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Individuals with drug use disorders seek drugs over other rewarding activities, and exhibit neurochemical deficits related to dopamine, which is involved in value-based learning and decision-making. Thus, a dopaminergic disturbance may underpin drug-biased choice in addiction. Classical drug-choice assessments, which offer drug-consumption opportunities, are inappropriate for addicted individuals seeking treatment or abstaining. Fifteen recently abstinent methamphetamine users and 15 healthy controls completed two laboratory paradigms of 'simulated' drug choice (choice for drug-related vs affectively pleasant, unpleasant, and neutral images), and underwent positron emission tomography measurements of dopamine D2-type receptor availability, indicated by binding potential (BP) for [F]fallypride. Thirteen of the methamphetamine users and 10 controls also underwent [C]NNC112 PET scans to measure dopamine D1-type receptor availability. Group analyses showed that, compared with controls, methamphetamine users chose to view more methamphetamine-related images on one task, with a similar trend on the second task. Regression analyses showed that, on both tasks, the more methamphetamine users chose to view methamphetamine images, specifically vs pleasant images (the most frequently chosen images across all participants), the lower was their D2-type BP in the lateral orbitofrontal cortex, an important region in value-based choice. No associations were observed with D2-type BP in striatal regions, or with D1-type BP in any region. These results identify a neurochemical correlate for a laboratory drug-seeking paradigm that can be administered to treatment-seeking and abstaining drug-addicted individuals. More broadly, these results refine the central hypothesis that dopamine-system deficits contribute to drug-biased decision-making in addiction, here showing a role for the orbitofrontal cortex.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5809782 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/npp.2017.138 | DOI Listing |
Nihon Yakurigaku Zasshi
August 2025
Department of Pharmaceutical Therapy and Neuropharmacology, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Toyama.
More than half of chronic methamphetamine (METH) users exhibit multi-domain cognitive deficits, including impaired attention, executive function, and memory. MRI studies consistently demonstrate hippocampal atrophy and frontotemporal cortical thinning; these structural changes spatially overlap with glial activation, indicating the coexistence of morphological damage and ongoing neuroinflammation. To clarify causality, we developed a mouse model in which low-dose METH is micro-infused into the nucleus accumbens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Health Serv Res
August 2025
Department of Social and Community Health, School of Population Health, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, 1142, New Zealand.
Background: Methamphetamine is the second most used illicit drug in Aotearoa New Zealand, after cannabis. Regular and heavy users of methamphetamine are likely to develop methamphetamine use disorder (MUD), and significant health and psychiatric harm. Effective treatments for MUD are limited, and relapses are common.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Emerg Med
August 2025
Department of Emergency Medicine, School of Clinical Medicine, Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Hong Kong S.A.R., China.
Background: Methamphetamine use is associated with frequent emergency department (ED) utilization, but factors associated with drug-related ED re-attendance are understudied. We aimed to characterize the pattern of 30-day drug-related ED re-attendance and evaluate the impact of the severity of acute toxicity and psychosocial interventions on such re-attendances.
Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of 815 episodes of acute methamphetamine toxicity reported to the Hong Kong Poison Control Centre from all local public EDs between January 1, 2010, and December 31, 2019.
Traffic Inj Prev
August 2025
MAIC/UniSC Road Safety Research Collaboration, School of Law and Society, University of the Sunshine Coast, Sippy Downs, Australia.
Objective: This study sought to investigate the thematic links between (MA) users' consumption patterns; their perceptions about the effects that MA has on their thoughts, feelings, and behavior; and their tendency to drive following MA consumption.
Methods: Seventeen MA users were recruited through a combination of social media advertising and third-party outreach. Participants completed a semi-structured interview lasting approximately 30 min.
Addict Behav
August 2025
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Center for Indigenous Health, United States.
We describe stages of opioid and psychostimulant use (i.e., onset of use and progression to dependence) over the early life course within Indigenous communities where drug overdose impacts have been most extreme.
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