Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA.
Biol Psychiatry. 2010 Dec 15;68(12):1134-40. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2010.08.003. Epub 2010 Oct 14.
Users of ±3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), "ecstasy," report that the drug produces unusual psychological effects, including increased empathy and prosocial feelings. These "empathogenic" effects are cited as reasons for recreational ecstasy use and also form the basis for the proposed use of MDMA in psychotherapy. However, they have yet to be characterized in controlled studies. Here, we investigate effects of MDMA on an important social cognitive capacity, the identification of emotional expression in others, and on socially relevant mood states.
Over four sessions, healthy ecstasy-using volunteers (n = 21) received MDMA (.75, 1.5 mg/kg), methamphetamine (METH) (20 mg), and placebo under double-blind, randomized conditions. They completed self-report ratings of relevant affective states and undertook tasks in which they identified emotions from images of faces, pictures of eyes, and vocal cues.
MDMA (1.5 mg/kg) significantly increased ratings of feeling "loving" and "friendly", and MDMA (.75 mg/kg) increased "loneliness". Both MDMA (1.5 mg/kg) and METH increased "playfulness"; only METH increased "sociability". MDMA (1.5 mg/kg) robustly decreased accuracy of facial fear recognition relative to placebo.
The drug MDMA increased "empathogenic" feelings but reduced accurate identification of threat-related facial emotional signals in others, findings consistent with increased social approach behavior rather than empathy. This effect of MDMA on social cognition has implications for both recreational and therapeutic use. In recreational users, acute drug effects might alter social risk-taking while intoxicated. Socioemotional processing alterations such as those documented here might underlie possible psychotherapeutic benefits of this drug; further investigation of such mechanisms could inform treatment design to maximize active components of MDMA-assisted psychotherapy.
使用±3,4-亚甲二氧基甲基苯丙胺(MDMA),即“摇头丸”的用户报告称,该药物会产生不同寻常的心理效应,包括增强同理心和亲社会感受。这些“致同情”的效应被认为是娱乐性摇头丸使用的原因,也是 MDMA 在心理治疗中应用的基础。然而,这些效应尚未在对照研究中得到描述。在这里,我们研究了 MDMA 对重要社会认知能力的影响,即识别他人情绪表达的能力,以及对与社会相关的情绪状态的影响。
在四个疗程中,健康的摇头丸使用者(n = 21)接受了 MDMA(0.75、1.5mg/kg)、甲基苯丙胺(METH)(20mg)和安慰剂的双盲、随机治疗。他们完成了与相关情感状态相关的自我报告评分,并进行了识别面部图像、眼睛图像和声音线索中的情绪的任务。
MDMA(1.5mg/kg)显著增加了“有爱心”和“友好”的感觉,而 MDMA(0.75mg/kg)增加了“孤独感”。MDMA(1.5mg/kg)和 METH 都增加了“玩乐性”,只有 METH 增加了“社交性”。MDMA(1.5mg/kg)显著降低了相对于安慰剂的面部恐惧识别准确性。
MDMA 增加了“致同情”的感觉,但降低了对他人相关威胁的面部情绪信号的准确识别,这一发现与增加社交接近行为而非同理心一致。MDMA 对社会认知的这种影响既适用于娱乐性使用,也适用于治疗性使用。在娱乐性使用中,急性药物效应可能会改变醉酒时的社会风险行为。本文所述的这种药物对社会情感处理的改变可能是该药物潜在的心理治疗益处的基础;对这些机制的进一步研究可以为最大限度地发挥 MDMA 辅助心理治疗的积极作用提供治疗设计的信息。