Cortical GABA levels are reduced in young adult binge drinkers: Association with recent alcohol consumption and sex

•1H-MRS was used to measure GABA+ in binge (BD) and light drinking (LD) young adults.•GABA+ was reduced in BDs relative to LDs, which correlated with alcohol intake.•This is consistent with compensatory GABA downregulation following alcohol misuse.•Neuroplasticity: GABA+ was lowest in BDs when measu...

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Veröffentlicht in:NeuroImage clinical 2022-01, Vol.35, p.103091, Article 103091
Hauptverfasser: Marinkovic, Ksenija, Alderson Myers, Austin B., Arienzo, Donatello, Sereno, Martin I., Mason, Graeme F.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•1H-MRS was used to measure GABA+ in binge (BD) and light drinking (LD) young adults.•GABA+ was reduced in BDs relative to LDs, which correlated with alcohol intake.•This is consistent with compensatory GABA downregulation following alcohol misuse.•Neuroplasticity: GABA+ was lowest in BDs when measured one day after last drink.•No interaction between Sex and binge drinking, but GABA+ highest in LD women. Binge drinking refers to a pattern of alcohol intake that raises blood alcohol concentration to or above legal intoxication levels. It is common among young adults and is associated with health risks that scale up with alcohol intake. Acute intoxication depresses neural activity via complex signaling mechanisms by enhancing inhibition mediated by gamma-amino butyric acid (GABA), and by decreasing excitatory glutamatergic effects. Evidence primarily rooted in animal research indicates that the brain compensates for the acute depressant effects under the conditions of habitual heavy use. These neuroadaptive changes are reflected in neural hyperexcitability via downregulated inhibitory signaling, which becomes apparent as withdrawal symptoms. However, human evidence on the compensatory reduction in GABA signaling is scant. The neurochemical aspect of this mechanistic model was evaluated in the present study with proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H-MRS) which is sensitive to GABA plus macromolecule signal (GABA + ). Furthermore, we examined sex differences in GABA + levels as a function of a recent history of binge drinking, given interactions between endogenous neurosteroids, GABA signaling, and alcohol. The study recruited young adult women and men (22.2 ± 2.8 years of age) who were classified as binge drinkers (BDs, N = 52) if they reported ≥ 5 binge episodes in the previous six months. Light drinkers (LDs, N = 49) reported drinking regularly, but not exceeding ≤ 2 binge episodes in the past six months. GABA-edited 1H-MR spectra were acquired from the occipital cortex at 3 T with the MEGA-PRESS sequence. GABA + signal was analyzed relative to water and total creatine (Cr) levels as a function of binge drinking history and sex. Controlling for within-voxel tissue composition, both GABA + indices showed decreased GABA + levels in BDs relative to LDs. The reduced GABA + concentration was associated with occasional high-intensity drinking in the BD group. This evidence is consistent with compensatory GABA downregulation that accompanies alcohol misuse, t
ISSN:2213-1582
2213-1582
DOI:10.1016/j.nicl.2022.103091