| Literature DB >> 26423806 |
Victor M Tang1, Donna J Lang2,3, Chantelle J Giesbrecht4, William J Panenka5,6, Taylor Willi7,8, Ric M Procyshyn9,10, Fidel Vila-Rodriguez11, Willough Jenkins12, Tania Lecomte13, Heidi N Boyda14,15, Ana Aleksic16,17, G William MacEwan18, William G Honer19,20, Alasdair M Barr21,22.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Psychostimulant drug use is commonly associated with drug-related infection, including the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Both psychostimulant use and HIV infection are known to damage brain white matter and impair cognition. To date, no study has examined white matter integrity using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) in chronic psychostimulant users with comorbid HIV infection, and determined the relationship of white matter integrity to cognitive function.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26423806 PMCID: PMC4590729 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-015-1501-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Diffusion tensor imaging studies in stimulant abuse
| References | n (drug users, controls) | Stimulant | Resultsa | Exclusionsb |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moeller et al. [ | 18, 18 | Cocaine | Decreased FA in genu and rostrum of CC, no difference in other areas of CC | Nonpsychiatric medical disorders which affect the CNS |
| Lim et al. [ | 21, 21 | Cocaine | Decreased FA in inferior frontal cortex, but not superior frontal or occipital cortex | – |
| Ma et al. [ | 19, 18 | Cocaine | Decreased FA in isthmus and splenium of the CC, increased RD in isthmus and rostral body, increased MD in isthmus and rostral body | Medical disorders that may affect the CNS |
| Lane et al. [ | 15, 18 | Cocaine | Decreased FA in parietal and frontal regions (mainly right corticospinal tract, right superior corona radiata, bilateral anterior corona radiata) and anterior CC, increased RD in frontal, parietal, and occipital regions (mainly bilateral corticospinal tracts, superior corona radiata, left posterior corona radiata, left optic radiation, left superior longitudinal fasciculus, left posterior thalamic radiation, left retrolenticular internal capsule) and left posterior body of CC and bilateral anterior CC | Medical disorders that may affect the CNS, comorbid alcohol dependence |
| Bell et al. [ | 43, 43 | Cocaine | Decreased FA in left anterior callosal fibers, left genu of the CC, right superior longitudinal fasciculus, right callosal fibers, and the superior corona radiata bilaterally | Diagnosis of HIV |
| Ma et al. [ | 12, 12 | Cocaine | Decreased FA in bilateral anterior corona radiata, but not in the CC | Medical disorders that may affect the CNS |
| Chung et al. [ | 32, 30 | Methamphetamine | Decreased FA bilateral frontal white matter at AC-PC plane, right frontal above AC-PC plane | Lifetime significant medical illnesses |
| Alicata et al. [ | 30, 30 | Methamphetamine | Decreased FA right frontal white matter; higher ADC left caudate and bilateral putamen | Comorbid medical illnesses, no alcohol or other drug dependence |
| Kim et al. [ | 11, 13 | Methamphetamine | Decreased FA in genu of CC | No screening for HIV status, alcohol dependence, lifetime use of other addictive drug |
| Salo et al. [ | 37, 17 | Methamphetamine | No significant difference in FA or ADC of CC | Substance dependence other than methamphetamine in the past year, alcohol abuse in past 5 years, HIV seropositivity |
| Tobias et al. [ | 23, 18 | Methamphetamine | Decreased FA in right prefrontal cortex superior to AC-PC, genu of CC, mid-caudal superior corona radiata bilaterally, right perforant fibers (hippocampus) | Heavy marijuana or alcohol use, HIV seropositivity |
| Lin et al. [ | 18, 22 | Methamphetamine | No significant difference in FA, RD, MD, or AD for caudate and putamen | Dependence on any other drug except nicotine requiring medical treatment |
