Cecilia A Hinojosa, Siara I Sitar, Joshua C Zhao, Joshua D Barbosa, Denise A Hien, Justine W Welsh, Negar Fani, Sanne J H van Rooij
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Greater reward, lesser regulation of inhibitory processes, and mixed findings of negative emotionality processes in individuals who use substances versus controls were found. Specifically, greater orbitofrontal cortex, ventral tegmental area, striatum, amygdala, and hippocampal activation was found in response to reward-related tasks, and reduced activation was found in the inferior frontal gyrus and hippocampus in response to inhibition-related tasks. Importantly, no studies in trauma-exposed individuals met our review criteria. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
药物使用障碍(SUD)是一个严重的健康问题,而遭受创伤是药物使用升级的一个已知风险因素。然而,创伤与药物使用相关的共同神经机制尚不清楚。因此,我们系统地回顾了神经影像学研究,重点关注可能导致 SUD 和创伤重叠机制的三个领域--奖赏显著性、负性情绪和抑制。利用 PRISMA 指南,我们确定了 45 项研究,这些研究利用了在酒精、烟草和大麻使用群体中测量这些领域的任务。研究发现,与对照组相比,使用药物者的奖赏性更强、抑制过程的调节能力更弱,而负面情绪过程的研究结果则好坏参半。具体地说,在完成与奖赏相关的任务时,发现眶额皮层、腹侧被盖区、纹状体、杏仁核和海马的活化程度更高,而在完成与抑制相关的任务时,发现额叶下回和海马的活化程度降低。重要的是,没有一项针对受过创伤的个体的研究符合我们的审查标准。未来还需要对创伤相关因素的作用进行研究,更多的研究应探讨使用药物者的抑制和消极情绪领域,以发现这些领域中具有临床意义的改变,这些改变会使患者面临更大的罹患药物依赖性成瘾的风险。
Functional Domains of Substance Use and their Implications to Trauma: A Systematic Review of Neuroimaging Studies.
Substance use disorder (SUD) is a significant health problem, and trauma exposure is a known risk factor for the escalation of substance use. However, the shared neural mechanisms through which trauma is associated with substance use are still unknown. Therefore, we systematically review neuroimaging studies focusing on three domains that may contribute to the overlapping mechanisms of SUD and trauma-reward salience, negative emotionality, and inhibition. Using PRISMA guidelines, we identified 45 studies utilizing tasks measuring these domains in alcohol, tobacco, and cannabis use groups. Greater reward, lesser regulation of inhibitory processes, and mixed findings of negative emotionality processes in individuals who use substances versus controls were found. Specifically, greater orbitofrontal cortex, ventral tegmental area, striatum, amygdala, and hippocampal activation was found in response to reward-related tasks, and reduced activation was found in the inferior frontal gyrus and hippocampus in response to inhibition-related tasks. Importantly, no studies in trauma-exposed individuals met our review criteria. Future studies examining the role of trauma-related factors are needed, and more studies should explore inhibition- and negative-emotionality domains in individuals who use substances to uncover clinically significant alterations in these domains that place an individual at greater risk for developing a SUD.