grant

Characterizing individual differences in the reciprocal relationship between sleep deprivation and binge drinking within the context of college life

Organization RUTGERS, THE STATE UNIV OF N.J.Location PISCATAWAY, UNITED STATESPosted 25 Sept 2021Deadline 31 May 2026
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY2025AcuteAffectAlcohol Chemical ClassAlcohol DrinkingAlcohol consumptionAlcohol withdrawal syndromeAlcoholsBehaviorBehavioralBiological MarkersBlood CirculationBloodstreamCardiovascularCardiovascular Body SystemCardiovascular Organ SystemCardiovascular PhysiologyCardiovascular systemChronicConsumptionDataDelta WaveDelta Wave sleepDevelopmentDimensionsDiseaseDisorderDissociationEnsureEnvironmentEtOH drinkingEtOH useEventFast-Wave SleepGrainHabitsHarm MinimizationHarm ReductionHealthHeart VascularHomeInadequate Sleep HygieneIndividualIndividual DifferencesIntoxicationLifeLinkLongitudinal StudiesMapsMeasurableMeasuresMental HealthMental HygieneMental disordersMental health disordersParadoxical SleepParentsParticipantPatient Self-ReportPatternPersonsPhysiologicPhysiologicalPhysiologyPlayPolysomnographyProceduresProtocolProtocols documentationPsychiatric DiseasePsychiatric DisorderPsychological HealthPublic HealthREM SleepRecoveryReportingResearchRhombencephalic SleepRiskRisk FactorsRoleSalivaSelf-ReportSleepSleep ArchitectureSleep DeprivationSleep FragmentationsSleep MonitoringSleep disturbancesSlow-Wave SleepSomnographyStressTest ResultTestingTimeaberrant sleepactigraphactigraphyaddictionaddictive disorderadult youthalcohol consequencesalcohol effectalcohol ingestionalcohol intakealcohol misusealcohol product usealcohol related consequencesalcohol related researchalcohol researchalcohol responsealcohol riskalcohol risk reductionalcohol testingalcohol usealcohol use disorderalcohol withdrawalalcoholic beverage consumptionalcoholic drink intakebehavior influencebehavioral influencebinge alcohol consumptionbinge drinkingbio-markersbiologic markerbiomarkerbiomarker identificationcardiovascular functioncirculatory systemcollegecollege studentcollegiatedeficient sleepdesigndesigningdevelopmentaldiariesdisrupted sleepdisturbed sleepdreaming sleepdrinkingepisodic drinkingethanol consumptionethanol drinkingethanol effectethanol ingestionethanol intakeethanol misuseethanol product useethanol researchethanol responseethanol testingethanol useethanol use disorderethanol withdrawalhomesidentification of biomarkersidentification of new biomarkersimpaired sleepimprovedimprovement on sleepinadequate sleepindexingindividual heterogeneityindividual variabilityindividual variationinnovateinnovationinnovativeinsufficient sleepirregular sleeplong-term studylongitudinal outcome studiesmaladaptive behaviormarker identificationmental illnessparentphysical conditioningphysical healthpoor sleeppoor sleep hygienepsychiatric illnesspsychologicpsychologicalpsychological disorderquality of sleeprapid eye movementrapid eye movement sleeprecruitrelapse riskresponseresponse to alcoholresponse to ethanolsecondary analysissleep amountsleep behaviorsleep debtsleep deficiencysleep deficitsleep disruptionsleep durationsleep dysregulationsleep episodesleep habitsleep improvementsleep insufficiencysleep intervalsleep lengthsleep losssleep measurementsleep patternsleep periodsleep physiologysleep polysomnographysleep qualitysleep quantitysleep routinesleep schedulesleep timesleep/wake behaviorsleep/wake disruptionsleep/wake disturbancesleep/wake patternssocial rolestemtime asleeptime during sleeptime in sleeptime spent asleeptime spent sleepingunhealthy alcohol useuniversity studentwearablewearable devicewearable electronicswearable systemwearable technologywearable toolwearableswithdrawal from alcoholyoung adultyoung adult ageyoung adulthood
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Full Description

Abstract
There is strong evidence that maladaptive behaviors, including poor sleep hygiene and binge drinking, emerge

in the college environment. When repeated in cycles, risk of habit development increases. This may contribute

to the development of addiction, psychiatric illness, and physical disease. Both chronic sleep deprivation and

frequent excessive alcohol use disrupt behavioral and physiological functioning, and their relationship appears

reciprocal. Research on individual differences in the alcohol-sleep relationship is largely unexplored, but may

identify putative biomarkers for immediate and long-term risks of alcohol misuse. This proposal's public health

significance stems from its potential to reduce immediate alcohol-related harms in college students and

develop scientific premise for improving the lives of individuals with sleep and alcohol use disorders. Proposed

studies build from an ongoing longitudinal study of college students (R01 AA027017), using its participants,

weekly drinking data, and physiological protocols. It maps the sleep-alcohol relationship onto individual

drinking bouts. It pairs self-reported sleep quality with objective measures of sleep behavior (actigraphy) and

physiology (polysomnography) that are collected before, during, and after a drinking bout. Sleep is

operationalized as a multidimensional and dynamic behavior that is measurable within and across discrete

episodes. Self-reported alcohol use and consequences are paired with a cardiovascular reactivity test that

objectively assesses proximal physiological repercussions of drinking. Study 1 (n= 150) is a one-week

actigraphy study of sleep duration, timing, and fragmentation. Aim 1 focuses on sleep behaviors preceding a

drinking event (i.e., pre-intoxication) and assesses how cumulative sleep debt and sleep irregularity influence

individual differences in the immediate consequences of drinking measured from self-report and cardiovascular

reactivity. Aim 2 targets sleep on the night of a drinking event (i.e., during intoxication) and assesses individual

differences in acute alcohol effects on sleep quantity and quality, as well as associations with alcohol use

behaviors across the subsequent week and over 2-years. Study 2 (n=25) involves at-home, overnight

polysomnography sessions on a night following a drinking night and on a night that does not follow drinking to

assess sleep architecture (e.g., time spent in rapid eye movement (REM) and slow-wave sleep) changes. Aim

3 explores how sleep is altered during recovery (i.e., post-intoxication) from drinking and if individual

differences in sleep physiology relate to sleep behavior and cardiovascular physiology. This application

innovates through its use of multi-level assessments of sleep and alcohol use; concurrently collecting objective

data may help dissociate contextual influences on self-report. It also innovates with a multi-PI design that

ensures primary expertise in both the alcohol and sleep fields. Added value for the proposed studies comes

from the resulting intensive, day-level, longitudinal data that has the potential to generate secondary analyses

focused on event-level data of within-subject alcohol-sleep relationships across time.

Grant Number: 5R01AA028286-05
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Jennifer Buckman

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