– Information not provided, AC-PC anterior commissure-posterior commissure, ADC apparent diffusion coefficient, AD axial diffusivity, CC corpus callosum, FA fractional anisotropy, MD mean diffusivity, RD radial diffusivity
aDrug users compared to healthy controls
bOnly exclusion criteria relevant to drug use or HIV/AIDS
Diffusion tensor imaging studies in HIV/AIDS
| References | N (HIV ± , controls) | Disease duration | On anti-retroviral therapy (%) | CD4 count (mean cells/uL) | Resultsa | Exclusionsb |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pomara et al. [ | 6, 9 | – | 83 % | 288.67 | Decreased FA in frontal lobes. No difference in FA for parietal lobe, temporal lobe, or genu or splenium of CC. Increased FA in the posterior limb of the internal capsule, no difference in anterior limb of internal capsule. No differences in MD | Current alcohol or substance abuse |
| Ragin et al. [ | 11, 11 | – | 100 % | – | No differences in centrum semiovale, caudate, putamen | None relevant |
| Thurnher et al. [ | 60, 30 | – | – | – | Decreased FA in genu of CC, increased ADC in genu of the CC | None relevant |
| Wu et al. [ | 11, 11a same sample as Ragin et al. [ | – | 100 % | – | Decreased FA in splenium of CC. Increased MD in splenium of CC. No differences in genu of CC and frontal white matter | None relevant |
| Pfefferbaum et al. [ | 42, 88 | Mean 8.4 years | 79 % | 546.6 | No significant differences in CC regions | Recent drug abuse or dependence |
| Stebbins et al. [ | 30, 30 | Mean 9.9 years | 77 % | 612.8 | Decreased FA in right middle frontal gyrus, left cuneus, left precuneus, right precentral gyrus, right cingulum, right insula, right internal capsule near pulvinar, increased FA in bilateral medial frontal lobes, bilateral middle frontal gyrus, right interior frontal lobe, left precentral gyrus, right cingulum, right parietal lobes. Decreased MD in right middle frontal gyrus and right ventriculus lateralis. Increased MD in left superior frontal, bilateral middle frontal gyrus, right cingulum, bilateral precentral gyrus, right superior temporal gyrus, left middle temporal gyrus, left cuneus, right anterior and posterior limbs of the internal capsule | Substance abuse within the last 6 months |
| Chang et al. [ | 39, 32 | Mean 13.7 years | – | 461.9 | Decreased FA in parietal white matter and increased MD in frontal white matter, after 1 year follow up increased MD in frontal and parietal white matter, putamen, and genu of CC | History of drug dependence in the past |
| Schulte et al. [ | 19, 17 | – | 68.40 % | 486 | No changes in FA and MD of CC | Axis I psychiatric diagnosis |
| Chen et al. [ | 29, 18 | – | 62 % | – | Decreased FA in frontal, parietal, temporal, occipital white matter and CC in HIV associated dementia subgroup, and in HIV non-dementia subgroup decreased in frontal, occipital white matter and CC. Increased MD in both dementia and non-dementia in frontal, parietal, temporal and CC white matter. Increased AD in parietal white matter and CC in dementia subgroup, and increase in CC in non dementia subgroup. Increase in RD in frontal, parietal, temporal, occipital white matter and CC in dementia while non dementia incrase in frontal, parietal, temporal white matter and CC. No differences in any measures for the internal capsule | – |
| Gongvatana et al. [ | 39, 25 | – | 82 % | 529 | Decreased FA in posterior limb of the internal capsule, right interior longitudinal fasciculus, right optic radiation. No significant differnce in MD | Substance use disorder in last 6 months |
| Pfefferbaum et al. [ | 42, 88a same sample as in Pfefferbaum et al. [ | Mean 8.4 years | 79 % | 546.6 | No changes in FA in internal capsule, external capsule, fornix, frontal forceps, occipital forceps, superior cingulate, inferior cingulate, superior longitudinal fasciculus, inferior longitudinal fasciculus, pontocerebellar tract, cerebellar hemispheres, CC. Increased longitudinal diffusivity in internal capsule and superior cingulate | Alcohol or substance abuse |
