Kaufman Marc J, Janes Amy C, Hudson James I, Brennan Brian P, Kanayama Gen, Kerrigan Andrew R, Jensen J Eric, Pope Harrison G
McLean Imaging Center, McLean Hospital, The Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, 115 Mill St., Belmont, MA 02478, USA.
McLean Imaging Center, McLean Hospital, The Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, 115 Mill St., Belmont, MA 02478, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2015 Jul 1;152:47-56. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2015.04.023. Epub 2015 May 7.
Anabolic-androgenic steroid (AAS) use is associated with psychiatric symptoms including increased aggression as well as with cognitive dysfunction. The brain effects of long-term AAS use have not been assessed in humans.
This multimodal magnetic resonance imaging study of the brain compared 10 male weightlifters reporting long-term AAS use with 10 age-matched weightlifters reporting no AAS exposure. Participants were administered visuospatial memory tests and underwent neuroimaging. Brain volumetric analyses were performed; resting-state fMRI functional connectivity (rsFC) was evaluated using a region-of-interest analysis focused on the amygdala; and dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) metabolites were quantified by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS).
AAS users had larger right amygdala volumes than nonusers (P=0.002) and reduced rsFC between right amygdala and frontal, striatal, limbic, hippocampal, and visual cortical areas. Left amygdala volumes were slightly larger in AAS users (P=0.061) but few group differences were detected in left amygdala rsFC. AAS users also had lower dACC scyllo-inositol levels (P=0.004) and higher glutamine/glutamate ratios (P=0.028), possibly reflecting increased glutamate turnover. On a visuospatial cognitive task, AAS users performed more poorly than nonusers, with the difference approaching significance (P=0.053).
Long-term AAS use is associated with right amygdala enlargement and reduced right amygdala rsFC with brain areas involved in cognitive control and spatial memory, which could contribute to the psychiatric effects and cognitive dysfunction associated with AAS use. The MRS abnormalities we detected could reflect enhanced glutamate turnover and increased vulnerability to neurotoxic or neurodegenerative processes, which could contribute to AAS-associated cognitive dysfunction.
使用合成代谢雄激素类固醇(AAS)与包括攻击性增强在内的精神症状以及认知功能障碍有关。长期使用AAS对大脑的影响尚未在人类中进行评估。
这项对大脑的多模态磁共振成像研究比较了10名报告长期使用AAS的男性举重运动员和10名年龄匹配、报告未接触过AAS的举重运动员。对参与者进行了视觉空间记忆测试并进行了神经成像。进行了脑容量分析;使用聚焦于杏仁核的感兴趣区域分析评估静息态功能磁共振成像功能连接(rsFC);并通过质子磁共振波谱(MRS)对背侧前扣带回皮质(dACC)代谢物进行定量。
AAS使用者右侧杏仁核体积大于未使用者(P = 0.002),右侧杏仁核与额叶、纹状体、边缘系统、海马体和视觉皮质区域之间的rsFC降低。AAS使用者左侧杏仁核体积略大(P = 0.061),但在左侧杏仁核rsFC中未检测到明显的组间差异。AAS使用者的dACC scyllo - 肌醇水平也较低(P = 0.004),谷氨酰胺/谷氨酸比值较高(P = 0.028),这可能反映了谷氨酸周转率增加。在一项视觉空间认知任务中,AAS使用者的表现比未使用者差,差异接近显著水平(P = 0.053)。
长期使用AAS与右侧杏仁核增大以及右侧杏仁核与参与认知控制和空间记忆的脑区之间的rsFC降低有关,这可能导致与使用AAS相关的精神症状和认知功能障碍。我们检测到的MRS异常可能反映了谷氨酸周转率增强以及对神经毒性或神经退行性过程的易感性增加,这可能导致与AAS相关的认知功能障碍。