Muzumdar Neel, Jackson Kristina M, Buckman Jennifer F, Spaeth Andrea M, Sokolovsky Alexander W, Pawlak Anthony P, White Helene R
Department of Kinesiology and Health, Rutgers University - New Brunswick, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, United States of America.
Rutgers Addiction Research Center, Rutgers University - New Brunswick, Piscataway, NJ 08854, United States of America.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav. 2025 Feb;247:173910. doi: 10.1016/j.pbb.2024.173910. Epub 2024 Nov 21.
This daily diary study expands knowledge of the pharmacological alcohol-sleep relationship using a multilevel modeling approach. The interplay between alcohol and sleep on hangover susceptibility is also explored. College students (n = 337; 52 % female) provided 2976 days of self-reported alcohol use. We regressed sleep duration onto accumulated sleep debt, prior night sleep duration, and estimated blood alcohol concentration (eBAC) at bedtime; linear mixed models disaggregated day and person-level effects. Binomial models, assessing days after drinking when eBAC = 0 % versus when eBAC>0 % at waketime, regressed hangover susceptibility onto the same predictors plus sleep duration. More accumulated sleep debt predicted slightly longer same-night sleep. Greater than average bedtime intoxication predicted longer than average same-night sleep when drinking ceased early, but later drinking attenuated the relationship. People who typically stopped drinking later in the night reported typically shorter sleep durations on drinking nights. When waketime eBAC = 0 %, higher eBAC at bedtime and drinking later on a given night predicted greater next-day hangover susceptibility. Typical bedtime eBAC and typically later drinking predicted typically greater hangover susceptibility. When waketime eBAC>0 %, longer sleep duration predicted more likely hangovers. Bedtime eBAC and sleep debt interacted, such that more sleep debt attenuated the positive association between intoxication and next-day hangover susceptibility. Late-night drinking appeared to reduce sleep duration and increase hangover susceptibility. Accumulated sleep debt complicated the alcohol-sleep-hangover relationship. External factors influencing sleep behaviors were not assessed, but the results highlight the need to deconstruct sleep into acute and chronic processes. Future studies should better subdivide physiological processes related to hangovers.
这项日常日记研究采用多层次建模方法扩展了对酒精与睡眠药理学关系的认识。还探讨了酒精与睡眠对宿醉易感性的相互作用。大学生(n = 337;52%为女性)提供了2976天自我报告的饮酒情况。我们将睡眠时间回归到累积睡眠债、前一晚睡眠时间和就寝时估计的血液酒精浓度(eBAC);线性混合模型分解了日和个体水平的影响。二项式模型评估饮酒后eBAC在醒来时为0%与>0%的天数,将宿醉易感性回归到相同的预测因素加上睡眠时间。更多的累积睡眠债预示着同一晚睡眠时间会略长。就寝时高于平均水平的醉酒程度在饮酒提前停止时预示着同一晚睡眠时间会长于平均水平,但饮酒时间较晚则削弱了这种关系。通常在深夜停止饮酒的人在饮酒当晚的睡眠时间通常较短。当醒来时eBAC = 0%时,就寝时较高的eBAC和特定夜晚较晚饮酒预示着次日宿醉易感性更高。典型的就寝时eBAC和通常较晚饮酒预示着通常更高的宿醉易感性。当醒来时eBAC>0%时,较长的睡眠时间预示着更可能出现宿醉。就寝时eBAC和睡眠债相互作用,使得更多的睡眠债削弱了醉酒与次日宿醉易感性之间的正相关。深夜饮酒似乎会缩短睡眠时间并增加宿醉易感性。累积睡眠债使酒精 - 睡眠 - 宿醉关系变得复杂。未评估影响睡眠行为的外部因素,但结果强调需要将睡眠解构为急性和慢性过程。未来的研究应更好地细分与宿醉相关的生理过程。