Literature DB >> 23369984

The effect of acute tyrosine phenylalanine depletion on emotion-based decision-making in healthy adults.

Suzanne Vrshek-Schallhorn1, Dustin Wahlstrom, Tonya White, Monica Luciana.   

Abstract

Despite interest in dopamine's role in emotion-based decision-making, few reports of the effects of dopamine manipulations are available in this area in humans. This study investigates dopamine's role in emotion-based decision-making through a common measure of this construct, the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT), using Acute Tyrosine Phenylalanine Depletion (ATPD). In a between-subjects design, 40 healthy adults were randomized to receive either an ATPD beverage or a balanced amino acid beverage (a control) prior to completing the IGT, as well as pre- and post-manipulation blood draws for the neurohormone prolactin. Together with conventional IGT performance metrics, choice selections and response latencies were examined separately for good and bad choices before and after several key punishment events. Changes in response latencies were also used to predict total task performance. Prolactin levels increased significantly in the ATPD group but not in the control group. However, no significant group differences in performance metrics were detected, nor were there sex differences in outcome measures. However, the balanced group's bad deck latencies speeded up across the task, while the ATPD group's latencies remained adaptively hesitant. Additionally, modulation of latencies to the bad decks predicted total score for the ATPD group only. One interpretation is that ATPD subtly attenuated reward salience and altered the approach by which individuals achieved successful performance, without resulting in frank group differences in task performance.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23369984     DOI: 10.1016/j.pbb.2013.01.013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pharmacol Biochem Behav        ISSN: 0091-3057            Impact factor:   3.533


  2 in total

1.  Behavioral and emotional adverse events of drugs frequently used in the treatment of bipolar disorders: clinical and theoretical implications.

Authors:  Alejandro Szmulewicz; Cecilia Samamé; Pablo Caravotta; Diego J Martino; Ana Igoa; Diego Hidalgo-Mazzei; Francesc Colom; Sergio A Strejilevich
Journal:  Int J Bipolar Disord       Date:  2016-02-16

2.  Dopamine and pain sensitivity: neither sulpiride nor acute phenylalanine and tyrosine depletion have effects on thermal pain sensations in healthy volunteers.

Authors:  Susanne Becker; Marta Ceko; Mytsumi Louis-Foster; Nathaniel M Elfassy; Marco Leyton; Yoram Shir; Petra Schweinhardt
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-11-13       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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