| Muller-Oehring et al. [ | 21, 19 | – | 86 % | 519 | No changes in FA of CC | – |
| Hoare et al. [ | 46, 10 | Diagnosis made in last 6 months | 0 % | 211.51 | Decreased FA in rostrum of CC, sagittal striatum, and the cingulum | Recent substance abuse history within 6 months |
| Du et al. [ | 10, 24 | – | – | Decreased FA and increased MD for whole brain white matter | none relevant | |
| Jacqueline et al. [ | 40, 10 | – | 0 % | 193.61 | In subgroup with poor prospective memory (n = 27), there was decreased FA in the corpus callosum, sagittal striatum, and superior longitudinal fasciculus. In subgroup with good prospective memory (n = 13), there was increased FA in superior longitudinal fasciculus. No differences in MD | Recent 6 month drug abuse history |
| Schulte et al. [ | 16, 15 | – | 81 % | 556.3 | Decreased FA in inferior longitudinal fasciculus and uncinate fasciculus | Non alcohol drug abuse or dependence in last 3 months or use of drugs in the past month |
| Stubbe-Drager et al. [ | 19, 19 | Mean 6.8 years | 68 % | – | Decreased FA in CC, temporal, and posterior region | Current alcohol or substance abuse |
| Wright et al. [ | 42, 21 | Mean 4.5 years in antiretroviral group, 1.5 years in antiretroviral naïve group | 50 % | 384 in antiretroviral group, 371 in antiretroviral naïve | Antiretroviral naïve (n = 21) had decreased MD, AD, RD for each CC region and the centrum semiovale, no differences in FA. No differences in antiretroviral group (n = 21) in any measure | Active substance abuse |
| Leite et al. [ | 34, 27 | Median 13 years | – | 679 | Decreased FA in body of CC, no differences in FA of corona radiata. Increased RD and MD in body of CC, left superior corona radiata, left posterior corona radiata. Increased MD in right posterior corona radiata. No significant differences in any measures of right anterior and superior corona radiata and left anterior corona radiata, cingulate gyri | – |
| Xuan et al. [ | 23, 20 | – | – | – | Decreased FA and increased ADC in CC genu and rostrum, body, and splenium, the lateral periventricular white matter, and frontal and parietal lobar white matter, internal capsule, and occipital white matter in the symptomatic group. In the asymptomatic group, significantly decreased FA and ADC in all regions except internal capsule and occipital white matter | None relevant |
| Zhu et al. [ | 50, 13 | Mean 10.7 years in no cognitive impairment group, 15.1 with cognitive impairment | 82 % | 386.3 no CI, 230.4 with CI | Increased MD in posterior area of frontal, temporal, and parietal lobe for non cognitive impaired, included prefrontal in cognitively impaired, FA decreased only in cognitively impaired subgroup in fibers associated or connected to prefrontal cortex | Abusing drugs or alcohol in last 6 months |
| Kamat et al. [ | 19, 19 | Mean 5.8 years | – | 340 (median) | Decreased FA in bilateral anterior corona radiata, genu of CC, and left orbital-medial prefrontal cortex | Current substance dependence of abuse |
| Nir et al. [ | 56, 31 | Mean 20 years | 95 % | 520 | Decreased FA and MD, RD, and AD increases diffusely through whole brain white matter, greatest differences in CC and projection fibers of corona radiata | Major psychiatric illness |
| Correa et al. [ | 47, 19 | Mea 13.06 years (planning deficit group) and 12.50 years (no planning deficit) | 100 % | 693.41 (planning deficit group) and 606.25 (no planning deficits) | In the subgroup with deficits in planning, decreased FA and increased MD and RD in bilateral anterior thalamic radiations, bilateral inferior fronto-occipital fasciculi, genu and splenium of CC, bilateral superior longitudinal fascicule, bilateral uncinate fasciculi, increased AD in left anterior thalamic radiation, left inferior fronto-occipital, and left longitudinal fasciculi. In the subgroup with no planning deficits, no significant changes in FA, RD, MD, and AD | Illicit drug use in the past year |
