Pandey Ashwini K, Kamarajan Chella, Manz Niklas, Chorlian David B, Stimus Arthur, Porjesz Bernice
Henri Begleiter Neurodynamics Laboratory, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, SUNY Downstate Medical Center, 450 Clarkson Avenue, MSC #1203, Brooklyn, NY 11203, USA.
Henri Begleiter Neurodynamics Laboratory, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, SUNY Downstate Medical Center, 450 Clarkson Avenue, MSC #1203, Brooklyn, NY 11203, USA.
Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry. 2016 Feb 4;65:158-71. doi: 10.1016/j.pnpbp.2015.10.002. Epub 2015 Oct 9.
Higher impulsivity observed in alcoholics is thought to be due to neurocognitive functional deficits involving impaired inhibition in several brain regions and/or neuronal circuits. Event-related oscillations (EROs) offer time-frequency measure of brain rhythms during perceptual and cognitive processing, which provide a detailed view of neuroelectric oscillatory responses to external/internal events. The present study examines evoked power (temporally locked to events) of oscillatory brain signals in alcoholics during an equal probability Go/NoGo task, assessing their functional relevance in execution and inhibition of a motor response. The current study hypothesized that increases in the power of slow frequency bands and their topographical distribution is associated with tasks that have increased cognitive demands, such as the execution and inhibition of a motor response. Therefore, it is hypothesized that alcoholics would show lower spectral power in their topographical densities compared to controls. The sample consisted of 20 right-handed abstinent alcoholic males and 20 age and gender-matched healthy controls. Evoked delta (1.0-3.5Hz; 200-600ms), theta (4.0-7.5Hz; 200-400ms), slow alpha (8.0-9.5Hz; 200-300ms), and fast alpha (10.0-12.5Hz; 100-200ms) ERO power were compared across group and task conditions. Compared to controls, alcoholics had higher impulsiveness scores on the Barrett Impulsiveness Scale (BIS-11) and made more errors on Go trials. Alcoholics showed significantly lower evoked delta, theta, and slow alpha power compared to controls for both Go and NoGo task conditions, and lower evoked fast alpha power compared to controls for only the NoGo condition. The results confirm previous findings and are suggestive of neurocognitive deficits while executing and suppressing a motor response. Based on findings in the alpha frequency ranges, it is further suggested that the inhibitory processing impairments in alcoholics may arise from inadequate early attentional processing with respect to the stimulus related aspects/semantic memory processes, which may be reflected in lower posterio-temporal evoked fast alpha power. It can thus be concluded that alcoholics show neurocognitive deficits in both execution and suppression of a motor response and inadequate early attentional processing with respect to the semantic memory/stimulus related aspects while suppressing a motor response.
酗酒者中观察到的较高冲动性被认为是由于神经认知功能缺陷,涉及多个脑区和/或神经回路的抑制受损。事件相关振荡(ERO)提供了感知和认知处理过程中脑节律的时间频率测量,它详细展示了对外部/内部事件的神经电振荡反应。本研究考察了酗酒者在等概率的“执行/不执行”任务期间振荡脑信号的诱发功率(与事件在时间上锁定),评估其在运动反应执行和抑制中的功能相关性。当前研究假设,低频带功率及其地形分布的增加与认知需求增加的任务相关,例如运动反应的执行和抑制。因此,假设酗酒者与对照组相比,其地形密度中的频谱功率会更低。样本包括20名右利手戒酒男性酗酒者和20名年龄及性别匹配的健康对照者。比较了两组在不同任务条件下诱发的δ波(1.0 - 3.5Hz;200 - 600ms)、θ波(4.0 - 7.5Hz;200 - 400ms)、慢α波(8.0 - 9.5Hz;200 - 300ms)和快α波(10.0 - 12.5Hz;100 - 200ms)的ERO功率。与对照组相比,酗酒者在巴雷特冲动性量表(BIS - 11)上的冲动性得分更高,并且在“执行”试验中犯的错误更多。在“执行”和“不执行”任务条件下,酗酒者诱发δ波、θ波和慢α波的功率均显著低于对照组;仅在“不执行”条件下,酗酒者诱发快α波的功率低于对照组。结果证实了先前的发现,并提示在执行和抑制运动反应时存在神经认知缺陷。基于α频率范围内的发现,进一步表明酗酒者的抑制性加工障碍可能源于对刺激相关方面/语义记忆过程的早期注意力加工不足,这可能反映在颞叶后部诱发的快α波功率较低。因此可以得出结论,酗酒者在运动反应的执行和抑制方面均表现出神经认知缺陷,并且在抑制运动反应时,在语义记忆/刺激相关方面的早期注意力加工不足。