Literature DB >> 23609769

Altered visual perception in long-term ecstasy (MDMA) users.

Claire White1, John Brown, Mark Edwards.   

Abstract

RATIONALE: The present study investigated the long-term consequences of ecstasy use on visual processes thought to reflect serotonergic functions in the occipital lobe. Evidence indicates that the main psychoactive ingredient in ecstasy (methylendioxymethamphetamine) causes long-term changes to the serotonin system in human users. Previous research has found that amphetamine-abstinent ecstasy users have disrupted visual processing in the occipital lobe which relies on serotonin, with researchers concluding that ecstasy broadens orientation tuning bandwidths. However, other processes may have accounted for these results.
OBJECTIVES: The aim of the present research was to determine if amphetamine-abstinent ecstasy users have changes in occipital lobe functioning, as revealed by two studies: a masking study that directly measured the width of orientation tuning bandwidths and a contour integration task that measured the strength of long-range connections in the visual cortex of drug users compared to controls.
METHOD: Participants were compared on the width of orientation tuning bandwidths (26 controls, 12 ecstasy users, 10 ecstasy + amphetamine users) and the strength of long-range connections (38 controls, 15 ecstasy user, 12 ecstasy + amphetamine users) in the occipital lobe.
RESULTS: Amphetamine-abstinent ecstasy users had significantly broader orientation tuning bandwidths than controls and significantly lower contour detection thresholds (CDTs), indicating worse performance on the task, than both controls and ecstasy + amphetamine users.
CONCLUSION: These results extend on previous research, which is consistent with the proposal that ecstasy may damage the serotonin system, resulting in behavioral changes on tests of visual perception processes which are thought to reflect serotonergic functions in the occipital lobe.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23609769     DOI: 10.1007/s00213-013-3094-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)        ISSN: 0033-3158            Impact factor:   4.530


  55 in total

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Authors:  Dezhe Z Jin; Valentin Dragoi; Mriganka Sur; H Sebastian Seung
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2.  Mood state and brain electric activity in ecstasy users.

Authors:  A Gamma; E Frei; D Lehmann; R D Pascual-Marqui; D Hell; F X Vollenweider
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Authors:  J H Morrison; S L Foote; M E Molliver; F E Bloom; H G Lidov
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5.  Cerebral activation in abstinent ecstasy (MDMA) users during a working memory task: a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study.

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6.  Quantitative PET studies of the serotonin transporter in MDMA users and controls using [11C]McN5652 and [11C]DASB.

Authors:  Una D McCann; Zsolt Szabo; Esen Seckin; Peter Rosenblatt; William B Mathews; Hayden T Ravert; Robert F Dannals; George A Ricaurte
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Review 7.  Nutritional tryptophan restriction and the role of serotonin in development and plasticity of central visual connections.

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6.  Visual stimuli induce serotonin release in occipital cortex: A simultaneous positron emission tomography/magnetic resonance imaging study.

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