Yale Stress Center, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Addict Biol. 2022 Mar;27(2):e13116. doi: 10.1111/adb.13116. Epub 2021 Dec 2.
Chronic alcohol use increases risk of alcohol withdrawal symptoms (AW) and disrupts stress biology and resilient coping, thereby promoting excessive alcohol intake. Chronic alcohol intake and multiple alcohol detoxifications are known to impair brain medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and striatal functioning, regions involved in regulating stress, craving and alcohol intake. In two related studies, we examined whether AW predicts this functional brain pathology and whether Prazosin versus Placebo treatment may reverse these effects. In Study 1, patients with Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) (N = 45) with varying AW levels at treatment entry were assessed to examine AW effects on corticostriatal responses to stress, alcohol cue and neutral visual images with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). In Study 2, 23 AUD patients entering a 12-week randomised controlled trial (RCT) of Prazosin, an alpha1 adrenergic antagonist that decreased withdrawal-related alcohol intake in laboratory animals, participated in two fMRI sessions at pretreatment and also at week 9-10 of chronic treatment (Placebo: N = 13; Prazosin: N = 10) to assess Prazosin treatment effects on alcohol-related cortico-striatal dysfunction. Study 1 results indicated that higher AW predicted greater disruption in brain mPFC and striatal response to stress and alcohol cues (p < 0.001, family-wise error [FWE] correction) and also subsequently greater heavy drinking days (HDD) in early treatment (p < 0.01). In Study 2, Prazosin versus Placebo treatment reversed mPFC-striatal dysfunction (p < 0.001, FWE), which in turn predicted fewer drinking days (p < 0.01) during the 12-week treatment period. These results indicate that AW is a significant predictor of alcohol-related prefrontal-striatal dysfunction, and Prazosin treatment reversed these effects that in turn contributed to improved alcohol treatment outcomes.
慢性酒精使用会增加酒精戒断症状(AW)的风险,并扰乱应激生物学和弹性应对能力,从而促进过度饮酒。已知慢性酒精摄入和多次酒精解毒会损害大脑内侧前额叶皮层(mPFC)和纹状体的功能,这些区域参与调节应激、渴望和饮酒。在两项相关研究中,我们研究了 AW 是否预测这种功能性脑病理学,以及普萘洛尔与安慰剂治疗是否可能逆转这些影响。在研究 1 中,评估了治疗开始时具有不同 AW 水平的酒精使用障碍(AUD)患者,以研究 AW 对皮质纹状体对应激、酒精线索和中性视觉图像的反应的影响,使用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)。在研究 2 中,23 名进入为期 12 周的普萘洛尔随机对照试验(RCT)的 AUD 患者参加了两次 fMRI 检查,分别在治疗前和慢性治疗的第 9-10 周(安慰剂:N=13;普萘洛尔:N=10),以评估普萘洛尔治疗对酒精相关皮质纹状体功能障碍的影响。研究 1 的结果表明,较高的 AW 预测了大脑 mPFC 和纹状体对应激和酒精线索的反应更大的破坏(p<0.001,全脑错误校正 [FWE]),并且随后在早期治疗中也会有更多的重度饮酒日(HDD)(p<0.01)。在研究 2 中,普萘洛尔与安慰剂治疗逆转了 mPFC-纹状体功能障碍(p<0.001,FWE),这反过来又预测了在 12 周治疗期间的更少饮酒日(p<0.01)。这些结果表明,AW 是与酒精相关的前额叶-纹状体功能障碍的重要预测因素,普萘洛尔治疗逆转了这些影响,进而有助于改善酒精治疗结果。