Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10444611 | Behaviour Research and Therapy | 2010 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Conditioned responses to drug-related environmental cues (such as craving) play a critical role in relapse to drug use. Animal models demonstrate that repeated exposure to drug-associated cues in the absence of drug administration leads to the extinction of conditioned responses, but the few existing clinical trials focused on extinction of conditioned responses to drug-related cues in drug-dependent individuals show equivocal results. The current study examined drug-related cue reactivity and response extinction in a laboratory setting in methamphetamine-dependent individuals. Methamphetamine cue-elicited craving was extinguished during two sessions of repeated (3) within-session exposures to multi-modal (picture, video, and in-vivo) cues, with no evidence of spontaneous recovery between sessions. A trend was noted for a greater attenuation of response in participants with longer (4-7 day) inter-session intervals. These results indicate that extinction of drug cue conditioned responding occurs in methamphetamine-dependent individuals, offering promise for the development of extinction- based treatment strategies.
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Authors
Kimber L. Price, Michael E. Saladin, Nathaniel L. Baker, Bryan K. Tolliver, Stacia M. DeSantis, Aimee L. McRae-Clark, Kathleen T. Brady,