Chronic Alcoholics without Wernicke‐Korsakoff Syndrome or Cirrhosis Do Not Lose Serotonergic Neurons in the Dorsal Raphe Nucleus
- 1 February 1996
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Alcohol, Clinical and Experimental Research
- Vol. 20 (1) , 61-66
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1530-0277.1996.tb01045.x
Abstract
Despite the considerable evidence that alcoholics have perturbation of serotonergic function, there is little pathological evidence for alcohol directly affecting the nervous system. The present study aims to assess neuronal loss that occurs as a consequence of alcohol neurotoxicity in the serotonergic dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN). To that end, the brains of eight alcoholics and eight age‐matched control cases were carefully screened to eliminate serious liver disease, the sequela of thiamine deficiency, Wernicke‐Korsakoff syndrome (WKS), and other pathological abnormalities. Brains were formalin‐fixed for 2 weeks, cut, and then immunohistochemically stained using a monoclonal PH8 antibody specific for the rate‐limiting enzyme of serotonin synthesis, tryptophan hydroxylase. The morphology of the serotonin‐synthesizing neurons and their average size was similar in all cases. However, there was a reduction in the staining intensity of the reaction product in the DRN serotonergic neurons of most alcoholics. Neuronal counts on spaced serial sections revealed that there were an estimated average total of 106,100 ± 19,500 serotonergic neurons in the DRN of alcoholics and 108,300 ± 11,800 in the DRN of controls, indicating that in most alcoholics there is no reduction in the number of these neurons. Therefore, the effect of chronic alcohol consumption on the serotonergic system, in the absence of WKS or liver disease, seems to be functional rather than neuropathological.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Alterations of [3H]8-OH-DPAT and [3H]ketanserin binding sites in autopsied brain tissue from cirrhotic patients with hepatic encephalopathyNeuroscience Letters, 1994
- Fewer pigmented neurons in the locus coeruleus of uncomplicated alcoholicsBrain Research, 1994
- Alcohol Consumption and Alcoholic Liver Disease: Evidence of a Threshold Level of Effects of EthanolAlcohol, Clinical and Experimental Research, 1993
- Effects of Ethanol on Cultured Fetal Serotonergic NeuronsAlcohol, Clinical and Experimental Research, 1993
- Autoradiographic analysis of serotonin 5-HT1A receptor binding in the human brain postmortem: effects of age and alcoholBrain Research, 1991
- The Korsakoff syndrome: a neurochemical perspectiveTrends in Neurosciences, 1990
- Higher density of serotonin-1A receptors in the hippocampus and cerebral cortex of alcohol-preferring P ratsLife Sciences, 1990
- Location of Lesions in Korsakoff's Syndrome: Neuropsychological and Neuropathological Data on Two PatientsCortex, 1988
- The activity of monoamine oxidase -A and -B in brains from chronic alcoholicsJournal Of Neural Transmission-Parkinsons Disease and Dementia Section, 1983
- Monoamine metabolism in rat brain regions following long term alcohol treatmentJournal Of Neural Transmission-Parkinsons Disease and Dementia Section, 1980