| Ragin et al. [ | 15, 20 | Less than 100 days | 53 % | 580 | Decreased FA in the CC and increased MD in caudate | Chronic or active drug abuse |
| Wright et al. [ | 78, 19 | <1 year for primary infection group (n = 62) and mean 11.5 years for chronic infected group (n = 16) | 0 % | 573 for primary infected group, 223 for chronic infected group | Decreased FA and increased MD for CC and whole brain white matter in chronically infected subgroup (n = 16) but not primary infected group of < 1 year (n = 62) | – |
– Information not provided, AC-PC anterior commissure-posterior commissure, ADC apparent diffusion coefficient, AD axial diffusivity, CC corpus callosum, FA fractional anisotropy, MD mean diffusivity, RD radial diffusivity
aDrug users compared to healthy controls
bOnly exclusion criteria relevant to drug use or HIV/AIDS
HIV status
| Patients (n = 21) | |
|---|---|
| Average duration of HIV infection | 8.7 ± 4.3 years |
| Current status HIV or AIDS | HIV 18 (86 %), AIDS 3 (14 %) |
| Previous HIV-related hospitalizations (Y/N) | 11Y (53 %), 10N (47 %) |
| Currently treated for HIV(Y/N) | 15Y (71 %), 6N (29 %) |
| If not currently treated, were previously | 4Y (66 %), 2N (33 %) |
Results of complete blood count and differential
| Controls (n = 17) | Patients (n = 16) | |
|---|---|---|
| White blood cell count (giga/L) | 6.76 ± 1.81 | 4.93 ± 1.61** |
| Helper CD4 (%) | 45.35 ± 5.32 | 28.00 ± 16.04** |
| Helper CD4 Absolute number (per µL) | 874.11 ± 192.32 | 435.00 ± 310.07** |
| Suppressor CD8 (5) | 24.53 ± 7.53 | 45.94 ± 19.94** |
| Suppressor CD8 Absolute number (per µL) | 480.59 ± 198.82 | 836.88 ± 735.46 |
| CD4:CD8 ratio | 2.04 ± 0.71 | 0.96 ± 1.09** |
Numbers indicate mean score (±SEM) for either the patient or control group. Significant difference between groups * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01
Substance use over prior 30 days
| Controls (n = 22) | Patients (n = 21) | |
|---|---|---|
| Alcohol (# using) | 16 | 7** |
| Alcohol (# days) [4.2 ± 3.7 units] | 4.6 ± 5.7 | 2.4 ± 6.5 |
| Heroin (# using) | 0 | 7** |
| Heroin (# days) [0.2 ± 0.15 g] | 0 | 3.4 ± 7.9* |
| Cocaine powder (# using) | 2 | 13** |
| Cocaine powder (# days) [0.52 ± 0.76 g] | 1 | 9.4 ± 12.1** |
| Crack cocaine (# using) | 0 | 19** |
| Crack cocaine (# days) [0.92 ± 1.65 g] | 0 | 18.3 ± 12.3** |
| Amphetamines (# using) | 0 | 6** |
| Amphetamines (# days) [0.38 ± 0.40 g] | 0 | 4.0 ± 8.6* |
| Cannabis (# using) | 4 | 13** |
| Cannabis (# days) [0.95 ± 0.68 g] | 1.6 ± 5.6 | 14.3 ± 13.9** |
Numbers indicate either number of subjects per group using the drug (# using) or mean number of days per 30 days spent using the drug (# days) ± SEM. Significant difference between groups * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01. For number of days using each drug, mean daily intake (± SEM) for both groups for cases who used the drug is included in square parentheses
DTI measures of white matter tracts in HIV positive patients with history of psychostimulant use
| Controls (n = 22) | Patients (n = 20) | Effect size ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Genu of CC | |||
| FA | 0.3838 ± 0.0254 | 0.3517 ± 0.0289 | 1.184; 0.0001* |
| MD | 0.910 ± 0.054 | 0.951 ± 0.039 | −0.864; 0.008* |
| AD | 1.283 ± 0.071 | 1.301 ± 0.047 | −0.296; 0.324 |
| RD | 0.723 ± 0.052 | 0.775 ± 0.046 | −1.056; 0.002* |
| Right ALIC | |||
| FA | 0.3555 ± 0.0229 | 0.3391 ± 0.0233 | 0.710; 0.027* |
| MD | 0.907 ± 0.064 | 0.953 ± 0.060 | −0.740; 0.022* |
| AD | 1.245 ± 0.071 | 1.288 ± 0.061 | −0.647; 0.044* |
| RD | 0.737 ± 0.064 | 0.785 ± 0.063 | −0.756; 0.020* |
| Left ALIC | |||
| FA | 0.3798 ± 0.0307 | 0.3539 ± 0.0190 | 1.002; 0.002* |
| MD | 0.857 ± 0.055 | 0.914 ± 0.042 | −1.157; 0.001* |
| AD | 1.208 ± 0.061 | 1.254 ± 0.049 | −0.827; 0.011* |
| RD | 0.681 ± 0.058 | 0.745 ± 0.042 | −1.254; 0.0001* |
| AC | |||
| FA | 0.3782 ± 0.0499 | 0.3509 ± 0.0332 | 0.638; 0.042* |
| MD | 1.107 ± 0.189 | 1.142 ± 0.200 | −0.180; 0.558 |
| AD | 1.539 ± 0.187 | 1.555 ± 0.239 | −0.075; 0.773 |
| RD | 0.937 ± 0.184 | 0.893 ± 0.191 | 0.235; 0.455 |
