Desire and craving measured using behavioral ratings and brain network topology differ significantly among moderate to heavy alcohol consumers

Author:

Peterson‐Sockwell Hope12ORCID,Veach Laura J.34,Simpson Sean L.15,Fanning Jason6,Laurienti Paul J.17,Gauvin Lise89

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory for Complex Brain Networks Wake Forest University School of Medicine Medical Center Blvd Winston‐Salem North Carolina 27157 USA

2. Neuroscience Graduate Program Wake Forest University School of Medicine 525 Vine St #150 Winston‐Salem North Carolina 27101 USA

3. Department of Trauma Surgery Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Medical Center Blvd Winston‐Salem North Carolina 27157 USA

4. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Medical Center Blvd Winston‐Salem North Carolina 27157 USA

5. Department of Biostatistics and Data Science Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Medical Center Blvd Winston‐Salem North Carolina 27157 USA

6. Department of Health and Exercise Science Wake Forest University 1834 Wake Forest Rd Winston‐Salem North Carolina 27106 USA

7. Department of Radiology Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Medical Center Blvd Winston‐Salem North Carolina 27157 USA

8. Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, School of Public Health Université de Montréal P.O. Box 6128, Downtown Station Montréal H3C 3J5 Canada

9. Health Innovation and Evaluation Hub, Centre de recherche du CHUM 850 rue Saint‐Denis, S01‐118 Montreal H2X 0A9 Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackground"Craving" is a central concept in alcohol research, but the semantic interpretation of craving as a concept varies. Multiple studies that have investigated differences in operational definitions of craving have demonstrated a lack of agreement among them. This study investigated whether moderate to heavy drinkers would rate craving and “desire” for alcohol similarly and explored potential neurobiological differences underpinning feelings of craving and desire.MethodsThirty‐nine individuals who consumed an average of at least 7 drinks/week for females and 14 drinks/week for males were studied across 3‐day periods of their typical alcohol consumption and imposed abstinence. Ratings of desire and craving for alcohol were collected approximately every three hours during waking periods across the two experimental periods (n = 35, 17 males). At the end of each period, participants underwent functional MRI scanning during neutral and alcohol image viewing (n = 39, 17 males) followed by ratings of desire and craving for alcohol (n = 32, 16 males). Survey responses were analyzed using 2‐level nested hierarchical modeling, image ratings were compared using a hierarchical mixed‐effects regression, and brain networks constructed from fMRI data were assessed with a two‐part mixed‐effect regression (α = 0.05 in all analyses).ResultsRatings of desire and craving differed significantly from one another in the survey data and in the ratings collected during image viewing. The strength of the desire experience was higher overall than craving, but the fluctuations over time were similar. Results for desire and craving differed on brain network attributes associated with distributed processing and those regional specific within the default mode network. Significant associations were found between ratings of desire and connection strength and between ratings of craving and connection probability.ConclusionsThese results demonstrate that the difference between ratings of craving for alcohol and desire for alcohol is not trivial. The different ratings and their association with alcohol consumption or abstinence experiences may have significant biological and clinical implications.

Funder

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

Publisher

Wiley

Reference62 articles.

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