Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7507807 | Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2013 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Background: Differences in fronto-striatal connectivity in problem substance users have suggested reduced influence of cognitive regions on reward-salience regions. Youth with a family history of alcoholism (FH+) have disrupted ventral striatal processing compared with controls with no familial risk (FHâ). As sensation-seeking represents an additional vulnerability factor, we hypothesized that functional connectivity during reward anticipation would differ by family history, and would mediate the relationship between sensation-seeking and drinking in high-risk subjects. Methods: Seventy 18-22 year olds (49 FH+/21 FHâ) performed a monetary incentive delay task during functional magnetic resonance imaging. Group connectivity differences for incentive (reward/loss) vs. neutral conditions were evaluated with psychophysiological interaction (PPI) analysis, seeded in nucleus accumbens (NAcc). Indirect effects of sensation-seeking on drinking volume through accumbens connectivity were tested. Results: NAcc connectivity with paracentral lobule/precuneus and sensorimotor areas was decreased for FHâ vs. increased for FH+ during incentive anticipation. In FH+, task-related functional coupling between left NAcc and supplementary sensorimotor area (SSMA) and right precuneus correlated positively with sensation-seeking and drinking volume and mediated their relationship. In FHâ, left NAcc-SSMA connectivity correlated negatively with sensation-seeking but was not related to drinking. Conclusions: These results suggest preexisting differences in accumbens reward-related functional connectivity in high-risk subjects. NAcc coupling with SSMA, involved in attention and motor networks, and precuneus, a default mode structure, appear to mediate sensation-seeking's effect on drinking in those most at-risk. Differences in accumbens connectivity with attention/motor/default networks, rather than control systems, may influence the reward system's role in vulnerability for substance abuse.
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Authors
Barbara J. Weiland, Robert C. Welsh, Wai-Ying Wendy Yau, Robert A. Zucker, Jon-Kar Zubieta, Mary M. Heitzeg,