Wardle Margaret C, Marcus Benjamin A, de Wit Harriet
Center for Neurobehavioral Research on Addiction, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. Houston, TX, United States of America.
Human Behavioral Pharmacology Laboratory, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience, MC 3077, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Oct 29;10(10):e0140501. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0140501. eCollection 2015.
Polydrug use is common, and might occur because certain individuals experience positive effects from several different drugs during early stages of use. This study examined individual differences in subjective responses to single oral doses of d-amphetamine, alcohol, and delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) in healthy social drinkers. Each of these drugs produces feelings of well-being in at least some individuals, and we hypothesized that subjective responses to these drugs would be positively correlated. We also examined participants' drug responses in relation to personality traits associated with drug use. In this initial, exploratory study, 24 healthy, light drug users (12 male, 12 female), aged 21-31 years, participated in a fully within-subject, randomized, counterbalanced design with six 5.5-hour sessions in which they received d-amphetamine (20mg), alcohol (0.8 g/kg), or THC (7.5 mg), each paired with a placebo session. Participants rated the drugs' effects on both global measures (e.g. feeling a drug effect at all) and drug-specific measures. In general, participants' responses to the three drugs were unrelated. Unexpectedly, "wanting more" alcohol was inversely correlated with "wanting more" THC. Additionally, in women, but not in men, "disliking" alcohol was negatively correlated with "disliking" THC. Positive alcohol and amphetamine responses were related, but only in individuals who experienced a stimulant effect of alcohol. Finally, high trait constraint (or lack of impulsivity) was associated with lower reports of liking alcohol. No personality traits predicted responses across multiple drug types. Generally, these findings do not support the idea that certain individuals experience greater positive effects across multiple drug classes, but instead provide some evidence for a "drug of choice" model, in which individuals respond positively to certain classes of drugs that share similar subjective effects, and dislike other types of drugs.
多药滥用很常见,可能是因为某些人在使用初期从几种不同药物中体验到了积极效果。本研究调查了健康社交饮酒者对单次口服d - 苯丙胺、酒精和δ-9 - 四氢大麻酚(THC)主观反应的个体差异。这些药物中的每一种至少在一些个体中会产生幸福感,我们假设对这些药物的主观反应会呈正相关。我们还研究了参与者的药物反应与与药物使用相关的人格特质之间的关系。在这项初步的探索性研究中,24名年龄在21 - 31岁之间的健康轻度药物使用者(12名男性,12名女性)参与了一项完全被试内、随机、平衡设计,该设计包括六个5.5小时的实验环节,在这些环节中他们分别接受d - 苯丙胺(20毫克)、酒精(0.8克/千克)或THC(7.5毫克),每个药物环节都与一个安慰剂环节配对。参与者对药物效果在整体指标(例如是否完全感觉到药物效果)和特定药物指标上进行评分。总体而言,参与者对这三种药物的反应没有关联。出乎意料的是,“想要更多”酒精与“想要更多”THC呈负相关。此外,在女性而非男性中,“不喜欢”酒精与“不喜欢”THC呈负相关。积极的酒精和苯丙胺反应是相关的,但仅在那些体验到酒精兴奋作用的个体中如此。最后,高特质约束(或缺乏冲动性)与较低的酒精喜爱报告相关。没有人格特质能够预测对多种药物类型的反应。一般来说,这些发现不支持某些个体在多种药物类别中体验到更大积极效果的观点,而是为“首选药物”模型提供了一些证据,即个体对某些具有相似主观效果的药物类别有积极反应,而不喜欢其他类型的药物。