Family history of alcohol use disorder is associated with brain structural and functional changes in healthy first-degree relatives

Archive ouverte

Filippi, Irina | Hoertel, Nicolas | Artiges, Eric | Airagnes, Guillaume | Guérin-Langlois, Christophe | Seigneurie, Anne-Sophie | Frère, Pauline | Dubol, Manon | Guillon, François | Lemaître, Hervé | Rahim, Mehdi | Martinot, Jean-Luc | Limosin, Frédéric

Edité par CCSD ; Cambridge University press -

International audience. Background: Neuroimaging studies of vulnerability to Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) have identified structural and functional variations which might reflect inheritable features in alcohol-naïve relatives of AUD individuals (FH+) compared to controls having no such family history (FH-). However, prior research did not simultaneously account for childhood maltreatment, any clinically significant disorder and maternal AUD. Therefore, we mainly aimed to investigate the brain structure and reward-related neural activations (fMRI), using whole-brain analysis in FH+ young adults with no prevalent confounders.Methods: 46 FH+ and 45 FH- male and female participants had no severe childhood maltreatment exposure, neither any psychiatric disorder or AUD, nor a prenatal exposure to maternal AUD. We used a 3 T MRI coupled with a whole brain voxel-based method to compare between groups the grey matter volumes and activations in response to big versus small wins during a Monetary Incentive Delay task. The Childhood Trauma Questionnaire score was used as confounding variable in the analyses to account for the remaining variance between groups.Results: Compared to FH- controls, FH+ participants had smaller grey matter volumes in the frontal and cingulate regions as well as in the bilateral nucleus accumbens and right insula. The FH+ participants' fMRI datasets denoted a blunted activation in the middle cingulum with respect to FH- controls' during the processing of reward magnitude, and a greater activation in the anterior cingulum in response to anticipation of a small win.Conclusions: Family history of alcohol use disorder is linked to structural and functional variations including brain regions involved in reward processes.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

286. Dopamine Transporter and Reward Anticipation in Psychiatric Patients: A Positron Emission Tomography and Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study

Archive ouverte | Dubol, Manon | CCSD

International audience

Dopamine Transporter and Reward Anticipation in a Dimensional Perspective: A Multimodal Brain Imaging Study

Archive ouverte | Dubol, Manon | CCSD

International audience. Dopamine function and reward processing are highly interrelated and involve common brain regions afferent to the Nucleus Accumbens, within the mesolimbic pathway. While dopamine function and ...

Differential predictors for alcohol use in adolescents as a function of familial risk

Archive ouverte | Tschorn, Mira | CCSD

International audience. Abstract Traditional models of future alcohol use in adolescents have used variable-centered approaches, predicting alcohol use from a set of variables across entire samples or populations. F...

Chargement des enrichissements...