Validating incentive salience with functional magnetic resonance imaging: association between mesolimbic cue reactivity and attentional bias in alcohol-dependent patients

被引:109
作者
Vollstaedt-Klein, Sabine [1 ]
Loeber, Sabine [1 ,2 ]
Richter, Anne [1 ]
Kirsch, Martina [1 ]
Bach, Patrick [1 ]
von der Goltz, Christoph [3 ]
Hermann, Derik [1 ]
Mann, Karl [1 ]
Kiefer, Falk [1 ]
机构
[1] Heidelberg Univ, Dept Addict Behav & Addict Med, Cent Inst Mental Hlth, D-68159 Mannheim, Germany
[2] Heidelberg Univ, Psychiat Clin, D-68159 Mannheim, Germany
[3] Kungalv Hosp, Regio Vastra Gotaland, Sweden
关键词
Addiction; alcoholism; attentional bias; cue reactivity; fMRI; incentive salience; VENTRAL STRIATUM; ANTERIOR CINGULATE; INDUCED ACTIVATION; PREFRONTAL CORTEX; NEURAL BASIS; ADDICTION; STIMULI; ABUSERS; BRAIN; HEAVY;
D O I
10.1111/j.1369-1600.2011.00352.x
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Alcohol-associated cues are able to elicit brain activations in mesocorticolimbic networks that are related to the rewarding properties of the drug. Some authors hypothesize that the activation of the mesocorticolimbic reward system triggers an attention allocation to alcohol-associated cues. Yet, no functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies examining this proposition are available. In this fMRI study we investigate the association between attentional bias and neural cue reactivity. Thirty-eight recently abstinent alcohol-dependent patients were examined. fMRI was used to study cue reactivity during the presentation of alcohol-related pictures. A modified visual dot-probe task was used to assess attentional bias. Alcohol-dependent patients showed an attentional bias to alcohol-associated cues as well as cue-induced fMRI activation in response to alcohol-related stimuli in limbic and reward-related brain regions and visual areas. We found a positive correlation between cue-induced brain activation and attentional bias score in a network including frontal, temporal and subcortical regions. This study is the first demonstrating that, in line with previous suggestions, cue induced activation of the mesocorticolimbic reward system triggers focusing attention to substance-associated cues. However, this association could also be bidirectional with the attentional bias enhancing cue-induced neural activity.
引用
收藏
页码:807 / 816
页数:10
相关论文
共 60 条
[21]   Alcohol cue-reactivity in heavy and light social drinkers as revealed by event-related potentials [J].
Herrmann, MJ ;
Weijers, HG ;
Wiesbeck, GA ;
Böning, J ;
Fallgatter, AJ .
ALCOHOL AND ALCOHOLISM, 2001, 36 (06) :588-593
[22]   Addiction and the brain: The neurobiology of compulsion and its persistence [J].
Hyman, SE ;
Malenka, RC .
NATURE REVIEWS NEUROSCIENCE, 2001, 2 (10) :695-703
[23]   Addiction as a Pathology in Prefrontal Cortical Regulation of Corticostriatal Habit Circuitry [J].
Kalivas, Peter W. .
NEUROTOXICITY RESEARCH, 2008, 14 (2-3) :185-189
[24]  
Kelley AE, 2002, J NEUROSCI, V22, P3306
[25]  
Lang PJ, 1998, PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, V35, P199, DOI 10.1017/S0048577298001991
[26]   Attentional bias in alcohol-dependent patients: the role of chronicity and executive functioning [J].
Loeber, Sabine ;
Vollstaedt-Klein, Sabine ;
von der Goltz, Christoph ;
Flor, Herta ;
Mann, Karl ;
Kiefer, Falk .
ADDICTION BIOLOGY, 2009, 14 (02) :194-203
[27]   Posterior cingulate cortex activation by emotional words: fMRI evidence from a valence decision task [J].
Maddock, RJ ;
Garrett, AS ;
Buonocore, MH .
HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, 2003, 18 (01) :30-41
[28]   Neural activity associated with episodic memory for emotional context [J].
Maratos, EJ ;
Dolan, RJ ;
Morris, JS ;
Henson, RNA ;
Rugg, MD .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2001, 39 (09) :910-920
[29]   Cognitive biases and addiction: an evolution in theory and method [J].
McCusker, CG .
ADDICTION, 2001, 96 (01) :47-56
[30]   Effect of naltrexone and ondansetron on alcohol cue-induced activation of the ventral striatum in alcohol-dependent people [J].
Myrick, Hugh ;
Anton, Rayinond F. ;
Li, Xingbao ;
Henderson, Scott ;
Randall, Patrick K. ;
Voronin, Konstantin .
ARCHIVES OF GENERAL PSYCHIATRY, 2008, 65 (04) :466-475