From the Department of Psychology (Ross), University of Pittsburgh; Department of Psychiatry (Andreescu), University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; and Department of Psychology (Inagaki), San Diego State University, San Diego, California.
Psychosom Med. 2021 Oct 1;83(8):924-931. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0000000000000986.
Early experiences of having received maternal warmth predict responses to opportunities to connect with others later in life. However, the understanding of neurochemical mechanisms by which such relationships emerge remains incomplete. Endogenous opioids, involved in social connection in both animals and humans, may contribute to this link. Therefore, the current study examined a) relationships between early maternal warmth and brain and self-report responses to novel social targets (i.e., outcomes that may promote social connection) and b) the effect of the opioid antagonist, naltrexone, on such relationships.
Eighty-two adult participants completed a retrospective report of early maternal warmth. On a second visit, participants were randomized to 50 mg of oral naltrexone (n = 42) or placebo (n = 40), followed by a magnetic resonance imaging scan where functional brain activity in response to images of novel social targets (strangers) was assessed. Approximately 24 hours later, participants reported on their feelings of social connection since leaving the scanner.
In the placebo condition, greater early maternal warmth was associated with less dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, anterior insula, ventral striatum, and amygdala activity in response to images of novel social targets (r values ≥ -0.360, p values ≤ .031), and greater feelings of social connection (r = 0.524, p < .001) outside of the laboratory. The same relationships, however, were not present in the naltrexone condition.
Results highlight relationships between early maternal warmth and responses to the social world at large and suggest that opioids might contribute to social connection by supporting the buffering effects of warm early life experiences on social connection later in life.Trial Registration: Clinical Trials NCT02818036.
早期获得的母性温暖体验预测了人们日后与他人建立联系的反应。然而,人们对这些关系出现的神经化学机制仍了解不足。内源性阿片类物质参与了动物和人类的社会联系,可能与这种联系有关。因此,本研究考察了:(a)早期母性温暖与大脑以及对新的社会目标(即可能促进社会联系的结果)的自我报告反应之间的关系;(b)阿片受体拮抗剂纳曲酮对这种关系的影响。
82 名成年参与者完成了早期母性温暖的回顾性报告。在第二次访问时,参与者被随机分为 50 毫克口服纳曲酮组(n = 42)或安慰剂组(n = 40),随后进行磁共振成像扫描,以评估对新的社会目标(陌生人)图像的大脑功能活动。大约 24 小时后,参与者报告离开扫描仪后他们的社会联系感。
在安慰剂条件下,与新的社会目标图像(陌生人)的反应中,背侧前扣带皮层、前岛叶、腹侧纹状体和杏仁核的活动减少(r 值≥-0.360,p 值≤0.031),与实验室外更大的社会联系感(r = 0.524,p < 0.001)相关。然而,在纳曲酮条件下,没有出现相同的关系。
结果强调了早期母性温暖与对整个社会世界的反应之间的关系,并表明阿片类物质可能通过支持温暖的早期生活经历对晚年社会联系的缓冲作用,促进社会联系。
临床试验 NCT02818036。