Numbers indicate mean score (±SEM) for fractional anisotropy (FA), medial diffusivity (MD), axial diffusivity (AD) and radial diffusivity (RD) values for either the patient or control group; units for MD, AD and RD are (mm2/s × 10−3). Tracts include the genu of the corpus callosum (CC), left and right anterior limb of the internal capsule (ALIC) and the anterior commissure (AC). Values represent group mean ± SD
* Significant difference between groups p < 0.05
Fig. 1Regions of interest include white matter pathways in the forebrain that are important in neurocognitive function and known to be damaged by HIV infection or psychostimulant use. Pathways include the a anterior commissure (sagittal view), b left (blue) and right (red) anterior limbs of the internal capsule (axial view) and c corpus callosum genu (axial view)
Comparison of neurocognitive data between groups
| Test-variable | Controls (n = 22) | Patients (n = 21) | Test statistic | Effect size ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TMT trail A (s) | 31.05 ± 1.22 | 33.81 ± 2.46 | −0.74 | −0.23 |
| TMT trail B (s)b | 66.77 ± 4.70 | 101.29 ± 10.30 | 147.0 (−2.04)* | −0.65 |
| Grooved pegboard dominant hand (s) | 65.86 ± 1.95 | 95.05 ± 5.49 | −3.96** | −1.23 |
| Grooved pegboard non-dominant hand (s) | 71.05 ± 2.03 | 90.35a ± 4.05 | −3.80** | −1.21 |
| RVP A′ | 0.89 ± 0.01 | 0.86a ± 0.01 | −1.84 | −0.56 |
| CVLT-II total recall | 45.86 ± 1.98 | 34.33 ± 2.47 | −2.37* | −0.72 |
| CVLT-II short delay free recall | 10.23 ± 0.74 | 7.00 ± 0.67 | −2.13* | −0.65 |
| CVLT-II long delay free recall | 10.45 ± 0.61 | 7.48 ± 0.79 | −1.67 | −0.51 |
| CVLT-II recognition discriminability | 3.04 ± 0.19 | 2.47 ± 0.17 | −1.30 | −0.40 |
| IED EDS errorsb | 9.55 ± 2.16 | 17.10 ± 2.40 | 168.0 (−1.53) | −0.61 |
| IED Pre-EDS errorsb | 21.41 ± 4.34 | 43.86 ± 7.43 | 191.0 (−0.972) | −0.68 |
Numbers indicate raw scores of group mean ± SEM with no mathematical transformations (lower scores represent better performance on variables measured in seconds or errors)
Significant difference between groups * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01
TMT trail making test, RVP rapid visual information processing, CVLT California verbal learning test, IED intra/extra dimensional shift
an = 20; test statistic = t value from independent t-tests or b Mann–Whitney U (z) value from the non-parametric Mann–Whitney U test for non-normal data
Associations between FA values and cognitive measures
| Cognitive domain | Measure | AC | LALIC | CC genu | RALIC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Visual scanning speed | TMT trails A | −0.051 | −0.288 | −0.157 | −0.114 |
| Cognitive set-shifting | TMT trails B | −0.274 | −0.409** | −0.289 | −0.182 |
| Fine motor speed | GP–DH | −0.338* | −0.468** | −0.475** | −0.384* |
| Fine motor speed | GP–NDH | −0.145 | −0.465** | −0.410** | −0.318* |
| Sustained attention | RVP A′ | 0.364* | 0.403* | 0.335* | 0.094 |
| Verbal learning | CVLT-II total recall | 0.235 | 0.419** | 0.206 | 0.343* |
| Immediate recall | CVLT-II SDFR | 0.234 | 0.376* | 0.065 | 0.242 |
| Delayed recall | CVLT-II LDFR | 0.222 | 0.416** | 0.098 | 0.184 |
| Verbal recognition | CVLT-II recognition | 0.055 | 0.247 | 0.086 | 0.229 |
| Concept shifting | IED EDS errors | −0.122 | −0.053 | −0.280 | 0.052 |
| Concept formation | IED Pre-EDS errors | −0.080 | −0.089 | −0.317* | −0.003 |
Numbers represent Pearson correlations between cognitive scores and FA values
Significant correlation * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01
AC anterior commissure, LALIC left anterior limb of the internal capsule, CC corpus callosum, RALIC right anterior limb of the internal capsule, TMT trail making test, GP grooved pegboard, DH dominant hand, NDH non-dominant hand, RVP rapid visual information processing, CVLT-II California verbal learning test-II, SDFR short-delay free recall, LDFR long-delay free recall, IED intra-extra dimensional shift, EDS extradimensional