PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT
Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a multifaceted, chronic relapsing disorder suffered by millions of men and women
in the United States. AUD is associated with disrupted sleep continuity and architecture, including an abnormally
high level of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep that persists long into abstinence, and which is a significant
predictor of relapse. Emotion deficits, including affective flattening and mesocorticolimbic hypo-responsiveness
to emotional stimuli, are consistent findings in AUD and also predict relapse. Here, we bring these two
components together, building on an emerging literature showing that REM sleep is important for neural emotion
regulation, calibrating emotions to promote next-day adaptive emotional functioning.
We propose that the REM sleep-emotion pathway is dysfunctional in AUD, contributing to the deficits in emotion
regulation in AUD shown by us and others, which lead to increased craving and relapse.
Here, multidisciplinary researchers (Baker, Műller-Oehring) with combined expertise in AUD, sleep, fMRI, and
emotion, aim to investigate the role of REM sleep in next-day emotional functioning in AUD. A novel
counterbalanced, mixed-measures experimental design is applied in abstinent male and female AUD patients
compared to age- and gender-matched healthy controls, all undergoing two experimental night conditions:
uninterrupted sleep and selective REM sleep reduction, each followed by functional neuroimaging with emotion
reactivity and emotion regulation tasks the following morning.
We aim to (1) Determine relationships between REM sleep qualities (duration and intensity) and next-day neural
emotional reactivity in AUD; (2) Determine specific effects of experimental REM sleep reduction on next-day
neural emotional reactivity in AUD compared to healthy controls and compared to an uninterrupted sleep
condition. We will also explore to what extent the sleep-emotion regulation link is adjustable with a REM sleep
reduction protocol towards a more functionally-intact system that contributes to normalization of behavioral
measures of emotion functioning and less alcohol craving in AUD.
These studies open up new avenues into a mechanistic understanding of links between sleep processes and
emotional brain function in AUD. Findings will inform a R01 application aimed at investigating the effects of sleep
manipulation as a pathway to reset neural emotion regulation circuits, fracture the cycle of relapse, and improve
management of AUD.