Peter Boris Centre for Addictions Research, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
Department of Psychology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2019 Sep;43(9):1918-1927. doi: 10.1111/acer.14147. Epub 2019 Jul 31.
Previous neuroimaging studies examining relations between alcohol misuse and cortical thickness have revealed that increased drinking quantity and alcohol-related problems are associated with thinner cortex. Although conflicting regional effects are often observed, associations are generally localized to frontal regions (e.g., dorsolateral prefrontal cortex [DLPFC], inferior frontal gyrus [IFG], and anterior cingulate cortex). Inconsistent findings may be attributed to methodological differences, modest sample sizes, and limited consideration of sex differences.
This study examined neuroanatomical correlates of drinking quantity and heavy episodic drinking in a large sample of younger adults (N = 706; M = 28.8; 51% female) using magnetic resonance imaging data from the Human Connectome Project. Exploratory analyses examined neuroanatomical correlates of executive function (flanker task) and working memory (list sorting).
Hierarchical linear regression models (controlling for age, sex, education, income, smoking, drug use, twin status, and intracranial volume) revealed significant inverse associations between drinks in past week and frequency of heavy drinking and cortical thickness in a majority of regions examined. The largest effect sizes were found for frontal regions (DLPFC, IFG, and the precentral gyrus). Follow-up regression models revealed that the left DLPFC was uniquely associated with both drinking variables. Sex differences were also observed, with significant effects largely specific to men.
This study adds to the understanding of brain correlates of alcohol use in a large, gender-balanced sample of younger adults. Although the cross-sectional methodology precludes causal inferences, these findings provide a foundation for rigorous hypothesis testing in future longitudinal investigations.
先前的神经影像学研究考察了酒精滥用与皮质厚度之间的关系,结果表明饮酒量增加和与酒精相关的问题与皮质变薄有关。尽管经常观察到冲突的区域效应,但关联通常局限于额叶区域(例如,背外侧前额叶皮层[DLPFC]、下额回[IFG]和前扣带皮层)。不一致的发现可能归因于方法学差异、样本量小以及对性别差异的考虑有限。
本研究使用人类连接组计划的磁共振成像数据,在一个较大的年轻成年人样本(N=706;M=28.8;51%为女性)中,检查了饮酒量和重度饮酒的神经解剖学相关性。探索性分析检查了执行功能(侧翼任务)和工作记忆(列表排序)的神经解剖学相关性。
分层线性回归模型(控制年龄、性别、教育、收入、吸烟、药物使用、双胞胎状况和颅内体积)显示,过去一周的饮酒量和重度饮酒频率与大多数检查的皮质厚度呈显著负相关。额叶区域(DLPFC、IFG 和中央前回)的效应量最大。后续回归模型显示,左侧 DLPFC 与两种饮酒变量均有独特的关联。还观察到了性别差异,显著效应主要限于男性。
本研究在一个较大的、性别平衡的年轻成年人样本中,增加了对酒精使用相关大脑相关性的理解。尽管横断面方法学排除了因果推断,但这些发现为未来的纵向研究中严格的假设检验提供了基础。