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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 1, 2009
Contact: Donna Krupa
Office: (301) 634-7253
commoff@the-aps.org
How Alcohol Blunts The Ability Of Hamsters
To ‘Rise And Shine’
Study helps understand how alcohol consumption disrupts circadian rhythm
in humans
BETHESDA,
Md. (September 1, 2009) — Chronic alcohol consumption blunts the
biological clock’s ability to synchronize daily activities to light,
disrupts natural activity patterns and continues to affect the body’s clock
(circadian rhythm), even days after the drinking ends, according to a new
study with hamsters.
The study describes the changes that drinking can
produce on the body’s master clock and how it affects behavior. The research
provides a way to study human alcoholism using an animal model, said
researcher Christina L. Ruby.
The study “Chronic ethanol attenuates circadian photic
phase resetting and alters nocturnal activity patterns in the hamster”
appears in the American Journal of Physiology – Regulatory, Integrative
and Comparative Physiology. Christina L. Ruby, Allison J. Brager, Marc
A. DePaul, and J. David Glass, all of Kent State University, and Rebecca A.
Prosser of the University of Tennessee, conducted the study. The American
Physiological Society published the research.
Batteries not included
Alcohol consumption affects the master clock, located
in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) section of the brain. This clock
controls the circadian cycle, a roughly 24-hour cycle, which regulates
sleeping and waking, as well as the timing of a variety of other
physiological functions, such as hormonal secretions, appetite, digestion,
activity levels and body temperature. The SCN synchronizes physiological
functions so that they occur at the proper times and keeps these functions
synchronized with daylight. Disruption of the clock dramatically increases
the risks of developing cancer, heart disease, and depression, among other
health problems.
The researchers used hamsters to find out how alcohol
affects circadian rhythms. Although hamsters are nocturnal, light
synchronizes their clocks, just as with humans. The animals were divided
into three groups, differing only on what they drank. The control group
received water only. A second group received water containing 10% alcohol
and the third group received water containing 20% alcohol. Hamsters, when
given a choice, prefer alcohol, which they metabolize quickly.
The animals drank as much as they wanted and lived in
an environment that provided 14 hours of light and 10 hours of darkness each
day.
Sleeping in
The researchers recorded the activity levels of the
three groups throughout the day. Late in the dark cycle, about three hours
before the nocturnal animals would normally be settling in to sleep, the
researchers put on a low-level light for 30 minutes. The light was similar
to the dim light of dawn. At another time, the groups received a brighter
light, akin to the light in an office building. Hamsters exposed to the
light late in their active cycle will normally settle down to sleep at the
same time, but will wake up earlier. In effect, the light pushes their
circadian clock forward.
In addition, the researchers tracked how long it takes
alcohol to travel to the master clock in the brain. They also took regular
readings of subcutaneous alcohol levels, which are akin to blood alcohol
levels. In the final phase of the experiment, the hamsters that received
alcohol were switched to regular water to examine the effects of withdrawal.
The study found that:
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The hamsters that drank alcohol had the hardest time
shifting their rhythms after exposure to the dim light, and the more
alcohol they drank, the harder it was to adjust. Exposure to dim light
caused the water-only hamsters to wake up 72 minutes earlier than they
normally would. The 10% alcohol group woke up 30 minutes earlier and the
20% alcohol group woke up only 18 minutes earlier.
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Exposure to bright light helped the alcohol-consuming
hamsters to wake up sooner, greatly reducing the difference in wake up
times among the groups. The control animals woke up 102 minutes earlier
compared to the 20% alcohol group that woke up 84 minutes earlier.
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Total time spent active during the 24-hour period was the
same for all three groups. However, the hamsters that consumed alcohol
had fewer bouts of activity that lasted longer than the water-consuming
controls. The control group had more bouts of activity over the course
of the day.
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When the hamsters were withdrawn from alcohol for 2-3 days
and then exposed to the same light treatment again, they woke up much
earlier than the animals that had drunk only water. The hamsters that
were withdrawn from alcohol woke up 126 minutes sooner compared to the
water drinking controls, who advanced 66 minutes. This exaggerated
response persisted even up to three days later, when the experiment
ended.
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The hamsters drank the most heavily shortly after the
beginning of the dark cycle, when they would naturally be most active. A
peak in alcohol reached the suprachiasmatic nucleus in the brain 20
minutes later.
Human applications?
The researchers aim to apply the research to people,
who also show circadian disruptions from drinking. Specifically, the study
suggests the following:
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People who drink alcohol, particularly late into the
night, may not respond to important light cues to keep their biological
clocks in synch with daylight over the next 24 hours. Even low levels of
alcohol may impair the response to light cues, said Ruby.
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After the first 24 hours, the circadian cycle continues to
be affected, even without further consumption of alcohol.
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Exposure to bright light in the morning may reduce the
disruption of alcohol to the biological clock.
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Chronic drinking continues to affect the biological clock
even after withdrawal from alcohol. The hamsters withdrawn from alcohol
woke up much earlier in response to
light than they normally would, just like people who are trying to stop
drinking. Getting a person’s circadian rhythm back in line after
quitting may be why staying abstinent is so difficult.
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Chronic drinking may affect activity patterns, making
drinkers less active at times of the day when they should be active and
more active when they should not be, such as late at night.
Editor’s Notes: To arrange an interview with Ms.
Ruby, please contact Donna Krupa (301) 634-7253 or at
commoff@the-aps.org.
To read the full study click
here or cut and past the following link into your web browser:
http://ajpregu.physiology.org/cgi/reprint/297/3/R729?maxtoshow=&HITS=10&hits=10&RESULTFORMAT=&author1=Ruby%2C+C&searchid=1&FIRSTINDEX=0&sortspec=relevance&resourcetype=HWCIT
Physiology
is the study of how molecules, cells, tissues and organs function to create
health or disease. The American Physiological Society (APS) has been an
integral part of this scientific discovery process since it was established
in 1887.
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