Association between iron accumulation in the dorsal striatum and compulsive drinking in alcohol use disorder

Author:

Tan Haoye,Hubertus Simon,Thomas Sebastian,Lee Alycia M.,Gerhardt Sarah,Gerchen Martin Fungisai,Sommer Wolfgang H.,Kiefer Falk,Schad Lothar,Vollstädt-Klein SabineORCID

Abstract

Abstract Rationale Brain iron accumulation has been observed in neuropsychiatric disorders and shown to be related to neurodegeneration. Objectives In this study, we used quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM), an emerging MRI technique developed for quantifying tissue magnetic susceptibility, to examine brain iron accumulation in individuals with alcohol use disorder (AUD) and its relation to compulsive drinking. Methods Based on our previous projects, QSM was performed as a secondary analysis with gradient echo sequence images, in 186 individuals with AUD and 274 healthy participants. Whole-brain susceptibility values were calculated with morphology-enabled dipole inversion and referenced to the cerebrospinal fluid. Then, the susceptibility maps were compared between AUD individuals and healthy participants. The relationship between drinking patterns and susceptibility was explored. Results Whole-brain analyses showed that the susceptibility in the dorsal striatum (putamen and caudate) among AUD individuals was higher than healthy participants and was positively related to the Obsessive Compulsive Drinking Scale (OCDS) scores and the amount of drinking in the past three months. Conclusions Increased susceptibility suggests higher iron accumulation in the dorsal striatum in AUD. This surrogate for the brain iron level was linearly associated with the compulsive drinking pattern and the recent amount of drinking, which provides us a new clinical perspective in relation to brain iron accumulation, and also might indicate an association of AUD with neuroinflammation as a consequence of brain iron accumulation. The iron accumulation in the striatum is further relevant for functional imaging studies in AUD by potentially producing signal dropout and artefacts in fMRI images.

Funder

Medizinische Fakultät Mannheim der Universität Heidelberg

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Pharmacology

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