Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6816490 | Psychiatry Research | 2011 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
The Antisocial personality disorder (ASPD), one of the most common co-morbid psychiatric disorders in heroin-dependent patients, is associated with a lack of affective modulation. The present study aimed to compare the affect-modulated startle responses of opioid-maintained heroin-dependent patients with and without ASPD relative to those of healthy controls. Sixty participants (20 heroin-dependent patients with ASPD, 20 heroin-dependent patients without ASPD, 20 healthy controls) were investigated in an affect-modulated startle experiment. Participants viewed neutral, pleasant, unpleasant, and drug-related stimuli while eye-blink responses to randomly delivered startling noises were recorded continuously. Both groups of heroin-dependent patients exhibited significantly smaller startle responses (raw values) than healthy controls. However, they showed a normal affective modulation: higher startle responses to unpleasant, lower startle responses to pleasant stimuli and no difference to drug-related stimuli compared to neutral stimuli. These findings indicate a normally modulated affective reactivity in heroin-dependent patients with ASPD.
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Authors
Marc Walter, Bigna Degen, Constanze Treugut, Jürgen Albrich, Monika Oppel, André Schulz, Hartmut Schächinger, Kenneth M. Dürsteler-MacFarland, Gerhard A. Wiesbeck,