Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine , Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine , Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Chronobiol Int. 2021 Jan;38(1):109-121. doi: 10.1080/07420528.2020.1838532. Epub 2020 Nov 9.
Increasing evidence implicates sleep/circadian factors in alcohol use; however, the role of such factors in alcohol craving has received scant attention. Prior research suggests a 24-hour rhythm in related processes (e.g., reward motivation), but more research directly investigating a rhythm in craving is needed. Moreover, prior evidence is ambiguous whether such a rhythm in alcohol craving may vary by sleep/circadian timing. To examine these possibilities, 36 late adolescents (18-22 years of age; 61% female) with regular alcohol use but without a current alcohol use disorder were recruited to complete smartphone reports of alcohol craving intensity six times a day for two weeks. During these two weeks, participants wore wrist actigraphs and completed two in-lab assessments (on Thursday and Sunday) of dim light melatonin onset (DLMO). Average actigraphically derived midpoint of sleep on weekends and average DLMO were used as indicators of sleep and circadian timing, respectively. Multilevel cosinor analysis revealed a 24-hour rhythm in alcohol craving. Findings across the sleep and circadian timing variables converged to suggest that sleep/circadian timing moderated the 24-hour rhythm in alcohol craving. Specifically, people with later sleep/circadian timing had later timing of peak alcohol craving. These findings add to the growing evidence of potential circadian influences on reward-related phenomena and suggest that greater consideration of sleep and circadian influences on alcohol craving may be useful for understanding alcohol use patterns and advancing related interventions.
越来越多的证据表明睡眠/昼夜节律因素与酒精使用有关;然而,这种因素在酒精渴求中的作用却很少受到关注。先前的研究表明相关过程(例如,奖励动机)存在 24 小时节律,但需要更多直接研究渴求节律的研究。此外,先前的证据对于酒精渴求是否可能因睡眠/昼夜节律时间而异存在不确定性。为了研究这些可能性,招募了 36 名青少年晚期(18-22 岁;61%为女性),他们有规律地饮酒,但没有当前的酒精使用障碍,要求他们在两周内每天六次使用智能手机报告酒精渴求强度。在这两周内,参与者佩戴腕戴活动记录仪,并完成两次实验室评估(周四和周日),即褪黑素起始时间(DLMO)的暗光。平均活动记录仪得出的周末睡眠中点和平均 DLMO 分别用作睡眠和昼夜节律时间的指标。多水平余弦分析显示出酒精渴求的 24 小时节律。睡眠和昼夜节律时间变量的发现结果一致表明,睡眠/昼夜节律时间调节了酒精渴求的 24 小时节律。具体来说,睡眠/昼夜节律时间较晚的人,酒精渴求的峰值时间也较晚。这些发现增加了潜在的昼夜节律对奖励相关现象的影响的证据,并表明,更充分地考虑睡眠和昼夜节律对酒精渴求的影响,可能有助于理解饮酒模式并推进相关干预措施。