Zahr Natalie M, Pfefferbaum Adolf
Natalie M. Zahr, Ph.D., is a Research Scientist in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California; and Program Director of Translational Imaging, Neuroscience Program, SRI International, Menlo Park, California. Adolf Pfefferbaum, M.D., is Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California; and Distinguished Scientist and Center Director of the Neuroscience Program, SRI International, Menlo Park, California.
Alcohol Res. 2017;38(2):183-206.
Brain imaging technology has allowed researchers to conduct rigorous studies of the dynamic course of alcoholism through periods of drinking, sobriety, and relapse and to gain insights into the effects of chronic alcoholism on the human brain. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies have distinguished alcohol-related brain effects that are permanent from those that are reversible with abstinence. In support of postmortem neuropathological studies showing degeneration of white matter, MRI studies have shown a specific vulnerability of white matter to chronic alcohol exposure. Such studies have demonstrated white-matter volume deficits as well as damage to selective gray-matter structures. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), by permitting microstructural characterization of white matter, has extended MRI findings in alcoholics. MR spectroscopy (MRS) allows quantification of several metabolites that shed light on brain biochemical alterations caused by alcoholism. This article focuses on MRI, DTI, and MRS findings in neurological disorders that commonly co-occur with alcoholism, including Wernicke's encephalopathy, Korsakoff's syndrome, and hepatic encephalopathy. Also reviewed are neuroimaging findings in animal models of alcoholism and related neurological disorders. This report also suggests that the dynamic course of alcoholism presents a unique opportunity to examine brain structural and functional repair and recovery.
脑成像技术使研究人员能够通过饮酒、戒酒和复发阶段对酒精中毒的动态过程进行严谨研究,并深入了解慢性酒精中毒对人脑的影响。磁共振成像(MRI)研究已区分出与酒精相关的永久性脑效应和可通过戒酒逆转的脑效应。为支持尸检神经病理学研究显示的白质退化,MRI研究表明白质对慢性酒精暴露具有特定易损性。此类研究已证明白质体积减少以及选择性灰质结构受损。扩散张量成像(DTI)通过对白质进行微观结构表征,扩展了对酗酒者的MRI研究结果。磁共振波谱(MRS)可对多种代谢物进行定量分析,从而揭示酒精中毒引起的脑生化改变。本文重点关注与酒精中毒常同时出现的神经系统疾病(包括韦尼克脑病、科萨科夫综合征和肝性脑病)的MRI、DTI和MRS研究结果。还回顾了酒精中毒及相关神经系统疾病动物模型的神经影像学研究结果。本报告还表明,酒精中毒的动态过程为研究脑结构和功能的修复与恢复提供了独特机会。