Literature DB >> 19951293

Greater activation in left hemisphere language-related regions during simple judgment tasks among substance-dependent patients in treatment for alcoholism.

Jodi M Gilman1, Megan B Davis, Daniel W Hommer.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Alcoholism is often associated with impaired emotional control. Alcoholics have also been found to have deficits in frontal lobe executive functions. Recent functional imaging studies have suggested that alcoholics show greater activation than nonalcoholics in circuits involving frontal lobes, as well as more posterior brain regions, when engaged in executive-type tasks. In this study, we compared brain activations of alcohol-dependent patients and healthy nonalcoholics while they performed 2 simple judgment tasks designed to activate frontal circuits involved in a basic form of decision making. Participants completed 1 judgment task that required an emotional judgment and 1 task that did not, which enabled us to study whether alcoholics had greater brain activation while performing executive tasks, and to determine if emotional tasks elicited even greater activation than nonemotional tasks.
METHODS: We performed functional magnetic resonance imaging scans while alcoholic patients and nonalcoholic controls viewed pictures from the International Affective Picture System. In 3 separate runs, participants viewed the images without making a judgment, determined whether the images were indoor or outdoor scenes, or decided if they liked or disliked the images.
RESULTS: There was little difference in brain activation between alcoholics and controls when no judgment was required. When participants made judgments about either the location or whether they liked or disliked an image, however, we observed significantly increased activation in frontal, limbic, and temporal regions in the patients relative to the controls. Increases were particularly robust in the frontal lobe and in areas of the brain associated with language. When we compared the emotional to the nonemotional judgment, the alcoholics, but not the controls, showed greater activation in the ventral mesial frontal cortex.
CONCLUSIONS: Alcoholic patients appear to use brain language areas more than nonalcoholics while making judgments about the setting or liking of emotionally arousing visual images. This increased activation may reflect a compensatory recruitment of brain regions to perform simple decision-making tasks.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19951293     DOI: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2009.01095.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Alcohol Clin Exp Res        ISSN: 0145-6008            Impact factor:   3.455


  12 in total

1.  Assessment of lexical semantic judgment abilities in alcohol-dependent subjects: an fMRI study.

Authors:  D Bagga; N Singh; S Modi; P Kumar; D Bhattacharya; M L Garg; S Khushu
Journal:  J Biosci       Date:  2013-12       Impact factor: 1.826

2.  White Matter and Cognitive Changes in Veterans Diagnosed with Alcoholism and PTSD.

Authors:  Arkadiy L Maksimovskiy; Regina E McGlinchey; Catherine B Fortier; David H Salat; William P Milberg; Marlene Oscar-Berman
Journal:  J Alcohol Drug Depend       Date:  2014-01-01

3.  Cumulative gains enhance striatal response to reward opportunities in alcohol-dependent patients.

Authors:  Jodi M Gilman; Ashley R Smith; James M Bjork; Vijay A Ramchandani; Reza Momenan; Daniel W Hommer
Journal:  Addict Biol       Date:  2014-04-23       Impact factor: 4.280

4.  Frontoparietal connectivity in substance-naïve youth with and without a family history of alcoholism.

Authors:  Reagan R Wetherill; Sunita Bava; Wesley K Thompson; Veronique Boucquey; Carmen Pulido; Tony T Yang; Susan F Tapert
Journal:  Brain Res       Date:  2011-11-11       Impact factor: 3.252

5.  Neuroimaging Impaired Response Inhibition and Salience Attribution in Human Drug Addiction: A Systematic Review.

Authors:  Anna Zilverstand; Anna S Huang; Nelly Alia-Klein; Rita Z Goldstein
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2018-06-06       Impact factor: 17.173

6.  Disrupted regulation of social exclusion in alcohol-dependence: an fMRI study.

Authors:  Pierre Maurage; Frédéric Joassin; Pierre Philippot; Alexandre Heeren; Nicolas Vermeulen; Pierre Mahau; Christel Delperdange; Olivier Corneille; Olivier Luminet; Philippe de Timary
Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology       Date:  2012-04-18       Impact factor: 7.853

7.  Associations Between Cerebellar Subregional Morphometry and Alcoholism History in Men and Women.

Authors:  Kayle S Sawyer; Marlene Oscar-Berman; Susan Mosher Ruiz; Daniel A Gálvez; Nikos Makris; Gordon J Harris; Eve M Valera
Journal:  Alcohol Clin Exp Res       Date:  2016-04-30       Impact factor: 3.455

Review 8.  Profiles of impaired, spared, and recovered neuropsychologic processes in alcoholism.

Authors:  Marlene Oscar-Berman; Mary M Valmas; Kayle S Sawyer; Susan Mosher Ruiz; Riya B Luhar; Zoe R Gravitz
Journal:  Handb Clin Neurol       Date:  2014

9.  Electrophysiological evidence of enhanced performance monitoring in recently abstinent alcoholic men.

Authors:  Mayra L Padilla; Ian M Colrain; Edith V Sullivan; Benjamin Z Mayer; Sharon R Turlington; Lindsay R Hoffman; Amanda E Wagstaff; Adolf Pfefferbaum
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  2010-10-13       Impact factor: 4.530

10.  Development of the complex general linear model in the Fourier domain: application to fMRI multiple input-output evoked responses for single subjects.

Authors:  Daniel E Rio; Robert R Rawlings; Lawrence A Woltz; Jodi Gilman; Daniel W Hommer
Journal:  Comput Math Methods Med       Date:  2013-06-12       Impact factor: 2.238

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