Claus Eric D, Blaine Sara K, Witkiewitz Katie, Ansell Emily B
Department of Biobehavioral Health, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, USA.
Department of Psychological Sciences, Auburn University, Auburn, Alabama, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2022 Apr;46(4):530-541. doi: 10.1111/acer.14797. Epub 2022 Mar 7.
Simultaneous or concurrent use (co-use) of alcohol and cannabis is associated with greater use of both substances over time, academic difficulties, more severe substance use consequences, and adverse impacts on cognitive functioning than the use of a single substance or no substance use. This study examined potential neural mechanisms underlying co-use behaviors in comparison to single substance use. Specifically, we compared alcohol cue reactivity and stress-cue reactivity among individuals who reported frequent same-day co-use of alcohol and cannabis and individuals who reported only alcohol use.
The sample included 88 individuals (41 women) who reported only alcohol use and 24 individuals (8 women) who reported co-use of alcohol and cannabis on at least 50% of drinking occasions. All participants completed fMRI stress and alcohol cue reactivity tasks. Because of known sex effects on stress reactivity and alcohol cue reactivity, we tested sex by co-use interactions.
During alcohol cue presentation, co-users had less activation in the thalamus and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex than alcohol-only users, effects that were driven by differences in responses to neutral cues. Examination of stress cue reactivity revealed sex by co-use interactions in the lingual gyrus, with women co-users showing a greater difference between negative and neutral cue reactivity than all other groups. In addition, women co-users had greater connectivity between the nucleus accumbens and both the medial orbitofrontal cortex and the rostral anterior cingulate cortex during negative cue presentation than the other groups.
These results provide preliminary evidence of enhanced stress cue reactivity in individuals reporting co-use of alcohol and cannabis, particularly women co-users.
随着时间的推移,酒精和大麻同时或并发使用(共同使用)与两种物质的使用量增加、学业困难、更严重的物质使用后果以及对认知功能的不利影响相关,这些影响比单独使用一种物质或不使用任何物质更为严重。本研究探讨了与单一物质使用相比,共同使用行为背后的潜在神经机制。具体而言,我们比较了报告频繁在同一天同时使用酒精和大麻的个体与仅报告使用酒精的个体之间的酒精线索反应性和应激线索反应性。
样本包括88名仅报告使用酒精的个体(41名女性)和24名在至少50%的饮酒场合报告同时使用酒精和大麻的个体(8名女性)。所有参与者都完成了功能磁共振成像应激和酒精线索反应性任务。由于已知性别对应激反应性和酒精线索反应性有影响,我们测试了性别与共同使用之间的交互作用。
在呈现酒精线索期间,共同使用者在丘脑和背内侧前额叶皮层的激活程度低于仅使用酒精的使用者,这些效应是由对中性线索的反应差异所驱动的。对应激线索反应性的检查揭示了在舌回中存在性别与共同使用之间的交互作用,女性共同使用者在负面线索和中性线索反应性之间的差异大于所有其他组。此外,在呈现负面线索期间,女性共同使用者伏隔核与内侧眶额皮层和喙前扣带回皮层之间的连接性比其他组更强。
这些结果为报告同时使用酒精和大麻的个体,尤其是女性共同使用者中增强的应激线索反应性提供了初步证据。