School of Psychology and Institute of Neuroscience, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland.
Neuroimage. 2010 Jan 1;49(1):1133-43. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2009.07.022. Epub 2009 Jul 23.
Despite an increased understanding of the pharmacology and long-term cognitive effects of cannabis in humans, there has been no research to date examining its chronic effects upon reward processing in the brain. Motivational theories regarding long-term drug use posit contrasting predictions with respect to how drug users are likely to process non-drug incentives. The reward deficiency syndrome (RDS) of addiction posits that there are deficits in dopamine (DA) motivational circuitry for non-drug rewards, such that only drugs of abuse are capable of normalizing DA in the ventral striatum (VS). Alternatively, the opponent process theory (OPT) holds that in individuals prone to drug use, there exists some form of mesolimbic hyperactivity, in which there is a bias towards reward-centred behaviour concomitant with impulsivity. The current study examined BOLD responses during reward and loss anticipation and their outcome deliveries in 14 chronic cannabis users and 14 drug-naive controls during a monetary incentive delay (MID) task. Despite no significant behavioural differences between the two groups, cannabis users had significantly more right VS BOLD activity during reward anticipation. Correlation analyses demonstrated that this right VS BOLD response was significantly correlated with life-time use and reported life-time cannabis joints consumed. No correlations between cannabis abstinence and BOLD responses were observed. We also observed a number of group differences following outcome deliveries, most notably hypoactivity in the left insula cortex in response to loss and loss avoidance outcome notifications in the cannabis group. These results may suggest hypersensitivity during instrumental response anticipation for non-drug rewards and a hyposensitivity to loss outcomes in chronic cannabis users; the implications of which are discussed with respect to the potentially sensitizing effects of cannabis for other rewards.
尽管人们对大麻在人类中的药理学和长期认知效应有了更多的了解,但迄今为止,还没有研究探讨其对大脑奖励处理的慢性影响。关于长期药物使用的动机理论对药物使用者如何处理非药物奖励提出了相互矛盾的预测。成瘾的奖励缺陷综合征(RDS)认为,非药物奖励的多巴胺(DA)动机回路存在缺陷,因此只有滥用药物才能使腹侧纹状体(VS)中的 DA 正常化。相反,对立过程理论(OPT)认为,在容易使用药物的个体中,存在某种形式的中脑边缘系统过度活跃,其中存在一种奖励为中心的行为偏见伴随着冲动性。本研究在金钱奖励延迟(MID)任务中,检查了 14 名慢性大麻使用者和 14 名无药物使用史的对照者在奖励和损失预期期间以及其结果传递期间的大脑活动。尽管两组之间没有显著的行为差异,但大麻使用者在奖励预期期间右 VS 的大脑活动明显更多。相关分析表明,这种右 VS 的大脑活动与一生中的使用量和报告的一生中消耗的大麻量显著相关。在大麻使用者中,未观察到大麻禁欲与大脑活动之间的相关性。在结果传递后,我们还观察到了一些组间差异,最显著的是在大麻组中,左岛叶皮层对损失的反应和对损失回避结果通知的反应活性降低。这些结果可能表明慢性大麻使用者对非药物奖励的工具性反应预期存在过度敏感,对损失结果的敏感性降低;讨论了这些结果对大麻对其他奖励的潜在致敏作用的影响。