Flannery Jessica S, Riedel Michael C, Salo Taylor, Poudel Ranjita, Laird Angela R, Gonzalez Raul, Sutherland Matthew T
Department of Psychology, Florida International University, Miami, FL, United States of America.
Department of Physics, Florida International University, Miami, FL, United States of America.
Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry. 2021 Dec 20;111:110398. doi: 10.1016/j.pnpbp.2021.110398. Epub 2021 Jul 3.
Brain activity linked with error processing has rarely been examined among persons living with HIV (PLWH) despite importance for monitoring and modifying behaviors that could lead to adverse health outcomes (e.g., medication non-adherence, drug use, risky sexual practices). Given that cannabis (CB) use is prevalent among PLWH and impacts error processing, we assessed the influence of HIV serostatus and chronic CB use on error-related brain activity while also considering associated implications for everyday functioning and clinically-relevant disease management behaviors.
A sample of 109 participants, stratified into four groups by HIV and CB (HIV+/CB+, n = 32; HIV+/CB-, n = 27; HIV-/CB+, n = 28; HIV-/CB-, n = 22), underwent fMRI scanning while completing a modified Go/NoGo paradigm called the Error Awareness Task (EAT). Participants also completed a battery of well-validated instruments including a subjective report of everyday cognitive failures and an objective measure of medication management abilities.
Across all participants, we observed expected error-related anterior insula (aI) activation which correlated with better task performance (i.e., less errors) and, among HIV- participants, fewer self-reported cognitive failures. Regarding awareness, greater insula activation as well as greater posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) deactivation were notably linked with aware (vs. unaware) errors. Regarding group effects, unlike HIV- participants, PLWH displayed a lack of error-related deactivation in two default mode network (DMN) regions (i.e., PCC, medial prefrontal cortex [mPFC]). No CB main or interaction effects were detected. Across all participants, reduced error-related PCC deactivation correlated with reduced medication management abilities and PCC deactivation mediated the effect of HIV on such abilities. More lifetime CB use was linked with reduced error-related mPFC deactivation among HIV- participants and poorer medication management across CB users.
These results demonstrate that insufficient error-related DMN suppression linked with HIV infection, as well as chronic CB use among HIV- participants, has real-world consequences for medication management behaviors. We speculate that insufficient DMN suppression may reflect an inability to disengage task irrelevant mental operations, ultimately hindering error monitoring and behavior modification.
尽管与错误处理相关的大脑活动对于监测和改变可能导致不良健康结果的行为(如药物治疗不依从、药物使用、危险性行为)很重要,但在感染人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)的人群(PLWH)中,很少有人对此进行研究。鉴于大麻(CB)在PLWH中使用普遍且会影响错误处理,我们评估了HIV血清学状态和长期使用CB对与错误相关的大脑活动的影响,同时考虑了其对日常功能和临床相关疾病管理行为的相关影响。
109名参与者的样本,根据HIV和CB状态分为四组(HIV+/CB+,n = 32;HIV+/CB-,n = 27;HIV-/CB+,n = 28;HIV-/CB-,n = 22),在完成一项名为错误意识任务(EAT)的改良Go/NoGo范式时接受功能磁共振成像(fMRI)扫描。参与者还完成了一系列经过充分验证的工具测试,包括日常认知失误的主观报告和药物管理能力的客观测量。
在所有参与者中,我们观察到预期的与错误相关的前脑岛(aI)激活,这与更好的任务表现(即错误更少)相关,并且在HIV阴性参与者中,自我报告的认知失误也更少。关于意识,更大的脑岛激活以及更大的后扣带回皮质(PCC)失活与有意识(相对于无意识)的错误显著相关。关于组间效应,与HIV阴性参与者不同,PLWH在两个默认模式网络(DMN)区域(即PCC、内侧前额叶皮质[mPFC])中显示出缺乏与错误相关的失活。未检测到CB的主效应或交互效应。在所有参与者中,与错误相关的PCC失活减少与药物管理能力下降相关,并且PCC失活介导了HIV对这种能力的影响。在HIV阴性参与者中,更多的终生CB使用与与错误相关的mPFC失活减少以及CB使用者中较差的药物管理相关。
这些结果表明,与HIV感染相关的与错误相关的DMN抑制不足,以及HIV阴性参与者中长期使用CB,对药物管理行为具有现实世界的影响。我们推测,DMN抑制不足可能反映了无法脱离与任务无关的心理操作,最终阻碍了错误监测和行为改变。