Vanderbilt Addiction Center, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN 37212, USA.
Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2013 May;227(1):41-54. doi: 10.1007/s00213-012-2936-1. Epub 2012 Dec 16.
Ecstasy (3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine [MDMA]) polydrug users have verbal memory performance that is statistically significantly lower than that of control subjects. Studies have correlated long-term MDMA use with altered brain activation in regions that play a role in verbal memory.
The aim of our study was to examine the association of lifetime ecstasy use with semantic memory performance and brain activation in ecstasy polydrug users.
A total of 23 abstinent ecstasy polydrug users (age = 24.57 years) and 11 controls (age = 22.36 years) performed a two-part functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) semantic encoding and recognition task. To isolate brain regions activated during each semantic task, we created statistical activation maps in which brain activation was greater for word stimuli than for non-word stimuli (corrected p < 0.05).
During the encoding phase, ecstasy polydrug users had greater activation during semantic encoding bilaterally in language processing regions, including Brodmann areas 7, 39, and 40. Of this bilateral activation, signal intensity with a peak T in the right superior parietal lobe was correlated with lifetime ecstasy use (r s = 0.43, p = 0.042). Behavioral performance did not differ between groups.
These findings demonstrate that ecstasy polydrug users have increased brain activation during semantic processing. This increase in brain activation in the absence of behavioral deficits suggests that ecstasy polydrug users have reduced cortical efficiency during semantic encoding, possibly secondary to MDMA-induced 5-HT neurotoxicity. Although pre-existing differences cannot be ruled out, this suggests the possibility of a compensatory mechanism allowing ecstasy polydrug users to perform equivalently to controls, providing additional support for an association of altered cerebral neurophysiology with MDMA exposure.
摇头丸(3,4-亚甲二氧基甲基苯丙胺[MDMA])多药使用者的言语记忆表现明显低于对照组。研究表明,长期使用 MDMA 会导致参与言语记忆的大脑区域的激活发生改变。
本研究旨在探讨终身摇头丸使用与摇头丸多药使用者的语义记忆表现和大脑激活之间的关系。
共有 23 名禁欲的摇头丸多药使用者(年龄=24.57 岁)和 11 名对照者(年龄=22.36 岁)完成了两个部分的功能磁共振成像(fMRI)语义编码和识别任务。为了分离每个语义任务中激活的大脑区域,我们创建了统计激活图,其中单词刺激的大脑激活高于非单词刺激(校正后的 p<0.05)。
在编码阶段,摇头丸多药使用者在双侧语言处理区域的语义编码过程中表现出更大的激活,包括布罗德曼区 7、39 和 40。在这种双侧激活中,右侧顶叶上回的信号强度峰值 T 与终身摇头丸使用相关(rs=0.43,p=0.042)。两组的行为表现无差异。
这些发现表明,摇头丸多药使用者在语义处理过程中大脑激活增加。这种大脑激活的增加而没有行为缺陷表明,摇头丸多药使用者在语义编码过程中大脑皮质效率降低,可能是由于 MDMA 诱导的 5-HT 神经毒性所致。尽管不能排除先前存在的差异,但这表明存在一种补偿机制,使摇头丸多药使用者能够与对照组表现相当,为大脑神经生理学改变与 MDMA 暴露之间的关联提供了额外的支持。