Abstract

Recovery from alcohol use disorders (AUDs) consists of salutary changes in behavior and affect. While evidence suggests that recovery-related behavioral changes, such as abstinence, emerge in tandem with both neural and affective changes, the precise relationships among these changes are unknown. To understand these relationships, we examined associations between the duration of abstinence (DOA), affective states, and neuroimaging-based structural measures of the brain reward system (BRS) in AUD men (AUDM ) and AUD women (AUDW ). Participants were community respondents from the Boston area comprising right-handed abstinent individuals with AUD (n=60; 30men) and controls without AUD (NC; n=60; 29men). Multivariate linear regressions compared short-/mid-term abstainers (≤5years), long-term abstainers (>5years), and the NC group on measures of BRS volume (3T magnetic resonance imaging scans) and measures of affect (Profile of Mood States [POMS]; Multiple Affect Adjective Check List [MAACL]; Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression [HRSD]). Analyses contrasted sex differences and accounted for age, education, drinking severity, and verbal IQ. Compared to the NC group, short-/mid-term abstainers exhibited larger posterior insular volume (total (β=0.019, 95% CI: 0.004, 0.034)), higher negative affect (POMS Mood Disturbance (β=27.8, 95% CI: 11.56, 44.04), and lower positive affect (POMS Vigor (β=-4.89, 95% CI: -9.06, -0.72)). Compared to the NC group, Long-term abstainers exhibited significantly smaller volumes of aggregate anterior cingulate cortex (β=-0.06, 95% CI: -0.113, -0.008) and higher HRSD scores (β=1.56, 95% CI: 0.14, 2.98). Relative to AUDM , AUDW exhibited significantly larger right anterior insular volumes (β=0.03, 95% CI: 0.01, 0.06) and significantly greater MAACL Positive Affect scores (β=7.56, 95% CI: 0.59, 11.55) in association with DOA. We found that differences in abstinence from alcohol were correlated with differences in both neural recovery and affective dimensions of recovery from AUDs. The observed sex differences extend evidence of dimorphic effects of AUDs and recovery on brain structure and function. Future longitudinal research will test inferences concerning the directionality of these relationships.

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