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Neural correlates of instrumental responding in the context of alcohol-related cues index disorder severity and relapse risk.

Authors :
Schad, Daniel J.
Garbusow, Maria
Friedel, Eva
Sommer, Christian
Sebold, Miriam
Hägele, Claudia
Bernhardt, Nadine
Nebe, Stephan
Kuitunen-Paul, Sören
Liu, Shuyan
Eichmann, Uta
Beck, Anne
Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich
Walter, Henrik
Sterzer, Philipp
Zimmermann, Ulrich S.
Smolka, Michael N.
Schlagenhauf, Florian
Huys, Quentin J. M.
Heinz, Andreas
Source :
European Archives of Psychiatry & Clinical Neuroscience. Apr2019, Vol. 269 Issue 3, p295-308. 14p. 1 Diagram, 3 Graphs.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The influence of Pavlovian conditioned stimuli on ongoing behavior may contribute to explaining how alcohol cues stimulate drug seeking and intake. Using a Pavlovian-instrumental transfer task, we investigated the effects of alcohol-related cues on approach behavior (i.e., instrumental response behavior) and its neural correlates, and related both to the relapse after detoxification in alcohol-dependent patients. Thirty-one recently detoxified alcohol-dependent patients and 24 healthy controls underwent instrumental training, where approach or non-approach towards initially neutral stimuli was reinforced by monetary incentives. Approach behavior was tested during extinction with either alcohol-related or neutral stimuli (as Pavlovian cues) presented in the background during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Patients were subsequently followed up for 6 months. We observed that alcohol-related background stimuli inhibited the approach behavior in detoxified alcohol-dependent patients (t = − 3.86, p <.001), but not in healthy controls (t = − 0.92, p =.36). This behavioral inhibition was associated with neural activation in the nucleus accumbens (NAcc) (t(30) = 2.06, p <.05). Interestingly, both the effects were only present in subsequent abstainers, but not relapsers and in those with mild but not severe dependence. Our data show that alcohol-related cues can acquire inhibitory behavioral features typical of aversive stimuli despite being accompanied by a stronger NAcc activation, suggesting salience attribution. The fact that these findings are restricted to abstinence and milder illness suggests that they may be potential resilience factors. Clinical trial: LeAD study, http://www.lead-studie.de, NCT01679145. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09401334
Volume :
269
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
European Archives of Psychiatry & Clinical Neuroscience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
135861110
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00406-017-0860-4