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酒精使用障碍的严重程度会影响睡眠、情绪和大脑功能连接受损方面的性别差异。

Severity of alcohol use disorder influences sex differences in sleep, mood, and brain functional connectivity impairments.

作者信息

Zhang Rui, Wiers Corinde E, Manza Peter, Tomasi Dardo, Shokri-Kojori Ehsan, Kerich Mike, Almira Erika, Schwandt Melanie, Diazgranados Nancy, Momenan Reza, Volkow Nora D

机构信息

Laboratory of Neuroimaging, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, National Institutes of Health, 10 Center Drive, Room B2L124: MSC 1013, Bethesda, MD 20892-1013, USA.

Clinical NeuroImaging Research Core, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892-1108, USA.

出版信息

Brain Commun. 2022 May 22;4(4):fcac127. doi: 10.1093/braincomms/fcac127. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Growing evidence suggests greater vulnerability of women than men to the adverse effects of alcohol on mood and sleep. However, the underlying neurobiological mechanisms are still poorly understood. Here, we examined sex difference in resting state functional connectivity in alcohol use disorder using a whole-brain data driven approach and tested for relationships with mood and self-reported sleep. To examine whether sex effects vary by severity of alcohol use disorder, we studied two cohorts: non-treatment seeking  = 141 participants with alcohol use disorder (low severity; 58 females) from the Human Connectome project and recently detoxified  = 102 treatment seeking participants with alcohol use disorder (high severity; 34 females) at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. For both cohorts, participants with alcohol use disorder had greater sleep and mood problems than healthy control, whereas sex by alcohol use effect varied by severity. Non-treatment seeking females with alcohol use disorder showed significant greater impairments in sleep but not mood compared to non-treatment seeking males with alcohol use disorder, whereas treatment-seeking females with alcohol use disorder reported greater negative mood but not sleep than treatment-seeking males with alcohol use disorder. Greater sleep problems in non-treatment seeking females with alcohol use disorder were associated with lower cerebello-parahippocampal functional connectivity, while greater mood problems in treatment-seeking females with alcohol use disorder were associated with lower fronto-occipital functional connectivity during rest. The current study suggests that changes in resting state functional connectivity may account for sleep and mood impairments in females with alcohol use disorder. The effect of severity on sex differences might reflect neuroadaptive processes with progression of alcohol use disorder and needs to be tested with longitudinal data in the future.

摘要

越来越多的证据表明,与男性相比,女性更容易受到酒精对情绪和睡眠的不良影响。然而,其潜在的神经生物学机制仍知之甚少。在此,我们使用全脑数据驱动方法研究了酒精使用障碍静息态功能连接的性别差异,并测试了其与情绪和自我报告睡眠的关系。为了研究性别效应是否因酒精使用障碍的严重程度而异,我们研究了两个队列:来自人类连接体项目的141名酒精使用障碍参与者(低严重程度;58名女性),他们未寻求治疗;以及美国国立酒精滥用与酒精中毒研究所的102名寻求治疗的酒精使用障碍参与者(高严重程度;34名女性),他们最近已戒酒。对于这两个队列,酒精使用障碍参与者比健康对照组有更多的睡眠和情绪问题,而性别与酒精使用的效应因严重程度而异。与未寻求治疗的酒精使用障碍男性相比,未寻求治疗的酒精使用障碍女性在睡眠方面有更显著的损害,但在情绪方面没有;而寻求治疗的酒精使用障碍女性比寻求治疗的酒精使用障碍男性报告有更严重的负面情绪,但在睡眠方面没有。未寻求治疗的酒精使用障碍女性存在更多睡眠问题,这与小脑-海马旁回功能连接较低有关;而寻求治疗的酒精使用障碍女性存在更多情绪问题,这与静息状态下额枕叶功能连接较低有关。当前研究表明,静息态功能连接的变化可能是酒精使用障碍女性睡眠和情绪受损的原因。严重程度对性别差异的影响可能反映了酒精使用障碍进展过程中的神经适应性过程,未来需要用纵向数据进行验证。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/1af8/9251604/83e62be662bb/fcac127ga1.jpg

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