| Literature DB >> 24723862 |
Yansong Li1, Guillaume Sescousse2, Jean-Claude Dreher1.
Abstract
Pathological gambling is a behavioral addiction characterized by a chronic failure to resist the urge to gamble. It shares many similarities with drug addiction. Glucocorticoid hormones including cortisol are thought to play a key role in the vulnerability to addictive behaviors, by acting on the mesolimbic reward pathway. Based on our previous report of an imbalanced sensitivity to monetary versus non-monetary incentives in the ventral striatum of pathological gamblers (PGs), we investigated whether this imbalance was mediated by individual differences in endogenous cortisol levels. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and examined the relationship between cortisol levels and the neural responses to monetary versus non-monetary cues, while PGs and healthy controls were engaged in an incentive delay task manipulating both monetary and erotic rewards. We found a positive correlation between cortisol levels and ventral striatal responses to monetary versus erotic cues in PGs, but not in healthy controls. This indicates that the ventral striatum is a key region where cortisol modulates incentive motivation for gambling versus non-gambling related stimuli in PGs. Our results extend the proposed role of glucocorticoid hormones in drug addiction to behavioral addiction, and help understand the impact of cortisol on reward incentive processing in PGs.Entities:
Keywords: addiction; cortisol; fMRI; glucocorticoid hormones; incentive; pathological gambling; reward; ventral striatum
Year: 2014 PMID: 24723862 PMCID: PMC3971166 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00083
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Demographic and clinical characteristics of PGs and healthy controls.
| Age | 31±7.3 | 34±11.9 | |
| Education level (number of years) | 13.2±1.7 | 12±2.7 | |
| Monthly income (€) | 1537.5±1010.7 | 2191.2±1410.2 | |
| SAI | 88.6±12.6 | 92.5±14.8 | |
| AUDIT | 4.2±3.5 | 6±4 | |
| FTND | 0.1±0.3 | 0.8±1.4 | |
| HADS depression subscale | 3.4±2.3 | 4±2.9 | |
| HADS anxiety subscale | 6.1±2.7 | 7.94±2.9 | |
| SOGS | 0.05±0.2 | 8.76±2.4 | |
| Pick-up frequency of 0.2€ coin (1–5) | 3.2±1.6 | 3.7±1.5 |
sexual arousability inventory
alcohol use disorders identification test
fagerstrom test for nicotine dependence
hospital anxiety and depression scale
south oaks gambling screen
Groups were compared using independent sample t-tests for normally distributed variables, and with Mann-Whitney U tests for non-normally distributed variables.
Figure 1Incentive delay task and behavioral results. (A) Subjects first saw a cue informing them about the type (pictogram), intensity (size of pictogram) and probability (pie chart) of an upcoming reward. Three cases are represented here: a 75% chance of receiving a large amount of money (left), a 25% chance of seeing a low erotic content picture (middle) and a sure chance of getting nothing (control trials, right). Then the cue was replaced by a question mark, symbolizing a delay period during which a pseudorandom draw was performed according to the announced probability. Following this anticipation phase, participants had to perform a target discrimination task within <1 s. The target was either a triangle (left button press required) or a square (right button press required). Both their performance and the result of the pseudorandom draw determined the nature of the outcome. In rewarded trials, subjects saw a monetary amount displayed on a safe (high or low amount, left) or an erotic picture (with high or low erotic content, middle), and had to provide a hedonic rating on a continuous scale. In non-rewarded and control trials, subjects saw a scrambled picture (right). (B) Plot of mean reaction times according to reward type (monetary/erotic) and group (healthy controls/gamblers) in the discrimination task. There is a significant interaction between group and reward type, driven by slower reaction times for erotic compared to monetary cues in gamblers. Error bars indicate SEM. Asterisks denote significance of Tukey’s HSD tests (** p < 0.01).
Figure 2Correlation between striatal cue reactivity and basal cortisol levels in gamblers. (A) Ventral striatal responses to monetary versus erotic cues in gamblers are positively correlated with basal cortisol levels. The scatter plot illustrates this positive correlation within significant striatal voxels extracted from the whole-brain map. (B) This correlation between ventral striatal responses to monetary versus erotic cues and basal cortisol levels is stronger in gamblers than in healthy controls.