眼睛有问题:酒精引起的眼动障碍和有或没有酒精使用障碍的老年人的感知障碍。

IF 2.7 Q2 SUBSTANCE ABUSE Alcohol (Hanover, York County, Pa.) Pub Date : 2025-01-29 DOI:10.1111/acer.15509
Nathan Didier, Dingcai Cao, Andrea C. King
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:虽然酒精已被证明会损害年轻人的眼球运动,但对于有较长饮酒史的老年人,酒精引起的动眼肌损伤却知之甚少。在这里,我们研究了患有慢性酒精使用障碍(AUD)的老年人是否比年龄匹配的轻度饮酒者(LD)表现出更强的急性耐受性,这可以通过更少的酒精引起的动眼肌损伤和感知损伤来证明。方法:两次随机、双盲实验,给予酒精(0.8 g/kg)或安慰剂。参与者(n = 117;55例AUD, 62例LD),年龄在40-65岁之间。在基线时测量眼动追踪结果(瞳孔大小、平滑追踪增益、前扫视速度和反扫视速度、潜伏期和准确性),并在呼气酒精间隔达到峰值和下降时重复测量。参与者在上升和下降的时间间隔内对他们感知到的损伤进行评分。结果:饮酒后,老年AUD患者(与LD患者相比)在平滑追求增益上表现出较少的损害,报告的感知损害也较低,但两组在眼跳测量上表现出相似的瞳孔扩张和损害。结论:虽然酒精损害了AUD小于LD的老年人追踪可预测移动物体的能力(即平滑追踪),但两个饮酒组对酒精引起的反应时间延迟、速度降低和对随机出现的物体(即扫视任务)的准确性缺陷同样敏感。因此,尽管有数十年的慢性过度饮酒,老年AUD患者与轻度饮酒者相比,在前扫视眼动和反扫视眼动方面表现出相似的眼动耐受性。考虑到这些人在醉酒时感觉损伤更小,他们在现实生活中饮酒时可能会有受伤和伤害的风险。
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The eyes have it: Alcohol-induced eye movement impairment and perceived impairment in older adults with and without alcohol use disorder

Background

While alcohol has been shown to impair eye movements in young adults, little is known about alcohol-induced oculomotor impairment in older adults with longer histories of alcohol use. Here, we examined whether older adults with chronic alcohol use disorder (AUD) exhibit more acute tolerance than age-matched light drinkers (LD), evidenced by less alcohol-induced oculomotor impairment and perceived impairment.

Method

Two random-order, double-blinded laboratory sessions with administration of alcohol (0.8 g/kg) or placebo. Participants (n = 117; 55 AUD, 62 LD) were 40–65 years of age. Eye tracking outcomes (pupil size, smooth pursuit gain, pro- and anti-saccadic velocity, latency, and accuracy) were measured at baseline and repeated at peak and declining breath alcohol intervals. Participants rated their perceived impairment during rising and declining intervals.

Results

Following alcohol consumption, older adults with AUD (vs. LD) showed less impairment on smooth pursuit gain and reported lower perceived impairment, but both groups showed similar pupil dilation and impairment on saccadic measures.

Conclusions

While alcohol impaired older adults with AUD less than LD in terms of their ability to track a predictably moving object (i.e., smooth pursuit), both drinking groups were equally sensitive to alcohol-induced delays in reaction time, reductions in velocity, and deficits in accuracy to randomly appearing objects (i.e., saccade tasks). Thus, despite decades of chronic excessive drinking, older adults with AUD exhibited similar oculomotor tolerance on pro- and anti-saccade eye movements relative to their light-drinking counterparts. Given that these individuals also perceived less impairment during intoxication, they may be at risk for injury and harm when they engage in real-life drinking bouts.

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