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Cocaine
Abuse Blunts Sensitivity to Monetary Reward
Wednesday, November 7, 2007
Brain-circuitry
impairment may underlie difficulty in modifying drug-taking
behavior
Rita
Goldstein
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Credit:
Brookhaven
National Laboratory
New measurements of brain
activity in individuals addicted to cocaine confirm that addicted
individuals have compromised sensitivity to monetary rewards.
"This altered sensitivity
to reward may help explain why some drug-addicted individuals are
unable to modify their drug-taking behavior, even in the face of
well-understood negative consequences and/or positive incentives
for behavioral change," said Rita Goldstein, who runs the
neuropsychoimaging lab at the U.S. Department of Energy's
Brookhaven National Laboratory where the work was done. Muhammad
A. Parvaz, a Stony Brook University graduate student working with
Goldstein, will present the findings at the Society for
Neuroscience annual meeting in San Diego on Wednesday, November
7, 2007.
The researchers studied 18
current cocaine users and 18 age-matched control subjects. They
outfitted each subject with a cap of electrodes to measure brain
activity after instructing the subjects to press or not press a
button in response to certain visual prompts. During the task,
subjects were told they could earn various amounts of money for
fast and accurate performance.
The scientists were
specifically interested in the P300 component of the brain waves
"time locked" to the task (known as Event-Related
Potentials). The P300, a positive voltage potential occurring at
a latency of 300 milliseconds after presentation of a novel or
meaningful stimulus, has been shown to be blunted in individuals
addicted to alcohol and their offspring. The current study
demonstrates, for the first time, a blunted P300 response to a
commonly occurring and generalized abstract reward - money - in
cocaine-addicted individuals with recent cocaine use.
The findings: In healthy
control subjects, the P300 response was significantly higher and
both accuracy and speed of performance were significantly better
and faster, respectively, when a monetary reward was offered
compared with when the reward was absent (45 vs. 0 cents). These
responses to money in both brain and behavioral measures - and
their interdependence - were reduced in cocaine-addicted
individuals. In addition, those who had used cocaine most
frequently during the year preceding the study were the least
able to improve their behavioral performance in response to
monetary rewards.
Interestingly, these results
could not be attributed to decreased task engagement in the
cocaine users, who instead reported being more interested in the
task than the control subjects. It is possible that this
heightened interest could be attributed to recent cocaine use,
which was documented in all cocaine-using subjects in this study
by positive urine screening tests.
"So despite greater
self-reported interest, cocaine users did not respond faster or
more accurately and their brain activity did not change in
response to monetary reward to the same degree as in the healthy
control subjects," Parvaz said.
These results confirm findings
from earlier studies conducted in Goldstein's lab that used
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to demonstrate a
similar compromise in neural sensitivity to monetary reward in
cocaine addiction.
"Individuals with such
blunted neural and behavioral sensitivity to rewards may have a
particularly difficult time responding to abstract incentives
designed to motivate behavioral changes - especially when outside
of a structured treatment environment or when rewards are not
readily available or clearly contingent on behavior,"
Goldstein said.
"It would be interesting
to see if there are any differences between the cocaine users
studied here, who were not seeking treatment, and those in
treatment or abstinent for longer periods of time," Parvaz
suggested. Such a comparison would allow the researchers to
determine whether recovery of sensitivity to reward can be
expected, and assess the time frame for such recovery. The
researchers may also extend the study to see if their findings
can be generalized to negative reinforcement, such as the loss of
money.
This research was funded by:
the Office of Biological and Environmental Research (OBER) within
the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science; the National
Institute on Drug Abuse; Laboratory Directed Research and
Development funding from OBER; a Young Investigator Award from
NARSAD (a mental health research association); a Stony Brook
University/Brookhaven National Laboratory seed grant; the
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism; and by Stony
Brook University's General Clinical Research Center.
Source:
Brookhaven National Laboratory

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