Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 235 E. Cameron Ave., Chapel Hill, NC, 27599, USA.
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 235 E. Cameron Ave., Chapel Hill, NC, 27599, USA; Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 101 Manning Dr., Chapel Hill, NC, 27599, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2019 May 1;198:180-189. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2019.01.047. Epub 2019 Mar 20.
Deficits in the ability to experience reward from natural, substance-free activities and stimuli is a common mechanism contributing to both opiate use disorder and depressive symptoms, and is a target of behavioral-focused treatments for substance use and depression. Although the neural response to monetary, positive affect-eliciting and social images has been investigated, the neural response to images representing substance-free activity engagement remains untested. The current study tested the neural response to anticipation and receipt of substance-free activity engagement images and monetary reward in opiate use disorder patients with elevated depressive symptoms compared to healthy controls.
Sixteen male opiate use disorder detoxification patients with elevated depressive symptoms (Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-II) ≥ 14) (OUDD M = 32.19 years, SD = 8.17 years) and seventeen male healthy controls (BDI-II < 14) (HC: M = 26.82 years, SD = 5.29 years) completed the Monetary Incentive Delay (MID) and newly developed Activity Incentive Delay (AID) tasks. Within- and between-group whole-brain contrasts tested activation during anticipation ([reward]-[non-reward]) and receipt ([win]-[non-win]) of substance-free activity image, monetary, and substance-free activity relative to monetary (AID-MID), reward.
OUDD demonstrated significantly lower activation in reward regions during anticipation and significantly greater activation during receipt of substance-free activity image reward compared to HC. OUDD demonstrated significantly lower activation during anticipation of substance-free activity reward relative to monetary reward, compared to HC.
The observed reduction in frontostriatal response to reward anticipation of substance-free activity engagement images in OUDD, yet increased neural response to reward receipt, supports theory linking reductions in reward processing with deficits in motivation for substance-free activity engagement.
无法从自然的、无物质的活动和刺激中体验奖励,是导致阿片类药物使用障碍和抑郁症状的常见机制,也是针对物质使用和抑郁的以行为为中心的治疗的目标。尽管已经研究了对货币、积极情感诱发和社交图像的神经反应,但对代表无物质活动参与的图像的神经反应仍未得到测试。本研究测试了在阿片类药物使用障碍患者中,与健康对照组相比,对预期和接受无物质活动参与图像和货币奖励的神经反应,这些患者的抑郁症状升高。
16 名患有阿片类药物使用障碍和抑郁症状升高(贝克抑郁量表(BDI-II)≥14)的男性(OUDD,M=32.19 岁,SD=8.17 岁)和 17 名健康男性对照(BDI-II<14)(HC:M=26.82 岁,SD=5.29 岁)完成了货币激励延迟(MID)和新开发的活动激励延迟(AID)任务。在组内和组间的全脑对比中,测试了在预期期间([奖励]-[非奖励])和接受期间([赢]-[非赢]),无物质活动图像、货币和无物质活动相对于货币(AID-MID)、奖励的激活。
与 HC 相比,OUDD 在预期期间的奖励区域的激活显著降低,在接受无物质活动图像奖励时的激活显著增加。与 HC 相比,OUDD 在预期无物质活动奖励时的激活显著低于预期货币奖励时的激活。
在 OUDD 中观察到对无物质活动参与图像的奖励预期的额顶叶反应减少,而对奖励接受的神经反应增加,这支持了与减少奖励处理相关的、对无物质活动参与的动机缺陷的理论。