A multimodal neuroimaging study of youth at risk for substance use disorders: Functional magnetic resonance imaging and [

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Tác giả: Michel Boivin, Mara Brendgen, Natalie Castellanos-Ryan, Sylvana Côté, Sylvia M L Cox, Alain Dagher, Natalia Jaworska, Marco Leyton, Maja Nikolic, Sophie Parent, Jean R Séguin, Richard E Tremblay, Frank Vitaro

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại: 627.12 Rivers and streams

Thông tin xuất bản: United States : Alcohol, clinical & experimental research , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 61129

 BACKGROUND: Adolescent alcohol use is the norm, but only some develop a substance use disorder. The increased risk might reflect heightened mesocorticolimbic responses to reward-related cues but results published to date have been inconsistent. METHODS: Young social drinkers (age 18.5 ± 0.6 y.o.) who have been followed since birth were recruited from high- versus low-risk trajectories based on externalizing (EXT) behavioral traits. All had functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans to measure mesocorticolimbic responses to alcohol, juice, and water cues (High EXT: 20F/10M
  Low EXT: 15F/12M). Most had positron emission tomography (PET) [ RESULTS: Compared with the low EXT group, high EXT participants reported larger subjective responses to the alcohol and juice cues (vs. water). Despite this, a main effect of group was not seen for brain activation responses to the alcohol and juice cues. Instead, low EXT participants exhibited higher mesocorticolimbic activations to alcohol than juice, whereas these activations did not differ in the high EXT group. Across all participants, alcohol (vs. water) blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) responses in the striatum and amygdala were associated with midbrain [ CONCLUSION: Young social drinkers at high versus low risk for substance use disorders did not exhibit larger mesocorticolimbic BOLD activations to alcohol-related cues and their responses poorly differentiated alcohol from juice. These observations raise the possibility that (i) diminished mesocorticolimbic BOLD differentiations between reward-related cues might be a marker of increased risk for substance use disorders, and (ii) previously reported large BOLD responses to drug-related cues in people with substance use disorders might better identify the disease than pre-existing vulnerability.
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