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Disruptions in Functional Network Connectivity During Alcohol Intoxicated Driving
Authors:Catherine I. Rzepecki‐Smith  Shashwath A. Meda  Vince D. Calhoun  Michael C. Stevens  Madiha J. Jafri  Robert S. Astur  Godfrey D. Pearlson
Affiliation:1. From the Olin Neuropsychiatry Research Center (CIRS, SAM, VDC, MCS, MJJ, RSA, GDP), Institute of Living/Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Connecticut;2. Department of Psychiatry (VDC, MCS, RSA, GDP), Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut;3. The Mind Research Network (VDC), Albuquerque, New Mexico;4. and Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (VDC), University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Abstract:Background: Driving while under the influence of alcohol is a major public health problem whose neural basis is not well understood. In a recently published functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study ( Meda et al., 2009 ), our group identified 5, independent critical driving‐associated brain circuits whose inter‐regional connectivity was disrupted by alcohol intoxication. However, the functional connectivity between these circuits has not yet been explored in order to determine how these networks communicate with each other during sober and alcohol‐intoxicated states. Methods: In the current study, we explored such differences in connections between the above brain circuits and driving behavior, under the influence of alcohol versus placebo. Forty social drinkers who drove regularly underwent fMRI scans during virtual reality driving simulations following 2 alcohol doses, placebo and an individualized dose producing blood alcohol concentrations (BACs) of 0.10%. Results: At the active dose, we found specific disruptions of functional network connectivity between the frontal‐temporal‐basal ganglia and the cerebellar circuits. The temporal connectivity between these 2 circuits was found to be less correlated (p < 0.05) when driving under the influence of alcohol. This disconnection was also associated with an abnormal driving behavior (unstable motor vehicle steering). Conclusions: Connections between frontal‐temporal‐basal ganglia and cerebellum have recently been explored; these may be responsible in part for maintaining normal motor behavior by integrating their overlapping motor control functions. These connections appear to be disrupted by alcohol intoxication, in turn associated with an explicit type of impaired driving behavior.
Keywords:Motor  Fronto‐Striatal  Virtual Reality  Driving While Intoxicated  Cerebellum
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