Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University School of Medicine, 2812 Erwin Rd, Durham, NC, 27710, United States.
Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University School of Medicine, 2812 Erwin Rd, Durham, NC, 27710, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2019 Jan 1;194:32-39. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2018.09.013. Epub 2018 Oct 24.
Cocaine addiction is related to impulsive decision making that is mediated by brain circuitry involved in reward processing and executive functions, such as cognitive control and attentional salience. Resting-state functional connectivity between reward and executive control circuitry is altered among cocaine users, with concomitant deficits in impulsivity and learning. Prior research has examined how select brain regions interact to influence impulsive decision making for drug users; however, research examining interactions between large-scale brain networks and impulsive behavior is limited.
The current study compared reward and executive control network resting-state functional connectivity and its relationship to impulsive decision making between cocaine users (n = 37) and non-cocaine using control participants (n = 35). Participants completed computerized decision-making tasks and a separate resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging scan. Data underwent independent component, dual regression, and linear regression moderation analyses.
Higher impulsivity on the Balloon Analogue Risk Task (BART) was associated with inverse resting-state connectivity between the left cognitive control and subgenual anterior cingulate extended reward networks for cocaine users, while the opposite was found for controls. Less impulsivity on the monetary choice questionnaire was associated with stronger positive resting-state connectivity between the attentional salience and striatal core reward networks for controls, while cocaine users showed no association between impulsivity and resting-state connectivity of these networks.
Cocaine users show aberrant associations between reward-executive control resting-state network coupling and impulsive decision making. The findings support the conclusion that an imbalance between reward and executive control circuitry contributes to impulsivity in drug use.
可卡因成瘾与冲动决策有关,而冲动决策是由涉及奖励处理和执行功能(如认知控制和注意力突显)的大脑回路介导的。可卡因使用者的奖励和执行控制回路之间的静息状态功能连接发生改变,同时伴随着冲动和学习能力的缺陷。先前的研究已经研究了特定脑区如何相互作用来影响药物使用者的冲动决策;然而,研究检查大尺度脑网络和冲动行为之间的相互作用是有限的。
本研究比较了可卡因使用者(n=37)和非可卡因使用者对照组(n=35)的奖励和执行控制网络静息状态功能连接及其与冲动决策的关系。参与者完成了计算机化的决策任务和单独的静息状态功能磁共振成像扫描。数据经过独立成分、双回归和线性回归调节分析。
BART 上的高冲动性与可卡因使用者左认知控制和前扣带回亚皮质延伸奖励网络之间的反向静息状态连接相关,而对照组则相反。金钱选择问卷上的低冲动性与对照组注意力突显和纹状体核心奖励网络之间的更强的正静息状态连接相关,而可卡因使用者在这些网络的冲动性和静息状态连接之间没有关联。
可卡因使用者的奖励-执行控制静息状态网络耦合与冲动决策之间存在异常关联。这些发现支持这样的结论,即奖励和执行控制回路之间的不平衡导致了药物使用中的冲动性。