RecruitingPhase 1Drug trial
Nicotinic Receptor Genetic Variation and Alcohol Reward
Background:
People with the brain disease AUD (alcohol use disorder) have a serious problem with drinking. Researchers want to study how different people react to alcohol, and how genes affect this. They will focus on a nicotine receptor gene that may increase a person s AUD risk.
Objectives:
To see if people with variations of a nicotine receptor gene take alcohol differently and have different brain responses to alcohol cues.
Eligibility:
Healthy adults ages 21 - 60. This study includes smokers and non-smokers.
Design:
Participation will be based on evaluation under the NIAAA natural history protocol (14-AA-0181) or a screening visit under this protocol.
Participants will have two 9-hour visits. They must have no alcohol or non-prescription drugs before all visits and no food or drink before the first visit.
At every visit, participants will:
* Get a light meal
* Have breath and urine tests
* Get taxi rides there and back
At visits 1, participants will:
* Have a thin plastic tube inserted in an arm and connected to a pump for alcohol infusion.
* Have sensors on their chest to monitor heart rate.
* Sit in a chair for 2.5 hours and get alcohol by pushing a button. Their breath alcohol level will be monitored.
* Answer questions about mood and effects of alcohol
* Give blood samples
* Relax at the clinic while their breath alcohol level drops
At visit 2, participants will:
* Answer questions and do computer tests
* Have an alcoholic drink and a snack
* Have a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan. They will lie in a machine that takes pictures of the brain. They will do computer tasks.
* Have another drink and snack
* Relax until their alcohol level drops
Participants will have a follow-up call after each visit.