Peripheral and Central Iron Measures in Alcohol Use Disorder and Aging: A Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Pilot Study.

TitlePeripheral and Central Iron Measures in Alcohol Use Disorder and Aging: A Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Pilot Study.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsAdams AR, Li X, Byanyima JI, Vesslee SA, Nguyen TD, Wang Y, Moon B, Pond T, Kranzler HR, Witschey WR, Shi Z, Wiers CE
JournalInt J Mol Sci
Volume24
Issue5
Date Published2023 Feb 24
ISSN1422-0067
KeywordsAging, Alcoholism, Brain Mapping, Humans, Iron, Pilot Projects
Abstract

Chronic excessive alcohol use has neurotoxic effects, which may contribute to cognitive decline and the risk of early-onset dementia. Elevated peripheral iron levels have been reported in individuals with alcohol use disorder (AUD), but its association with brain iron loading has not been explored. We evaluated whether (1) serum and brain iron loading are higher in individuals with AUD than non-dependent healthy controls and (2) serum and brain iron loading increase with age. A fasting serum iron panel was obtained and a magnetic resonance imaging scan with quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) was used to quantify brain iron concentrations. Although serum ferritin levels were higher in the AUD group than in controls, whole-brain iron susceptibility did not differ between groups. Voxel-wise QSM analyses revealed higher susceptibility in a cluster in the left globus pallidus in individuals with AUD than controls. Whole-brain iron increased with age and voxel-wise QSM indicated higher susceptibility with age in various brain areas including the basal ganglia. This is the first study to analyze both serum and brain iron loading in individuals with AUD. Larger studies are needed to examine the effects of alcohol use on iron loading and its associations with alcohol use severity, structural and functional brain changes, and alcohol-induced cognitive impairments.

DOI10.3390/ijms24054461
Alternate JournalInt J Mol Sci
PubMed ID36901892
PubMed Central IDPMC10002495
Grant ListK01 DA051709 / DA / NIDA NIH HHS / United States
AA026892 / NH / NIH HHS / United States
Related Institute: 
MRI Research Institute (MRIRI)

Weill Cornell Medicine
Department of Radiology
525 East 68th Street New York, NY 10065