Sleep-Related Predictors of Risk for Alcohol Use and Related Problems in Adolescents and Young Adults.

Q1 Psychology
Alcohol research : current reviews Pub Date : 2024-03-14 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.35946/arcr.v44.1.02
Brant P Hasler, Christina T Schulz, Sarah L Pedersen
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose: Growing evidence supports sleep and circadian rhythms as influencing alcohol use and the course of alcohol use disorder (AUD). Studying sleep/circadian-alcohol associations during adolescence and young adulthood may be valuable for identifying sleep/circadian-related approaches to preventing and/or treating AUD. This paper reviews current evidence for prospective associations between sleep/circadian factors and alcohol involvement during adolescence and young adulthood with an emphasis on the effects of sleep/circadian factors on alcohol use.

Search methods: The authors conducted a literature search in PsycInfo, PubMed, and Web of Science using the search terms "sleep" and "alcohol" paired with "adolescent" or "adolescence" or "young adult" or "emerging adult," focusing on the title/abstract fields, and restricting to English-language articles. Next, the search was narrowed to articles with a prospective/longitudinal or experimental design, a sleep-related measure as a predictor, an alcohol-related measure as an outcome, and confirming a primarily adolescent and/or young adult sample. This step was completed by a joint review of candidate article abstracts by two of the authors.

Search results: The initial search resulted in 720 articles. After review of the abstracts, the list was narrowed to 27 articles reporting on observational longitudinal studies and three articles reporting on intervention trials. Noted for potential inclusion were 35 additional articles that reported on studies with alcohol-related predictors and sleep-related outcomes, and/or reported on candidate moderators or mediators of sleep-alcohol associations. Additional articles were identified via review of relevant article reference lists and prior exposure based on the authors' previous work in this area.

Discussion and conclusions: Overall, the review supports a range of sleep/circadian characteristics during adolescence and young adulthood predicting the development of alcohol use and/or alcohol-related problems. Although sleep treatment studies in adolescents and young adults engaging in regular and/or heavy drinking show that sleep can be improved in those individuals, as well as potentially reducing alcohol craving and alcohol-related consequences, no studies in any age group have yet demonstrated that improving sleep reduces drinking behavior. Notable limitations include relatively few longitudinal studies and only two experimental studies, insufficient consideration of different assessment timescales (e.g., day-to-day vs. years), insufficient consideration of the multidimensional nature of sleep, a paucity of objective measures of sleep and circadian rhythms, and insufficient consideration of how demographic variables may influence sleep/circadian-alcohol associations. Examining such moderators, particularly those related to minoritized identities, as well as further investigation of putative mechanistic pathways linking sleep/circadian characteristics to alcohol outcomes, are important next steps.

青少年酗酒及相关问题风险的睡眠相关预测因素。
目的:越来越多的证据表明,睡眠和昼夜节律会影响酒精的使用和酒精使用障碍(AUD)的病程。研究青春期和青年期的睡眠/昼夜节律与酒精的关系可能对确定预防和/或治疗 AUD 的睡眠/昼夜节律相关方法很有价值。本文回顾了目前关于青春期和青年期睡眠/昼夜节律因素与酗酒之间的前瞻性关联的证据,重点关注睡眠/昼夜节律因素对酗酒的影响:作者使用 "睡眠 "和 "酒精 "以及 "青少年 "或 "青春期 "或 "年轻成人 "或 "新兴成人 "等检索词在 PsycInfo、PubMed 和 Web of Science 中进行了文献检索,重点关注标题/摘要字段,并仅限于英文文章。接下来,搜索范围缩小到前瞻性/纵向或实验性设计、以睡眠相关指标作为预测因素、以酒精相关指标作为结果、并确认主要是青少年和/或年轻成人样本的文章。这一步骤由两位作者对候选文章的摘要进行联合审查后完成:初步搜索结果为 720 篇文章。在对摘要进行审核后,名单缩小到 27 篇报告观察性纵向研究的文章和 3 篇报告干预试验的文章。另有 35 篇文章报告了与酒精相关的预测因素和与睡眠相关的结果,和/或报告了睡眠与酒精关联的候选调节因子或中介因子,这些文章被认为可能被纳入研究。其他文章是通过审查相关文章的参考文献目录以及作者之前在该领域的工作而确定的:总体而言,综述支持青少年时期的一系列睡眠/昼夜节律特征可预测酒精使用和/或酒精相关问题的发展。尽管对经常饮酒和/或大量饮酒的青少年和年轻成人进行的睡眠治疗研究表明,这些人的睡眠状况可以得到改善,并有可能减少对酒精的渴求和与酒精相关的后果,但目前还没有针对任何年龄组的研究表明,改善睡眠可以减少饮酒行为。值得注意的局限性包括:纵向研究相对较少,仅有两项实验研究;未充分考虑不同的评估时间尺度(如每日与数年);未充分考虑睡眠的多维性;缺乏睡眠和昼夜节律的客观测量指标;未充分考虑人口统计学变量如何影响睡眠/昼夜节律与酒精的关联。研究这些调节因素,特别是与少数群体身份有关的调节因素,以及进一步调查睡眠/昼夜节律特征与酒精结果之间的潜在机制途径,是下一步的重要工作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Alcohol research : current reviews
Alcohol research : current reviews Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
18.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
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