Fox Helen C, Hong Kwang-Ik A, Siedlarz Kristen, Sinha Rajita
Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, Substance Abuse Center, Connecticut Mental Health Center, New Haven, CT 06519, USA.
Neuropsychopharmacology. 2008 Mar;33(4):796-805. doi: 10.1038/sj.npp.1301470. Epub 2007 Jun 13.
Chronic exposure to cocaine is associated with neuroadaptions in stress and reward circuits that may increase susceptibility to relapse. We examined whether there are alterations in stress response and craving in abstinent cocaine-dependent individuals compared with a demographically matched group of non-addicted socially drinking community controls. Forty treatment-engaged abstinent cocaine patients (17F/23M) and 40 controls (19F/21M) were exposed to a brief 5 min guided imagery of individually calibrated stressful situations, personal drug/alcohol-related situation and a neutral-relaxing situation, one imagery per session, presented in random order. Craving, anxiety, emotion rating scales, and physiological measures were assessed. Cocaine patients reported significantly higher and more persistent stress- and cue-induced drug/alcohol craving, negative emotions, and physiological responses compared with social drinkers. In cocaine patients, stress- and cue-induced drug craving was accompanied by increased anger, fear, sadness, heart rate, and SBP. Controls reported minimal stress-induced craving and only increases in anxiety and SBP during stress exposure. Cue-induced alcohol craving was accompanied only by an increase in relaxed state. Females reported increased stress-induced anxiety and sadness compared with males, while males were emotionally and physiologically more reactive in the cue condition. These findings are the first to document functional alterations in stress- and reward-related affect and physiology in recently abstinent cocaine patients that is marked by an enhanced sensitivity to stress- and drug-related cue exposure. These data suggest that recovery from chronic cocaine abuse could be hampered by a hyper-responsive stress- and drug-craving state that increases cocaine relapse susceptibility.
长期接触可卡因与应激和奖赏回路中的神经适应性变化有关,这可能会增加复发的易感性。我们研究了与人口统计学匹配的非成瘾性社交饮酒社区对照组相比,戒断的可卡因依赖个体在应激反应和渴望方面是否存在改变。40名接受治疗的戒断可卡因患者(17名女性/23名男性)和40名对照组(19名女性/21名男性)被暴露于5分钟的简短引导想象中,内容包括个体校准的应激情况、个人药物/酒精相关情况和中性放松情况,每次想象一个,随机呈现。评估了渴望、焦虑、情绪评分量表和生理指标。与社交饮酒者相比,可卡因患者报告的应激和线索诱导的药物/酒精渴望、负面情绪和生理反应明显更高且更持久。在可卡因患者中,应激和线索诱导的药物渴望伴随着愤怒、恐惧、悲伤、心率和收缩压的增加。对照组报告的应激诱导渴望最小,仅在应激暴露期间焦虑和收缩压增加。线索诱导的酒精渴望仅伴随着放松状态的增加。与男性相比,女性报告的应激诱导焦虑和悲伤增加,而男性在线索条件下情绪和生理反应更强。这些发现首次记录了近期戒断的可卡因患者在应激和奖赏相关情感及生理方面的功能改变,其特征是对应激和药物相关线索暴露的敏感性增强。这些数据表明,慢性可卡因滥用的恢复可能会受到高反应性应激和药物渴望状态的阻碍,这种状态会增加可卡因复发的易感性。