Accelerated Aging of the Amygdala in Alcohol Use Disorders: Relevance to the Dark Side of Addiction

Author:

Tomasi Dardo1,Wiers Corinde E1,Manza Peter1,Shokri-Kojori Ehsan1,Michele-Vera Yonga1,Zhang Rui1,Kroll Danielle1,Feldman Dana1,McPherson Katherine1,Biesecker Catherine1,Schwandt Melanie1,Diazgranados Nancy1,Koob George F2,Wang Gene-Jack1,Volkow Nora D1

Affiliation:

1. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA

2. National Institute on Drug Abuse, Bethesda, MD 21224, USA

Abstract

Abstract Here we assessed changes in subcortical volumes in alcohol use disorder (AUD). A simple morphometry-based classifier (MC) was developed to identify subcortical volumes that distinguished 32 healthy controls (HCs) from 33 AUD patients, who were scanned twice, during early and later withdrawal, to assess the effect of abstinence on MC-features (Discovery cohort). We validated the novel classifier in an independent Validation cohort (19 AUD patients and 20 HCs). MC-accuracy reached 80% (Discovery) and 72% (Validation). MC features included the hippocampus, amygdala, cerebellum, putamen, corpus callosum, and brain stem, which were smaller and showed stronger age-related decreases in AUD than HCs, and the ventricles and cerebrospinal fluid, which were larger in AUD and older participants. The volume of the amygdala showed a positive association with anxiety and negative urgency in AUD. Repeated imaging during the third week of detoxification revealed slightly larger subcortical volumes in AUD patients, consistent with partial recovery during abstinence. The steeper age-associated volumetric reductions in stress- and reward-related subcortical regions in AUD are consistent with accelerated aging, whereas the amygdalar associations with negative urgency and anxiety in AUD patients support its involvement in the “dark side of addiction”.

Funder

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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