Recovery Research Institute, Center for Addiction Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Addict Biol. 2023 Aug;28(8):e13306. doi: 10.1111/adb.13306.
Impairment in autonomic self-regulatory functioning reflected by reduced heart rate variability (HRV) is a common feature of alcohol use disorder (AUD) and is believed to heighten AUD relapse risk. However, to date, no study has explored associations between in natura HRV and subsequent alcohol use among individuals seeking AUD recovery. In this study, 42 adults in the first year of a current AUD recovery attempt were monitored for 4 days using ambulatory electrocardiogram, followed by 90 days of alcohol use monitoring using timeline follow-back. HRV indices (independent variables) reflecting autonomic neurocardiac engagement were calculated from electrocardiogram recordings. Alcohol use (dependent variable) was calculated from timeline follow-back and expressed as per cent days abstinent (PDA). The sample was 73.81% White/European American, 19.05% Black/African American, 4.76% Asian, and 2.38% Other race/Mixed race. As predicted, higher parasympathetically mediated HRV and lower heart rate were associated with greater PDA over 90-day follow-up. Additionally, interactions between these measures and baseline PDA indicated higher parasympathetically mediated HRV and lower heart rate mitigated the deleterious positive association between baseline and follow-up alcohol use. Including factors known to influence alcohol use and/or HRV in the models did not meaningfully alter their results. Findings are consistent with psychophysiological theories implicating autonomic self-regulatory functioning in AUD treatment outcomes and suggest that select HRV indices may have utility as indicants of risk for alcohol use lapse in individuals in early AUD recovery. Findings provide theoretical support for HRV Biofeedback for this population, which exercises the psychophysiological systems that support self-regulation.
自主神经自我调节功能受损,表现为心率变异性(HRV)降低,是酒精使用障碍(AUD)的一个常见特征,被认为会增加 AUD 复发的风险。然而,迄今为止,尚无研究探讨寻求 AUD 康复的个体中自然 HRV 与随后的酒精使用之间的关联。在这项研究中,42 名处于当前 AUD 康复尝试的第一年的成年人使用动态心电图监测了 4 天,随后使用时间线回溯法监测了 90 天的酒精使用情况。从心电图记录中计算出反映自主神经心脏活动的 HRV 指数(自变量)。从时间线回溯中计算出酒精使用(因变量),并用戒酒天数百分比(PDA)表示。该样本中,73.81%为白种人/欧洲裔美国人,19.05%为黑种人/非裔美国人,4.76%为亚洲人,2.38%为其他种族/混血儿。正如预期的那样,较高的迷走神经介导的 HRV 和较低的心率与 90 天随访期间更高的 PDA 相关。此外,这些测量值与基线 PDA 之间的相互作用表明,较高的迷走神经介导的 HRV 和较低的心率减轻了基线和随访酒精使用之间的有害正关联。在模型中纳入已知会影响酒精使用和/或 HRV 的因素并没有显著改变其结果。这些发现与心理生理学理论一致,该理论将自主神经自我调节功能与 AUD 治疗结果联系起来,并表明某些 HRV 指数可能作为个体在早期 AUD 康复期间酒精使用失误风险的指标具有实用性。这些发现为该人群的 HRV 生物反馈提供了理论支持,该方法锻炼了支持自我调节的心理生理系统。