Title
Acute alcohol intoxication decreases glucose metabolism but increases acetate uptake in the human brain.
Abstract
Alcohol intoxication results in marked reductions in brain glucose metabolism, which we hypothesized reflect not just its GABAergic enhancing effects but also the metabolism of acetate as an alternative brain energy source. To test this hypothesis we separately assessed the effects of alcohol intoxication on brain glucose and acetate metabolism using Positron Emission Tomography (PET). We found that alcohol intoxication significantly decreased whole brain glucose metabolism (measured with FDG) with the largest decrements in cerebellum and occipital cortex and the smallest in the thalamus. In contrast, alcohol intoxication caused a significant increase in [1-11C]acetate brain uptake (measured as standard uptake value, SUV), with the largest increases occurring in the cerebellum and the smallest in the thalamus. In heavy alcohol drinkers [1-11C]acetate brain uptake during alcohol challenge tended to be higher than in occasional drinkers (p<0.06) and the increases in [1-11C]acetate uptake in cerebellum with alcohol were positively associated with the reported amount of alcohol consumed (r=0.66, p<0.01). Our findings corroborate a reduction of brain glucose metabolism during intoxication and document an increase in brain acetate uptake. The opposite changes observed between regional brain metabolic decrements and regional increases in [1-11C]acetate uptake support the hypothesis that during alcohol intoxication the brain may rely on acetate as an alternative brain energy source and provides preliminary evidence that heavy alcohol exposures may facilitate the use of acetate as an energy substrate. These findings raise the question of the potential therapeutic benefits that increasing plasma acetate concentration (i.e. ketogenic diets) may have in alcoholics undergoing alcohol detoxification.
Year
DOI
Venue
2013
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2012.08.057
NeuroImage
Keywords
Field
DocType
Glia,PET,FDG,Alcoholism,Withdrawal,Acetate
Internal medicine,Ethanol,Alcohol intoxication,Psychology,Human brain,Alcohol detoxification,Metabolism,Alcohol,Energy source,Endocrinology,Carbohydrate metabolism
Journal
Volume
ISSN
Citations 
64
1053-8119
2
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.42
1
12
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Nora D Volkow16711.55
Sung Won Kim249173.56
Gene-Jack Wang34410.04
David L. Alexoff420.42
Jean Logan5245.52
Lisa Muench620.76
Colleen Shea720.76
Frank Telang8224.24
Joanna S. Fowler9387.50
Christopher Wong10276.26
Helene Benveniste11143.64
Dardo Tomasi12728.74