Neurobiological Effects of Binge Drinking Help in Its Detection and Differential Diagnosis from Alcohol Dependence

المؤلفون المشاركون

Konarzewska, Beata
Kułak-Bejda, Agnieszka
Waszkiewicz, Napoleon
Galińska-Skok, Beata
Nestsiarovich, Anastasiya
Wilczyńska, Karolina
Simonienko, Katarzyna
Kwiatkowski, Mikołaj

المصدر

Disease Markers

العدد

المجلد 2018، العدد 2018 (31 ديسمبر/كانون الأول 2018)، ص ص. 1-9، 9ص.

الناشر

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

تاريخ النشر

2018-07-04

دولة النشر

مصر

عدد الصفحات

9

التخصصات الرئيسية

الأمراض

الملخص EN

The prevalence of binge drinking in the general population is 3-4 times higher than that of alcohol dependence.

Neuroimaging studies show that binge drinking in adolescence impairs brain development and white matter integrity.

Regions with reduced functional activity include the limbic system, ventral diencephalon, frontal lobe, and middle and inferior temporal lobes, whereas the right superior frontal and parietal lobes are typically hyperactivated.

The observed activation of the frontoparietal areas might reflect the alternative memory system operating, whereas the reduced occipito-hippocampal response is associated with impaired visual and linguistic processing/learning.

Some other findings from literature research include a decrease of N-acetylaspartate (NAA) in the frontal lobe and its increase in the parietal lobes, as well as the reduced components of event-related potentials, reflecting deficit in attention, working memory, inhibition, and executive functioning.

Animal studies show that even a single day of binge drinking results in a neurodegeneration and reactive gliosis in the limbic cortex as well as in gene expression dysregulation and histone acetylation.

Another biological evidence on binge drinking effect include inflammatory response, oxidative stress, formation of toxic ceramides, activation of caspase 3, and secretion of corticoliberin.

Some of the binge drinking-induced cognitive abnormalities can be reversible after three weeks of abstinence.

Although binge drinkers have a similar pattern of neuropsychological deficits with chronic alcohol consumers (mainly memory deficits), binge drinkers have prominent impairment of inhibitory control, which may be a marker of binge pattern of alcohol drinking.

The optimal therapeutic strategies should target the inhibitory control processes to facilitate discontinuation of alcohol consumption and to block its possible progression to the alcohol dependence syndrome.

نمط استشهاد جمعية علماء النفس الأمريكية (APA)

Waszkiewicz, Napoleon& Galińska-Skok, Beata& Nestsiarovich, Anastasiya& Kułak-Bejda, Agnieszka& Wilczyńska, Karolina& Simonienko, Katarzyna…[et al.]. 2018. Neurobiological Effects of Binge Drinking Help in Its Detection and Differential Diagnosis from Alcohol Dependence. Disease Markers،Vol. 2018, no. 2018, pp.1-9.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1153449

نمط استشهاد الجمعية الأمريكية للغات الحديثة (MLA)

Waszkiewicz, Napoleon…[et al.]. Neurobiological Effects of Binge Drinking Help in Its Detection and Differential Diagnosis from Alcohol Dependence. Disease Markers No. 2018 (2018), pp.1-9.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1153449

نمط استشهاد الجمعية الطبية الأمريكية (AMA)

Waszkiewicz, Napoleon& Galińska-Skok, Beata& Nestsiarovich, Anastasiya& Kułak-Bejda, Agnieszka& Wilczyńska, Karolina& Simonienko, Katarzyna…[et al.]. Neurobiological Effects of Binge Drinking Help in Its Detection and Differential Diagnosis from Alcohol Dependence. Disease Markers. 2018. Vol. 2018, no. 2018, pp.1-9.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1153449

نوع البيانات

مقالات

لغة النص

الإنجليزية

الملاحظات

Includes bibliographical references

رقم السجل

BIM-1153449