Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Health, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, 370 W. 9th Avenue, Columbus, OH, 43210, USA.
Institute for Behavioral Medicine Research, The Ohio State University, 460 Medical Center Drive, Columbus, OH, 43210, USA.
Neuropsychopharmacology. 2023 Jul;48(8):1194-1200. doi: 10.1038/s41386-023-01571-x. Epub 2023 May 5.
Prior studies show that individuals with alcohol use disorder exhibit exaggerated behavioral and brain reactivity to uncertain threats (U-threat). It is posited this brain-based factor emerges early in life and contributes to the onset and escalation of alcohol problems. However, no study to date has tested this theory using a longitudinal within-subjects design. Ninety-five young adults, ages 17-19, with minimal alcohol exposure and established risk factors for alcohol use disorder participated in this multi-session study with a 1-year tracking period. Startle eyeblink potentiation and brain activation were collected at separate baseline sessions during the well-validated No-Predictable-Unpredictable (NPU) threat-of-shock task designed to probe reactivity to U-threat and predictable threat (P-threat). Participants self-reported their drinking behavior over the past 90 days at baseline and one-year later. We fit a series of multilevel hurdle models to model the binary outcome of whether binge drinking occurred and the continuous outcome of number of binge drinking episodes. Zero-inflated binary submodels revealed that greater baseline startle reactivity, bilateral anterior insula (AIC) reactivity, and dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) reactivity to U-threat were associated with increased probability of binge drinking. There were no other associations between reactivity to U- and P-threat and probability of binge drinking and number of binging episodes. These results demonstrate that exaggerated reactivity to U-threat is a brain-based individual difference factor that connotes risk for problem drinking. These findings also add to a growing literature implicating AIC and dACC dysfunction in the pathophysiology of alcohol use disorder.
先前的研究表明,患有酒精使用障碍的个体对不确定的威胁(U-威胁)表现出过度的行为和大脑反应。据推测,这种基于大脑的因素在生命早期出现,并导致酒精问题的发生和恶化。然而,迄今为止,没有研究使用纵向的被试内设计来检验这一理论。95 名年龄在 17-19 岁的年轻人,酒精暴露量很少,且具有酒精使用障碍的既定风险因素,参加了这项多阶段研究,跟踪期为 1 年。在经过充分验证的无预测性不可预测性(NPU)威胁性电击任务中,分别在单独的基线阶段收集眨眼反射增强和大脑激活,该任务旨在探究对 U-威胁和可预测性威胁(P-威胁)的反应性。参与者在基线和 1 年后自我报告过去 90 天的饮酒行为。我们拟合了一系列多层障碍模型,以对是否发生 binge drinking 这一二值结果和 binge drinking 次数这一连续结果进行建模。零膨胀二元子模型表明,更大的基线眨眼反射、双侧前岛叶(AIC)和背侧前扣带皮层(dACC)对 U-威胁的反应性与 binge drinking 的概率增加相关。U-和 P-威胁的反应性与 binge drinking 的概率和 binge drinking 次数之间没有其他关联。这些结果表明,对 U-威胁的过度反应是一种基于大脑的个体差异因素,预示着酗酒的风险。这些发现也增加了越来越多的文献,表明 AIC 和 dACC 功能障碍在酒精使用障碍的病理生理学中起作用。