VA Northwest Geriatric Research Education and Clinical Center, VA Puget Sound Health Care System, Seattle, WA, USA.
VA Northwest Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center, VA Puget Sound Health Care System, Seattle, WA, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2021 May;45(5):1051-1064. doi: 10.1111/acer.14605. Epub 2021 Apr 9.
Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) is common in civilians and highly prevalent among military service members. mTBI can increase health risk behaviors (e.g., sensation seeking, impulsivity) and addiction risk (e.g., for alcohol use disorder (AUD)), but how mTBI and substance use might interact to promote addiction risk remains poorly understood. Likewise, potential differences in single vs. repetitive mTBI in relation to alcohol use/abuse have not been previously examined.
Here, we examined how a history of single (1×) or repetitive (3×) blast exposure (blast-mTBI) affects ethanol (EtOH)-induced behavioral and physiological outcomes using an established mouse model of blast-mTBI. To investigate potential translational relevance, we also examined self-report responses to the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test-Consumption questions (AUDIT-C), a widely used measure to identify potential hazardous drinking and AUD, and used a novel unsupervised machine learning approach to investigate whether a history of blast-mTBI affected drinking behaviors in Iraq/Afghanistan Veterans.
Both single and repetitive blast-mTBI in mice increased the sedative properties of EtOH (with no change in tolerance or metabolism), but only repetitive blast potentiated EtOH-induced locomotor stimulation and shifted EtOH intake patterns. Specifically, mice exposed to repetitive blasts showed increased consumption "front-loading" (e.g., a higher rate of consumption during an initial 2-h acute phase of a 24-h alcohol access period and decreased total daily intake) during an intermittent 2-bottle choice condition. Examination of AUDIT-C scores in Iraq/Afghanistan Veterans revealed an optimal 3-cluster solution: "low" (low intake and low frequency), "frequent" (low intake and high frequency), and "risky" (high intake and high frequency), where Veterans with a history of blast-mTBI displayed a shift in cluster assignment from "frequent" to "risky," as compared to Veterans who were deployed to Iraq/Afghanistan but had no lifetime history of TBI.
Together, these results offer new insight into how blast-mTBI may give increase AUD risk and highlight the increased potential for adverse health risk behaviors following repetitive blast-mTBI.
轻度创伤性脑损伤(mTBI)在平民中很常见,在军人中也很普遍。mTBI 会增加健康风险行为(例如寻求刺激、冲动)和成瘾风险(例如酒精使用障碍(AUD)),但 mTBI 和物质使用如何相互作用以增加成瘾风险仍知之甚少。同样,单次与重复 mTBI 与酒精使用/滥用的关系也尚未得到先前的研究。
在这里,我们使用已建立的爆炸伤 mTBI 小鼠模型,研究了单次(1×)或重复(3×)爆炸暴露(爆炸伤 mTBI)的历史如何影响乙醇(EtOH)诱导的行为和生理结果。为了研究潜在的转化相关性,我们还检查了对酒精使用障碍识别测试-消费问题(AUDIT-C)的自我报告反应,这是一种广泛用于识别潜在危险饮酒和 AUD 的测量方法,并使用了一种新的无监督机器学习方法来研究爆炸伤 mTBI 是否影响伊拉克/阿富汗退伍军人的饮酒行为。
在小鼠中,单次和重复爆炸伤 mTBI 均增加了 EtOH 的镇静作用(没有耐受性或代谢变化),但只有重复爆炸伤增强了 EtOH 诱导的运动刺激,并改变了 EtOH 的摄入模式。具体来说,暴露于重复爆炸的小鼠在间歇性双瓶选择条件下显示出更高的消耗“前置加载”(例如,在 24 小时酒精摄入期的初始 2 小时急性阶段消耗率更高,总日摄入量减少)。对伊拉克/阿富汗退伍军人 AUDIT-C 评分的检查显示出最佳的 3 聚类解决方案:“低”(低摄入和低频率),“频繁”(低摄入和高频率)和“危险”(高摄入和高频率),其中有爆炸伤 mTBI 病史的退伍军人的聚类分配从“频繁”转变为“危险”,与部署到伊拉克/阿富汗但没有终生创伤性脑损伤史的退伍军人相比。
这些结果为爆炸伤 mTBI 如何增加 AUD 风险提供了新的见解,并强调了重复爆炸伤 mTBI 后不良健康风险行为的增加潜力。