* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download nicotine / neuroimaging 2006
Neuroanatomy wikipedia , lookup
Clinical neurochemistry wikipedia , lookup
Neuroscience and intelligence wikipedia , lookup
Human brain wikipedia , lookup
Functional magnetic resonance imaging wikipedia , lookup
Haemodynamic response wikipedia , lookup
Causes of transsexuality wikipedia , lookup
Positron emission tomography wikipedia , lookup
Human multitasking wikipedia , lookup
Biology of depression wikipedia , lookup
Cognitive neuroscience wikipedia , lookup
Time perception wikipedia , lookup
Emotional lateralization wikipedia , lookup
Embodied language processing wikipedia , lookup
Cognitive neuroscience of music wikipedia , lookup
Neurophilosophy wikipedia , lookup
Neuropsychology wikipedia , lookup
Brain morphometry wikipedia , lookup
Neuroplasticity wikipedia , lookup
Sex differences in cognition wikipedia , lookup
Affective neuroscience wikipedia , lookup
Neurolinguistics wikipedia , lookup
Neuropsychopharmacology wikipedia , lookup
Sensory cue wikipedia , lookup
Aging brain wikipedia , lookup
Neuroesthetics wikipedia , lookup
Neuroeconomics wikipedia , lookup
Metastability in the brain wikipedia , lookup
Impact of health on intelligence wikipedia , lookup
NICOTINE / NEUROIMAGING 2006 <400> Database EMBASE Accession Number 2007221707 Authors Okuyemi K.S. Powell J.N. Savage C.R. Hall S.B. Nollen N. Holsen L.M. McClernon F.J. Ahluwalia J.S. Institution (Okuyemi) Program in Health Disparities Research, University of Minnesota, United States. (Okuyemi) Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Minnesota, United States. (Powell, Savage, Nollen) Hoglund Brain Imaging Center, University of Kansas, United States. (Savage) Department of Psychiatry, University of Kansas, United States. (Hall) Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, University of Kansas, United States. (Holsen) Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, United States. (McClernon) Tobacco Neuroscience Research Laboratory, Duke University, Medical Center, United States. (Ahluwalia) Office of Clinical Research, University of Minnesota, United States. (Ahluwalia) Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota, United States. (Okuyemi) Department of Family Medicine, University of Kansas, Medical Center, 3901 Rainbow Boulevard, Kansas City, KS 66160-7370, United States. Country of Publication United Kingdom Title Enhanced cue-elicited brain activation in African American compared with Caucasian smokers: An fMRI study. Source Addiction Biology. 11(1)(pp 97-106), 2006. Date of Publication: Mar 2006. Abstract Current evidence indicates that, although African Americans (AA) are more likely to attempt to quit smoking than Caucasians (CC) in any given year, success rates are lower for AA. However, factors contributing to these differences are not well known. In order to explore potential factors, this study assessed differences in attention to smoking cues between ethnic groups. Participants underwent morning functional magnetic resonance imaging scanning while viewing images of AA models and CC models who were either smoking (smoking cues) or engaging in everyday activities (neutral cues), interspersed with a fixation baseline period. The study was conducted at the Hoglund Brain Imaging Center of the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, KS. We studied 17 smokers (eight AA, nine CC) after 12-hour abstinence and 17 non-smokers (eight AA, nine CC) matched by age, gender, years of education, and handedness. The AA and CC smoking groups were also matched for number of cigarettes smoked per day. All results are P < 0.01, corrected for whole brain. There was a strong ethnicity by condition interaction among smokers in several a priori regions of interest. AA smokers showed a greater increase in response to smoking (versus neutral cues) than CC smokers in the medial prefrontal cortex, right lateral orbitofrontal cortex, and bilateral ventrolateral prefrontal cortex. In smoking versus baseline contrasts, additional areas of greater activation were found in AA, including the right amygdala and left caudate nucleus. No significant differences in cue-elicited brain activation were found between AA and CC nonsmokers. These preliminary findings demonstrate variation in brain activation in response to smoking cues between AA and CC smokers in structures known to be associated with nicotine addiction. Differences in neural response may reflect fundamental differences in attention to smoking cues, which may in turn contribute to differences in effectiveness of nicotine dependence treatments among ethnic populations. copyright 2006 Society for the Study of Addiction. ISSN 1355-6215 Publication Type Journal: Article Journal Name Addiction Biology Volume 11 Issue Part 1 Page 97-106 Year of Publication 2006 Date of Publication Mar 2006 ALCOHOL / NEUROIMAGING 2006 <402> Database EMBASE Accession Number 2007221701 Authors Lingford-Hughes A.R. Daglish M.R.C. Stevenson B.J. Feeney A. Pandit S.A. Wilson S.J. Myles J. Grasby P.M. Nutt D.J. Institution (Lingford-Hughes, Daglish, Stevenson, Feeney, Pandit, Wilson, Myles, Nutt) Psychopharmacology Unit, University of Bristol, United Kingdom. (Lingford-Hughes, Daglish, Stevenson, Feeney, Pandit, Grasby) MRC Clinical Sciences Centre, Imperial College School of Medicine, United Kingdom. (Stevenson) Community Drug Team, Paget House, 2 West Street, Leicester LE1 6XP, United Kingdom. (Myles) Addictive Behaviour and Psychological Medicine, St. George's Hospital Medical School, London, United Kingdom. (Lingford-Hughes) Psychopharmacology Unit, Dorothy Hodgkin Building, University of Bristol, Whitson Street, Bristol, BS1 3NY, United Kingdom. Country of Publication United Kingdom Title Imaging alcohol cue exposure in alcohol dependence using a PET <sup>15</sup>OH<sub>2</sub>O paradigm: Results from a pilot study. Source Addiction Biology. 11(1)(pp 107-115), 2006. Date of Publication: Mar 2006. Abstract Craving is a commonly used term to describe an intense desire for a substance or behaviour; however, its underlying neurobiology is not fully characterized. We have successfully used a cue exposure paradigm with functional neuro-imaging (H<sub>2</sub><sup>15</sup>O PET; PET, positron emission tomography) in abstinent opiate addicts. This study showed that salient cue exposure results in activation in the left anterior cingulate/mediofrontal cortex and elicited craving correlated with activity in the left orbitofrontal cortex. We therefore aimed to replicate this study in alcohol dependence to see if a similar pattern of neural activation occurred. We recruited six abstinent alcohol-dependent and six non-dependent subjects who each underwent a 12-run PET scan using H<sub>2</sub><sup>15</sup>O to measure changes in regional blood flow during exposure to an alcoholic drink or its visually matched non-alcoholic drink. Physiological data and subjective ratings were also recorded. Statistical parametric mapping (SPM99) was used to analyse the PET images. Compared with control subjects, abstinent alcohol-dependent subjects rated their alcohol craving higher at baseline and throughout the study, but there was no significant change in the scores in response to the cues in either group. SPM analysis across all subjects showed significant activation in the occipital cortex in response to the alcohol cue as compared with the neutral one. Analysis of the same regions that were activated in the opiate study, revealed significant increases in signal activation in the left medial prefrontal area, but only in abstinent alcohol-dependent subjects. In conclusion, in abstinent alcohol dependence we suggest that a simple cue exposure paradigm is not sufficiently powerful in functional imaging studies to determine the underlying neurobiology of subjective craving. Comparisons with the finding in opiate dependence suggest a shared region, the anterior cingulate/left medial prefrontal cortex is involved in the cue response in dependent subjects but not controls. copyright 2006 The Authors. ISSN 1355-6215 Publication Type Journal: Article Journal Name Addiction Biology Volume 11 Issue Part 1 Page 107-115 Year of Publication 2006 Date of Publication Mar 2006 NEUROIMAGING 2006 <531> Database EMBASE Accession Number 2006470159 Authors Mouras H. Institution (Mouras) INSERM, Paris F-75005, France. (Mouras) Universite Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris 6, UMR S 742, Paris F-75005, France. (Mouras) Socio-Affective Development Group, Department of Psychology, University of Geneva, CH-1205 Geneva, Switzerland. Country of Publication United Kingdom Title Recent advances and hypotheses regarding the neural networks involved in cruelty and pathological aggression. Source Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 29(3)(pp 234), 2006. Date of Publication: Jun 2006. Abstract Functional neuroimaging studies allow examination of the cerebral networks involved in human behavior. For pathological aggression, several studies have reported a involvement of frontal and temporal areas, reflecting disruption of emotional regulatory systems. Recent genetic studies that bring together reward system dysfunction and violent behavior. copyright 2006 Cambridge University Press. ISSN 0140-525X Publication Type Journal: Note Journal Name Behavioral and Brain Sciences Volume 29 Issue Part 3 Page 234 Year of Publication 2006 Date of Publication Jun 2006 NEUROIMAGING 2006 <585> Database EMBASE Accession Number 2006420814 Authors Chang L. Haning W. Institution (Chang) Department of Medicine, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawai'i, Honolulu, HI, United States. (Haning) Department of Psychiatry, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawai'i, Honolulu, HI, United States. (Chang) Department of Medicine, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawai'i, 1356 Lusitana St., Honolulu, HI 96813, United States. Country of Publication United Kingdom Title Insights from recent positron emission tomographic studies of drug abuse and dependence. Source Current Opinion in Psychiatry. 19(3)(pp 246-252), 2006. Date of Publication: May 2006. Abstract PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Recent positron emission tomographic studies demonstrate a variety of abnormalities in the brains of addicted individuals. This review aims to discuss and highlight these findings. RECENT FINDINGS: The recent findings are as follows: (a) the reward response to an addictive substance is associated with increased dopamine release in the striatum. (b) Activation of the orbitofrontal region is involved in the reinforcing properties of a drug. (c) Behavioral, cognitive and affective abnormalities are associated with alterations in specific brain networks and regions (e.g., prefrontal cortices) in drug abusers. (d) Personality traits may play a role in the susceptibility to addiction and the brain's responses to drugs. (e) Sex-differences exist for cue-induced craving. (f) Several studies have confirmed decreased D2 receptors in drug users, which is associated with increased salience to drug cues. (g) Serotonergic transporters are decreased in the current users of 3,4-methylene-deoxymethamphetamine but found normal in the past users of 3,4-methylene-deoxymethamphetamine. SUMMARY: Abnormalities in the dopaminergic, opioid, and serotonergic systems in drug abusers are seen in positron emission tomography scans. Decreased D2 receptor densities in drug users, whether premorbid or the consequence of substance misuse, imply a source of the susceptibility to relapse of this population. Insights from these studies could lead to better treatment approaches targeting specific neurotransmitter systems. copyright 2006 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. ISSN 0951-7367 Publication Type Journal: Review Journal Name Current Opinion in Psychiatry Volume 19 Issue Part 3 Page 246-252 Year of Publication 2006 Date of Publication May 2006