Reduced neural functional connectivity during working memory performance in methamphetamine use disorder.

Drug Alcohol Depend

Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, University of California at Los Angeles, USA; Brain Research Institute, University of California at Los Angeles, USA; Department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology, University of California at Los Angeles, USA. Electronic address: elondon@medne

Published: February 2023


Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Background: Methamphetamine misuse, a surging cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide, identifies Methamphetamine Use Disorder (MUD) as a critical public health problem. Treatment for MUD typically is sought during early abstinence when patients are experiencing cognitive difficulties that may hamper their engagement in treatment and recovery. Cognitive difficulties, particularly those that involve executive functions, likely reflect disruptions in neural functioning involving multiple brain areas and circuits.

Methods: To extend knowledge in this area, we compared individuals with MUD (MUD group, n = 30) in early abstinence (3-11 days abstinent) with a healthy control group (HC, n = 33) on brain activation and network connectivity and topology, using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during performance on an N-back working memory task. The N-back task involves the maintenance and manipulation of information in short-term memory and engages multiple neural processes related to executive functioning. The task was administered at two working-memory difficulty loads (1-back and 2-back).

Results: Compared with the HC group, the MUD group had worse task performance but no differences in task-related brain activation. Network-based statistics analyses, however, revealed that the MUD group exhibited less functional network connectivity at both difficulty loads of the N-back task than the HC group. Additional graph theory analyses showed that path lengths were longer, and clustering was lower across these networks, which also exhibited disrupted small-world properties in the MUD group.

Conclusion: These results suggest a decoupling in network dynamics that may underlie deficits in cognition during early abstinence in MUD patients.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2023.109764DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

early abstinence
12
mud group
12
working memory
8
methamphetamine disorder
8
mud
8
cognitive difficulties
8
brain activation
8
network connectivity
8
n-back task
8
difficulty loads
8

Similar Publications

Tobacco use is the primary contributor to disease and death in the United States, and cigarette smoking is the leading risk factor for lung cancer. Safe and effective treatments for tobacco dependence exist; however, access to and use of tobacco treatment remains low. The most recent Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services National Coverage Determination requires a shared decision-making visit for lung cancer screening that includes counseling on the importance of maintaining cigarette smoking abstinence if a person formerly smoked; or the importance of smoking cessation if a person currently smokes and, if appropriate, furnishing of information about tobacco-cessation interventions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Reduction in reward-driven behaviour depends on the basolateral but not central nucleus of the amygdala in female rats.

J Neurosci

September 2025

Center for Studies in Behavioural Neurobiology, Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada, H4B 1R6

Adaptive behavior depends on a dynamic balance between acquisition and extinction memories. Male and female rodents differ in extinction learning rates, suggestion potential sex-based differences in this balance. In males, deletion of extinction-recruited neurons in the central nucleus (CN) of the amygdala impairs extinction retrieval, shifting behavior toward acquisition (Lay et al.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

People with mental health and substance use disorders (SUDs) experience worse outcomes, including increased mortality risk, compared to those with SUDs alone. Access to safe, stable housing, in conjunction with treatment, such as intensive outpatient programs (IOP), is vital in early recovery. Nevertheless, those with historically marginalized identities may experience increased disparities in accessing and utilizing services.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ketamine has been widely used as a recreational substance by adolescents and young adults in nightclubs and raves in an acute manner, especially during the weekend. Considering the scarcity of evidence on the harmful consequences of adolescent ketamine recreational use on the central nervous system, primarily related to motor function, this study aimed to investigate the behavioral, biochemical, and neurochemical consequences on motor function induced by ketamine use, evaluating the motor cortex, cerebellum, and striatum in early abstinence. Adolescent female Wistar rats (28 days old) received ketamine by intranasal route (10mg/kg/day) for 3 consecutive days.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Steroids remain the primary treatment for severe alcohol-associated hepatitis (AAH), though there is little available tools to predict patient response to steroids. It was hypothesized that phosphatidylethanol (PEth) value will inversely correlate with response to steroid therapy based on Lille score in AAH.

Aim: To assess the relationship of patient factors, focusing on pre-steroid therapy PEth value, to steroid therapy response in AAH.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF