Alcohol and brain structure across the lifespan: A systematic review of large-scale neuroimaging studies

酒精与大脑结构在生命周期中的关系:一项大规模神经影像学研究的系统性综述

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Abstract

Alcohol exposure affects brain structure, but the extent to which its effects differ across development remains unclear. Several countries are considering changes to recommended guidelines for alcohol consumption, so high-quality evidence is needed. Many studies have been conducted among small samples, but recent efforts have been made to acquire large samples to characterize alcohol's effects on the brain on a population level. Several large-scale consortia have acquired such samples, but this evidence has not been synthesized across the lifespan. We conducted a systematic review of large-scale neuroimaging studies examining effects of alcohol exposure on brain structure at multiple developmental stages. We included studies with an alcohol-exposed sample of at least N = 100 from the following consortia: ABCD, ENIGMA, NCANDA, IMAGEN, Framingham Offspring Study, HCP and UK BioBank. Twenty-seven studies were included, examining prenatal (N = 1), adolescent (N = 9), low-to-moderate-level adult (N = 11) and heavy adult (N = 7) exposure. Prenatal exposure was associated with greater brain volume at ages 9-10, but contemporaneous alcohol consumption during adolescence and adulthood was associated with smaller volume/thickness. Both low-to-moderate consumption and heavy consumption were characterized by smaller volume and thickness in frontal, temporal and parietal regions, and reductions in insula, cingulate and subcortical structures. Adolescent consumption had similar effects, with less consistent evidence for smaller cingulate, insula and subcortical volume. In sum, prenatal exposure was associated with larger volume, while adolescent and adult alcohol exposure was associated with smaller volume and thickness, suggesting that regional patterns of effects of alcohol are similar in adolescence and adulthood.

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