Department of Addictive Behavior and Addiction Medicine, Central Institute of Mental Health, Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Germany.
Addiction. 2010 Oct;105(10):1741-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2010.03022.x.
During the development of drug addiction, initial hedonic effects decrease when substance use becomes habitual and ultimately compulsive. Animal research suggests that these changes are represented by a transition from prefrontal cortical control to subcortical striatal control and within the striatum from ventral to dorsal domains of the striatum, but only limited evidence exists in humans. In this study we address this hypothesis in the context of alcohol dependence.
DESIGN, SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: Non-abstinent heavy social drinkers (n = 21, 5.0 ± 1.5 drinks/day, 13 of them were alcohol-dependent according to DSM-IV) and light social drinkers (n = 10, 0.4 ± 0.4 drinks/day) were examined.
We used a cue-reactivity functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) design during which pictures of alcoholic beverages and neutral control stimuli were presented.
In the dorsal striatum heavy drinkers showed significant higher activations compared to light drinkers, whereas light social drinkers showed higher cue-induced fMRI activations in the ventral striatum and in prefrontal areas compared to heavy social drinkers [region of interest analyses, P < 0.05 false discovery rate (FDR)-corrected]. Correspondingly, ventral striatal activation in heavy drinkers correlated negatively with obsessive-compulsive craving, and furthermore we found a positive association between cue-induced activation in the dorsal striatum and obsessive-compulsive craving in all participants.
In line with our hypothesis we found higher cue-induced activation of the ventral striatum in social compared to heavy drinkers, and higher dorsal striatal activation in heavy drinkers. Increased prefrontal activation may indicate that social drinkers activate cortical control when viewing alcohol cues, which may prevent the development of heavy drinking or alcohol dependence. Our results suggest differentiating treatment research depending on whether alcohol use is hedonic or compulsive.
在药物成瘾的发展过程中,当物质使用变得习惯化并最终强迫性时,最初的愉悦效应会降低。动物研究表明,这些变化表现为从前额叶皮质控制到皮质下纹状体控制的转变,并且在纹状体内部,从腹侧到背侧纹状体区域的转变,但在人类中仅存在有限的证据。在这项研究中,我们在酒精依赖的背景下探讨了这一假设。
设计、设置和参与者:非禁欲的重度社交饮酒者(n=21,5.0±1.5 杯/天,其中 13 人根据 DSM-IV 标准为酒精依赖)和轻度社交饮酒者(n=10,0.4±0.4 杯/天)被纳入研究。
我们使用了线索反应功能磁共振成像(fMRI)设计,在此期间呈现了酒精饮料和中性对照刺激的图片。
在背侧纹状体中,重度饮酒者的激活显著高于轻度饮酒者,而轻度社交饮酒者的腹侧纹状体和前额叶区域的线索诱导 fMRI 激活高于重度社交饮酒者[感兴趣区分析,P<0.05 经假发现率(FDR)校正]。相应地,重度饮酒者的腹侧纹状体激活与强迫性觅酒欲望呈负相关,此外,我们还发现所有参与者的背侧纹状体的线索诱导激活与强迫性觅酒欲望呈正相关。
与我们的假设一致,我们发现社交饮酒者的腹侧纹状体的线索诱导激活高于重度饮酒者,而重度饮酒者的背侧纹状体的激活较高。前额叶的激活增加可能表明社交饮酒者在观看酒精线索时激活皮质控制,这可能防止重度饮酒或酒精依赖的发展。我们的结果表明,根据酒精使用是愉悦性还是强迫性,进行区分治疗研究。