Publications by authors named "Meredith E Halcomb"

Cigarette smoking is associated with elevated risk of disease and mortality and contributes to heavy healthcare-related economic burdens. The nucleus accumbens is implicated in numerous reward-related behaviors, including reinforcement learning and incentive salience. The established functional connectivity of the accumbens includes regions associated with motivation, valuation, and affective processing.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study investigates how both short-term (acute) and long-term (chronic) alcohol exposure affects the structure of neurons in the brain, specifically looking at neurite density.
  • Using advanced imaging techniques, including neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging (NODDI), researchers compared effects in healthy social drinkers versus individuals with alcohol use disorder.
  • The findings reveal significant differences in various parameters related to white matter in the brain, particularly in the corpus callosum, suggesting that even short-term alcohol infusion can alter brain properties that were previously thought to be unaffected by immediate changes in substance intake.
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An emergent literature suggests that resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rsfMRI) functional connectivity (FC) patterns are aberrant in alcohol use disorder (AUD) populations. The salience network (SAL) is an established set of brain regions prominent in salience attribution and valuation, and includes the anterior insular cortex (AIC). The SAL is thought to play a role in AUD through directing increased attention to interoceptive cues of intoxication.

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Background: Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) has been widely used to investigate the integrity of white matter (WM; indexed by fractional anisotropy [FA]) in alcohol dependence and cigarette smoking. These disorders are highly comorbid, yet cigarette use has often not been adequately controlled in neuroimaging studies of alcohol-dependent populations. In addition, information on WM deficits in currently drinking, nontreatment-seeking (NTS) individuals with alcohol dependence is limited.

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Approximately 30% of current drinkers in the United States drink excessively, and are referred to as problem/hazardous drinkers. These individuals, who may not meet criteria for alcohol abuse or dependence, comprise binge, heavy drinkers, or both. Given their high prevalence, interventions that reduce the risk of binge and heavy drinking have important public health implications.

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