Kleinhans Natalia M, Terry Garth E, Kang Dahyeon, Larsen Sarah F, Larimer Mary E
Department of Radiology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Integrated Brain Imaging Center, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Addict Biol. 2025 Aug;30(8):e70067. doi: 10.1111/adb.70067.
Cue-induced craving-the desire to use a drug triggered by exposure to cues associated with prior use-is a central mechanism in the development and maintenance of problematic substance use behaviours. Drug cues have the power to induce craving even in long-term abstinent individuals, which has led clinicians to advise patients to avoid the people, places and objects that are associated with their use. This preliminary study builds on prior behavioural research that demonstrates that exposure to multimodal drug cues can increase craving even after the drug cues are removed from the environment. We used a novel fMRI paradigm that combined multimodal cannabis cue-exposure with resting-state functional connectivity to examine positive and negative functional connectivity (i.e., correlations and anticorrelations) between the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and the striatum, a circuit critically involved in reward processing and addiction. Intrinsic VTA-striatal connectivity was measured in 28 individuals who use cannabis regularly (CU group) and 26 age- and sex-matched controls who had never used cannabis before and after multimodal (visual and olfactory) cannabis cue exposure. Craving was assessed at baseline using the Marijuana Craving Questionnaire-Short Form to test whether VTA-striatal connectivity was correlated with self-reported craving measured prior to the fMRI scan. There were no significant group differences in VTA-striatal connectivity during the baseline resting-state scan. However, following cue exposure, CU participants showed significantly greater VTA-caudate connectivity compared to controls. Further, within the CU group, baseline craving was positively correlated with VTA-striatal connectivity at both time points. Our preliminary findings support prior investigations demonstrating that alterations of mesostriatal connectivity are associated with cannabis use and craving in individuals with problematic cannabis use. In addition, the observation of altered connectivity during the post-cue resting-state scan-after multimodal cannabis cues were removed-suggests a potential neural mechanism by which cue exposure may contribute to relapse vulnerability in individuals with problematic cannabis use.
线索诱发的渴望——接触与先前使用相关的线索所引发的使用药物的欲望——是问题性物质使用行为发展和维持的核心机制。药物线索甚至能在长期戒毒的个体中诱发渴望,这使得临床医生建议患者避开与药物使用相关的人、地点和物品。这项初步研究建立在先前的行为研究基础之上,该研究表明,即使药物线索从环境中移除,接触多模式药物线索仍会增加渴望。我们使用了一种新颖的功能磁共振成像范式,将多模式大麻线索暴露与静息态功能连接相结合,以检查腹侧被盖区(VTA)和纹状体之间的正性和负性功能连接(即相关性和反相关性),这一神经回路在奖赏处理和成瘾过程中起着关键作用。在28名经常使用大麻的个体(CU组)以及26名年龄和性别匹配、此前从未使用过大麻的对照组个体中,在多模式(视觉和嗅觉)大麻线索暴露前后测量了VTA与纹状体之间的内在连接性。在基线时使用《大麻渴望问卷简版》评估渴望程度,以测试VTA与纹状体之间的连接性是否与功能磁共振成像扫描前自我报告的渴望程度相关。在基线静息态扫描期间,VTA与纹状体之间的连接性在两组之间没有显著差异。然而,线索暴露后,与对照组相比,CU组参与者的VTA与尾状核之间的连接性显著更强。此外,在CU组内,两个时间点的基线渴望程度均与VTA与纹状体之间的连接性呈正相关。我们的初步研究结果支持了先前的调查,表明中脑纹状体连接性的改变与有问题的大麻使用个体中的大麻使用和渴望有关。此外,在多模式大麻线索移除后的线索暴露后静息态扫描期间观察到连接性改变,这表明线索暴露可能导致有问题的大麻使用个体复发易感性的一种潜在神经机制。