Kate Hull, Hanaan Bing-Canar, Krista Miloslavich, Christopher Holden, Aneet Ahluwalia, Scott D Lane, Joy M Schmitz, Margaret C Wardle
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms are common in people with cocaine use disorder (CUD), and even sub-threshold PSTD symptoms result in worse treatment outcomes. Difficulties with reward functioning may drive this comorbidity. Impairments in reward functioning are prominent in both PTSD and CUD and contribute to development of substance use problems after trauma. There are three distinct reward processes that may be involved in the PTSD/CUD overlap: consummatory reward (ability to experience pleasure), motivational reward (willingness to exert effort for rewards), and reward learning (adapting behavior based on reward history). Here we test whether impairments in these reward functions account for the relationship between PTSD and CUD symptoms.
Methods: This is a secondary analysis of data from a clinical trial (NCT02773212) that measured of PTSD symptoms, CUD severity, consummatory reward, motivational reward, and reward learning in 53 treatment-seeking people with CUD.
Results: Greater PTSD symptoms related to (1) more severe CUD and (2) less ability to learn from reward; however, impaired reward learning did not significantly account for the overlap in PTSD and CUD symptom severity.
Conclusions: The observed relationship between PTSD and CUD symptoms was not accounted for by reduced ability to experience pleasure from rewards, reduced motivation for rewards, or reduced ability to learn from rewards. Thus, treatments that attempt to enhance reward functioning seem unlikely to address this complex comorbidity.
期刊介绍:
For over 50 years, Substance Use & Misuse (formerly The International Journal of the Addictions) has provided a unique international multidisciplinary venue for the exchange of original research, theories, policy analyses, and unresolved issues concerning substance use and misuse (licit and illicit drugs, alcohol, nicotine, and eating disorders). Guest editors for special issues devoted to single topics of current concern are invited.
Topics covered include:
Clinical trials and clinical research (treatment and prevention of substance misuse and related infectious diseases)
Epidemiology of substance misuse and related infectious diseases
Social pharmacology
Meta-analyses and systematic reviews
Translation of scientific findings to real world clinical and other settings
Adolescent and student-focused research
State of the art quantitative and qualitative research
Policy analyses
Negative results and intervention failures that are instructive
Validity studies of instruments, scales, and tests that are generalizable
Critiques and essays on unresolved issues
Authors can choose to publish gold open access in this journal.