Time Since Last Drink is Positively Associated with Heart Rate Variability in Outpatients with Alcohol Use Disorder: Further Evidence of Psychophysiological Recovery in Early Alcohol Use Disorder Recovery

IF 2.2 3区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback Pub Date : 2023-07-12 DOI:10.1007/s10484-023-09597-z
David Eddie, Agata Pietrzak, Jason Ham
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Abstract

Heart rate variability (HRV) is a biomarker of psychological and physiological health with greater variability reflecting greater psychophysiological regulatory capacity. The damaging effects of chronic, heavy alcohol use on HRV have been well explored, with greater alcohol use associated with lower resting HRV. In this study we sought to replicate and extend our previous finding that HRV improves as individuals with alcohol use disorder (AUD) reduce or stop drinking and engage in treatment. With a sample of treatment engaged adults in the first year of a current AUD recovery attempt (N = 42), we used general linear models to explore associations between indices of HRV (dependent variables) and time since last alcoholic drink at study baseline assessed using timeline follow-back (independent variable), with checks for effects of age, medication, and baseline AUD severity. As predicted, HRV increased as a function of time since last drink, however, contrary to hypotheses, HR did not decrease. Effect sizes were largest for HRV indices fully under parasympathetic control, and these significant associations remained after controlling for age, medications, and AUD severity. Because HRV is an indicant of psychophysiological health, as well as self-regulatory capacity that may portend subsequent relapse risk, assessing HRV in individuals entering AUD treatment could provide important information about patient risk. At-risk patients may do well with additional support and may especially benefit from interventions like Heart Rate Variability Biofeedback that exercise the psychophysiological systems regulating brain/cardiovascular communication.

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自上次饮酒以来的时间与酒精使用障碍门诊患者的心率变异性呈正相关:早期酒精使用障碍恢复中心理生理恢复的进一步证据。
心率变异性(HRV)是心理和生理健康的生物标志物,具有更大的变异性,反映了更大的心理生理调节能力。长期大量饮酒对HRV的破坏性影响已经得到了很好的探讨,大量饮酒与较低的静息HRV相关。在这项研究中,我们试图复制和扩展我们之前的发现,即随着酒精使用障碍(AUD)患者减少或停止饮酒并接受治疗,HRV会有所改善。在当前AUD恢复尝试的第一年,接受治疗的成年人样本(N = 42),我们使用一般线性模型来探索HRV指数(因变量)与研究基线最后一次饮酒后的时间之间的相关性,使用时间线随访(自变量)进行评估,并检查年龄、药物和基线AUD严重程度的影响。正如预测的那样,自上次饮酒以来,HRV随着时间的推移而增加,然而,与假设相反,HR并没有降低。完全在副交感神经控制下,HRV指数的影响大小最大,在控制年龄、药物和AUD严重程度后,这些显著相关性仍然存在。由于HRV是心理生理健康的指标,以及可能预示随后复发风险的自我调节能力,评估接受AUD治疗的个体的HRV可以提供有关患者风险的重要信息。高危患者在额外的支持下可能表现良好,尤其可能受益于心率变异性生物反馈等干预措施,这些干预措施可以锻炼调节大脑/心血管交流的心理生理系统。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
13.30%
发文量
36
期刊介绍: Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback is an international, interdisciplinary journal devoted to study of the interrelationship of physiological systems, cognition, social and environmental parameters, and health. Priority is given to original research, basic and applied, which contributes to the theory, practice, and evaluation of applied psychophysiology and biofeedback. Submissions are also welcomed for consideration in several additional sections that appear in the journal. They consist of conceptual and theoretical articles; evaluative reviews; the Clinical Forum, which includes separate categories for innovative case studies, clinical replication series, extended treatment protocols, and clinical notes and observations; the Discussion Forum, which includes a series of papers centered around a topic of importance to the field; Innovations in Instrumentation; Letters to the Editor, commenting on issues raised in articles previously published in the journal; and select book reviews. Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback is the official publication of the Association for Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback.
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