The brains of alcohol-dependent individuals
are affected not only by their own heavy drinking, but
also by genetic or environmental factors associated
with their parents' drinking, according to a new study
by researchers at the National Institute on Alcohol
Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), part of the National Institutes
of Health (NIH).
Researchers found reduced brain growth among alcohol-dependent
individuals with a family history of alcoholism or heavy
drinking compared to those with no such family history.
Their report has been published online in Biological
Psychiatry as an article in press.
"This is interesting new information about how biological
and environmental factors might interact to affect children
of alcoholics," notes George Kunos M.D., Ph.D., Scientific
Director, Division of Intramural Clinical and Biological
Research, NIAAA.
Many studies have shown that alcohol-dependent men
and women have smaller brain volumes than non-alcohol-dependent
individuals. It is widely believed that this is due
to the toxic effects of ethanol, which causes the alcoholic's
brain to shrink with aging to a greater extent than
the non-alcoholic's.
"Our study is the first to demonstrate that brain
size among alcohol-dependent individuals with a family
history of alcoholism is reduced even before the onset
of alcohol dependence," explains first author Jodi
Gilman, B.S., a NIAAA research fellow and Ph.D. candidate
at Brown University working with senior author Daniel
Hommer, M.D., of the NIAAA Laboratory of Clinical and
Translational Studies (LCTS) and co-author James Bjork,
Ph.D., also of the NIAAA/LCTS.
Children of alcoholics are known to have a greater
risk for alcohol dependence than individuals without
a parental history of alcohol dependence. In addition
to inheriting genes that predispose them to alcoholism,
children of alcoholics may experience adverse biological
and psychological effects from poor diets, unstable
parental relationships, and alcohol exposure before
birth, all of which could contribute to their increased
risk for alcoholism.
In a search for direct physical evidence of these assumed
genetic and environmental mediators of family-transmitted
alcoholism, the NIAAA researchers used magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI) techniques to measure the volume of the
cranium -- the part of the skull that encloses the brain
-- in a group of individuals being treated for alcohol
dependence. The intracranial volume (ICV), they note,
is determined by skull growth, which occurs as the brain
expands to its maximum size around puberty. Because
ICV does not change as the brain shrinks with age, it
provides a good estimate of the lifetime maximum volume
of the brain.
The researchers found that the average ICV of adult
alcoholic children of alcoholic parents was about 4
percent smaller than the average ICV of adult alcoholics
without family histories of alcoholism or heavy drinking.
Family history did not affect the frequency, quantity,
or other aspects of drinking behavior of the alcoholics
themselves, suggesting that differences in ICV between
family history positive and negative alcoholics are
not the result of different drinking patterns. The researchers
also found that adult alcoholic children of alcoholic
parents had IQ scores that averaged 5.7 points lower
than IQs of alcohol dependent individuals with no parental
drinking, but that were still within the range of normal
intelligence.
The authors note that a possible implication of their
findings is that the increased risk for alcoholism among
children of alcoholics may be due to a genetic or environmental
effect, or both, related to reduced brain growth.
"Although ICV is known to be influenced primarily
by genetic factors," says Dr. Hommer, "many
studies have found that living in an enriched environment
promotes central nervous system growth and development.
It seems likely that alcoholics, in general, are raised
in less than optimal environments and thus that genetics
and environment both contribute to the smaller ICV observed
in family history positive alcoholics."
The authors report that ICV of women, but not men,
in the study appeared to be affected more by their mothers'
drinking than their fathers', perhaps due to a greater
maternal influence on a child's nutritional, social,
and intellectual environment. None of the participants
in the study were diagnosed with fetal alcohol syndrome
(FAS).
"It is possible that some participants might have
experienced subtle fetal alcohol effects," notes
Dr. Hommer. "However, there were no differences
between the effects of maternal and paternal drinking
on ICV of men in our study. Thus, fetal alcohol effects
do not appear to account for the reduced ICV we saw
in men with a positive family history for drinking.
Future studies should determine more precisely how parental
drinking affects brain size among children of alcoholics
and whether smaller ICV is a more specific risk factor
for the development of alcohol dependence than family
history."
The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism,
part of the National Institutes of Health, is the primary
U.S. agency for conducting and supporting research on
the causes, consequences, prevention, and treatment
of alcohol abuse, alcoholism, and alcohol problems and
disseminates research findings to general, professional,
and academic audiences. Additional alcohol research
information and publications are available at http://www.niaaa.nih.gov.