Worhunsky Patrick D, Potenza Marc N, Rogers Robert D
Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT USA; Department of Neuroscience, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT USA; Child Study Center, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT USA; National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT USA; Connecticut Mental Health Center, New Haven, CT USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2017 Sep 1;178:363-371. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2017.05.025. Epub 2017 Jun 28.
Continued, persistent gambling to recover accumulating losses, or 'loss-chasing', is a behavioral pattern linked particularly closely to gambling disorder (GD) but may reflect impaired decision-making processes relevant to drug addictions like cocaine-use disorder (CUD). However, little is known regarding the neurocognitive mechanisms of this complex, maladaptive behavior, particularly in individuals with addictive disorders.
Seventy participants (25 GD, 18 CUD, and 27 healthy comparison (HC)) completed a loss-chase task during fMRI. Engagement of functional brain networks in response to losing outcomes and during decision-making periods preceding choices to loss-chase or to quit chasing losses were investigated using independent component analysis (ICA). An exploratory factor analysis was performed to examine patterns of coordinated engagement across identified networks.
In GD relative to HC and CUD participants, choices to quit chasing were associated with greater engagement of a medial frontal executive-processing network. By comparison, CUD participants exhibited altered engagement of a striato-amygdala motivational network in response to losing outcomes as compared to HC, and during decision-making as compared to GD. Several other networks were differentially engaged during loss-chase relative to quit-chasing choices, but did not differ across participant groups. Exploratory factor analysis identified a system of coordinated activity across prefrontal executive-control networks that was greater in GD and CUD relative to HC participants and was associated with increased chasing persistence across all participants.
Results provide evidence of shared and distinct neurobiological mechanisms in substance and behavioral addictions, and lend insight into potential cognitive interventions targeting loss-chasing behavior in GD.
持续不断地赌博以挽回累积损失,即“追损行为”,是一种与赌博障碍(GD)联系尤为紧密的行为模式,但可能反映出与可卡因使用障碍(CUD)等药物成瘾相关的决策过程受损。然而,对于这种复杂的适应不良行为的神经认知机制,尤其是成瘾性障碍患者的相关机制,我们知之甚少。
70名参与者(25名患有GD、18名患有CUD以及27名健康对照者(HC))在功能磁共振成像(fMRI)期间完成了一项追损任务。使用独立成分分析(ICA)研究了功能性脑网络在面对损失结果时以及在做出追损或停止追损选择之前的决策期的参与情况。进行了探索性因素分析以检验已识别网络间的协同参与模式。
与HC和CUD参与者相比,GD参与者中做出停止追损的选择与内侧额叶执行加工网络的更大参与有关。相比之下,与HC相比,CUD参与者在面对损失结果时以及与GD相比在决策期表现出纹状体 - 杏仁核动机网络的参与改变。在追损与停止追损选择期间,其他几个网络的参与情况存在差异,但在不同参与者组之间没有差异。探索性因素分析确定了前额叶执行控制网络间的一个协同活动系统,与HC参与者相比,GD和CUD参与者中的该系统更活跃,并且与所有参与者的追损持续性增加有关。
研究结果为物质成瘾和行为成瘾中共同及独特的神经生物学机制提供了证据,并有助于深入了解针对GD中追损行为的潜在认知干预措施。