Sex differences in heart rate variability measures that predict alcohol drinking in rats

Problem alcohol drinking continues to be a substantial cost and burden. In addition, alcohol consumption in women has increased in recent decades, and women can have greater alcohol problems and comorbidities. Thus, there is a significant need for novel therapeutics to enhance sex‐specific, individu...

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Published inAddiction biology Vol. 29; no. 3; pp. e13387 - n/a
Main Authors Frasier, Raizel M., Starski, Phillip A., Oliveira Sergio, Thatiane, Grippo, Angela J., Hopf, F. Woodward
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.03.2024
John Wiley and Sons Inc
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Summary:Problem alcohol drinking continues to be a substantial cost and burden. In addition, alcohol consumption in women has increased in recent decades, and women can have greater alcohol problems and comorbidities. Thus, there is a significant need for novel therapeutics to enhance sex‐specific, individualized treatment. Heart rate (HR) and HR variability (HRV) are of broad interest because they may be both biomarkers for and drivers of pathological states. HRV reflects the dynamic balance between sympathetic (SNS, ‘fight or flight’) and parasympathetic (PNS, ‘rest and digest’) systems. Evidence from human studies suggest PNS predominance in women and SNS in men during autonomic regulation, indicating the possibility of sex differences in risk factors and physiological drivers of problem drinking. To better understand the association between HRV sex differences and alcohol drinking, we examined whether alcohol consumption levels correlated with time domain HRV measures (SDNN and rMSSD) at baseline, at alcohol drinking onset, and across 10 min of drinking, in adult female and male Wistar rats. In particular, we compared both HRV and HR measures under alcohol‐only and compulsion‐like conditions (alcohol + 10 mg/L quinine), because compulsion can often be a significant barrier to treatment of alcohol misuse. Importantly, previous work supports the possibility that different HRV measures could be interpreted to reflect PNS versus SNS influences. Here, we show that females with higher putative PNS indicators at baseline and at drinking onset had greater alcohol consumption. In contrast, male intake levels related to increased potential SNS measures at drinking onset. Once alcohol was consumed, HR predicted intake level in females, perhaps a pharmacological effect of alcohol. However, HRV changes were greater during compulsion‐like intake versus alcohol‐only, suggesting HRV changes (reduced SNS in females, reduced PNS and increased HR in males) specifically related to aversion‐resistant intake. We find novel and likely clinically relevant autonomic differences associated with biological sex and alcohol drinking, suggesting that different autonomic mechanisms may promote differing aspects of female and male alcohol consumption. Problem alcohol drinking presents enormous and ever‐increasing challenges, and women can develop stronger addictions. Measuring changes in heart rate patterns could give novel insight and translationally‐useful biomarkers for sex‐specific drivers of behavior. Female rat drinking related more to parasympathetic indicators, with male intake more with sympathetic, and, importantly, basal autonomic state predicted drinking in females but not males. Similar sex differences in parasympathetic versus sympathetic are in several human studies, suggesting important sex‐selective arousal regulation mechanisms, including drivers of alcohol.
Bibliography:Funding information
This study is supported by NIAAA AA030710 to FWH.
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Funding informationThis study is supported by NIAAA AA030710 to FWH.
ISSN:1355-6215
1369-1600
1369-1600
DOI:10.1111/adb.13387