Brain responses to emotional salience and reward in alcohol use disorder.
Brain Imaging Behav
; 10(1): 136-46, 2016 Mar.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-25875013
ABSTRACT
Heightened neural responsiveness of alcoholics to alcohol cues and social emotion may impede sobriety. To test mesocorticolimbic network responsivity, 10 (8 men) alcohol use disorder (AUD) patients sober for 3 weeks to 10 months and 11 (8 men) controls underwent fMRI whilst viewing pictures of alcohol and non-alcohol beverages and of emotional faces (happy, sad, angry). AUD and controls showed similarities in mesocorticolimbic activity both groups activated fusiform for emotional faces and hippocampal and pallidum regions during alcohol picture processing. In AUD, less fusiform activity to emotional faces and more pallidum activity to alcohol pictures were associated with longer sobriety. Using graph theory-based network efficiency measures to specify the role of the mesocorticolimbic network nodes for emotion and reward in sober AUD revealed that the left hippocampus was less efficiently connected with the other task-activated network regions in AUD than controls when viewing emotional faces, while the pallidum was more efficiently connected when viewing alcohol beverages. Together our findings identified lower occipito-temporal sensitivity to emotional faces and enhanced striatal sensitivity to alcohol stimuli in AUD than controls. Considering the role of the striatum in encoding reward, its activation enhancement with longer sobriety may reflect adaptive neural changes in the first year of drinking cessation and mesocorticolimbic system vulnerability for encoding emotional salience and reward potentially affecting executive control ability and relapse propensity during abstinence.
Key words
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Pattern Recognition, Visual
/
Reward
/
Brain
/
Alcohol-Related Disorders
/
Emotions
Type of study:
Prognostic_studies
Limits:
Adult
/
Female
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Humans
/
Male
Language:
En
Journal:
Brain Imaging Behav
Journal subject:
CEREBRO
/
CIENCIAS DO COMPORTAMENTO
/
DIAGNOSTICO POR IMAGEM
Year:
2016
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country: