Literature DB >> 16290890

Neuroimaging study of sex differences in the neuropathology of cocaine abuse.

Chiang-shan Ray Li1, Kathleen Kemp, Verica Milivojevic, Rajita Sinha.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Female and male substance abusers differ in their disease patterns and clinical outcomes. An important question in addiction neuroscience thus concerns the neural substrates underlying these sex differences.
OBJECTIVE: This article aims to examine what is known of the neural mechanisms involved in the sex differences between substance abusers.
METHODS: We reviewed neuroimaging studies that addressed sex differences in cerebral perfusion deficits after chronic cocaine use and in regional brain activation during pharmacologic challenge and cue-induced craving. We also present results from a preliminary study in which cocaine-dependent men and women participated in script-guided imagery of stress- and drug cue-related situations while blood oxygenation level-dependent signals of their brain were acquired in a 1.5T scanner. Spatial pre-processing and statistical analysis of brain images were performed. Regional brain activation was compared between stress and drug cue trials in men versus women.
RESULTS: The results of our study showed greater activation in the left uncus and right claustrum (both, statistical threshold of P = 0.01, uncorrected; extent = 10 voxels) in men (n = 5) during drug cue trials compared with stress trials. No brain regions showed greater activation during stress trials compared with drug cue trials. In contrast, women (n = 6) showed greater activation in the right medial and superior frontal gyri during stress trials compared with drug cue trials at the same statistical threshold. No brain regions showed more activation during drug cue trials than during stress trials.
CONCLUSIONS: The studies reviewed underscore the need to consider sex-related factors in examining the neuropathology of cocaine addiction. Our preliminary results also suggest important sex differences in the effect of stress- and drug cue-associated brain activation in individuals with cocaine use disorder.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16290890     DOI: 10.1016/s1550-8579(05)80046-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gend Med        ISSN: 1550-8579


  16 in total

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3.  Influence of verbal recall of a recent stress experience on anxiety and desire for cocaine in non-treatment seeking, cocaine-addicted volunteers.

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4.  Incubation of Cocaine Craving After Intermittent-Access Self-administration: Sex Differences and Estrous Cycle.

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5.  Plasma progesterone levels and cocaine-seeking in freely cycling female rats across the estrous cycle.

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Review 7.  New findings on biological factors predicting addiction relapse vulnerability.

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8.  Guanfacine effects on stress, drug craving and prefrontal activation in cocaine dependent individuals: preliminary findings.

Authors:  Helen C Fox; Dongju Seo; Keri Tuit; Julie Hansen; Anne Kimmerling; Peter T Morgan; Rajita Sinha
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9.  Neural correlates of impulse control during stop signal inhibition in cocaine-dependent men.

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10.  Enhanced sensitivity to stress and drug/alcohol craving in abstinent cocaine-dependent individuals compared to social drinkers.

Authors:  Helen C Fox; Kwang-Ik A Hong; Kristen Siedlarz; Rajita Sinha
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