, Complutense University (UCM), Madrid, Spain.
Red de Trastornos Adictivos (RTA) del Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII), Madrid, Spain.
Addict Biol. 2018 Sep;23(5):1130-1144. doi: 10.1111/adb.12543. Epub 2017 Aug 25.
Alcohol binge drinking is a pattern of heavy alcohol consumption that is increasingly practiced by adolescents and young adults. Evidence indicates that alcohol binges induce peripheral inflammation and an exacerbated neuroimmune response that may participate in alcohol-induced cognitive/behavioral dysfunctions. Here, we recruited 20-year-old male and female university students who were identified as binge drinkers for at least 2 years. Compared with controls, young alcohol binge drinkers had elevated levels of blood endotoxin and upregulated markers of the toll-like receptor 4/NF-κB inflammatory pathway in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, together with pro-inflammatory cytokine/chemokine release, oxidative stress and lipid peroxidation. These changes positively correlate with the estimated blood alcohol levels achieved during alcohol binge intoxication and negatively correlate with the time elapsed from the last alcohol consumption. The immune/inflammatory changes were more prominent in female drinkers, who showed elevated levels of alcohol danger-associated molecules, such as high mobility group box 1, indicating that there are sex-related differences in the peripheral inflammatory response to alcohol. In contrast, cortisol levels were decreased in alcohol binge drinkers. Finally, higher levels of inflammatory markers, mainly monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, as well as LPS, high mobility group box 1, toll-like receptor 4, IL-6 and ciclooxygenase-2, correlated with worse scores on episodic memory and executive functioning tasks in female binge drinkers but not in male binge drinkers. These results emphasize possible risky consequences of alcohol use in binge episodes during young adulthood and call attention to sex-related differences in the alcohol-induced immune/inflammatory and neurocognitive responses.
酒精 binge drinking(酗酒)是一种越来越多的青少年和年轻人采用的大量饮酒模式。有证据表明,酒精 binge 会引起外周炎症和神经免疫反应加剧,这可能参与了酒精引起的认知/行为功能障碍。在这里,我们招募了至少有 2 年酗酒史的 20 岁男性和女性大学生。与对照组相比,年轻的酒精 binge 饮酒者的血液内毒素水平升高,外周血单核细胞中 toll 样受体 4/NF-κB 炎症途径的标志物上调,同时伴有促炎细胞因子/趋化因子释放、氧化应激和脂质过氧化。这些变化与酒精 binge 中毒期间达到的估计血液酒精水平呈正相关,与最后一次饮酒后经过的时间呈负相关。这些免疫/炎症变化在女性饮酒者中更为明显,她们表现出更高水平的与酒精危险相关的分子,如高迁移率族蛋白 1,这表明在对外周炎症对酒精的反应方面存在性别差异。相比之下,酒精 binge 饮酒者的皮质醇水平降低。最后,更高水平的炎症标志物,主要是单核细胞趋化蛋白-1,以及 LPS、高迁移率族蛋白 1、toll 样受体 4、IL-6 和环氧化酶-2,与女性 binge 饮酒者的情景记忆和执行功能任务得分更差相关,但与男性 binge 饮酒者无关。这些结果强调了在年轻成年时期酒精 binge 发作可能带来的风险后果,并引起了对酒精引起的免疫/炎症和神经认知反应中性别差异的关注。