| Literature DB >> 27977717 |
Yanhui Liao1,2, Jinsong Tang1,2, Jianbin Liu3, An Xie3, Mei Yang1,4,5, Maritza Johnson2, Xuyi Wang1, Qijian Deng1, Hongxian Chen1, Xiaojun Xiang1, Tieqiao Liu1, Xiaogang Chen1, Ming Song6, Wei Hao1.
Abstract
Disintegration in thalamocortical integration suggests its role in the mechanistic 'switch' from recreational to dysregulated drug seeking/addiction. In this study, we aimed to address whether thalamic nuclear groups show altered functional connectivity within the cerebral cortex in chronic ketamine users. One hundred and thirty subjects (41 ketamine users and 89 control subjects) underwent rsfMRI (resting-state functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging). Based on partial correlation functional connectivity analysis we partitioned the thalamus into six nuclear groups that correspond well with human histology. Then, in the area of each nuclear group, the functional connectivity differences between the chronic ketamine user group and normal control group were investigated. We found that the ketamine user group showed significantly less connectivity between the thalamic nuclear groups and the cortical regions-of-interest, including the prefrontal cortex, the motor cortex /supplementary motor area, and the posterior parietal cortex. However, no increased thalamic connectivity was observed for these regions as compared with controls. This study provides the first evidence of abnormal thalamocortical connectivity of resting state brain activity in chronic ketamine users. Further understanding of pathophysiological mechanisms of the thalamus in addiction (ketamine addiction) may facilitate the evaluation of much-needed novel pharmacological agents for improved therapy of this complex disease.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27977717 PMCID: PMC5157971 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0167381
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 2Functional connectivity patterns between the posterior parietal area and the right lateral dorsal nucleus (MNI (x,y,z) coordinate: (12, -18, 15)).
Fig 3Location of thalamus subregion ROIs
Fig 1The diffusively decreased thalamocortical connectivity in ketamine-dependent subjects.
A. The 6 cortical regions-of-interest. B. Thalamocortical connectivity of the drug-free control subjects. C. Thalamocortical connectivity of the ketamine-dependent subjects. D. Group differences in thalamocortical connectivity for the drug-free control subjects and the ketamine-dependent subjects. All shown clusters in this study were corrected for multiple comparisons with the corrected statistical threshold of P<0.05 using the AlphaSim program (single voxele p value<0.01, and ≥108 mm3 (4 adjacent voxels). A presentation formation referred to the previous study [26].
Fig 4Functional connectivity patterns of thalamus ROIs.
Fig 5Differences of functional connectivity patterns of thalamus ROIs between drug-free control subject group and ketamine user group.
The purple dotted lines show the significant different brain regions (single voxel P<0.01, cluster size>20 voxels).
Demographic and drug use characteristics of ketamine dependent subjects and drug-free healthy subjects.
| Ketamine users/smokers (n = 40) | Controls (n = 88) | Two sample T test | X2 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years, mean±SD | 26.8 ±4.91 | 27.1 ±5.14 | p = 0.731 | |
| Range (years) | 19–39 | 19–39 | ||
| Male/Female, % | 33/7 (17.5%) | 70/18 (20.45%) | p = 0.696 | |
| Subjects’ education, years, mean±SD | 11.9±2.75 | 14.1±2.94 | P<0.001 | |
| Right/left-handed, % | 39/1 (2.56%) | 85/3 (3.53%) | P>0.999 | |
| Unmarried/Married, % | 25/15(37.5%) | 54/34 (38.6%) | P = 0.902 | |
| Age of first use, years, mean±SD | 23.10±5.21 | ― | ||
| Range (years) | 14–36 | ― | ||
| Duration, months, mean±SD | 41.1±21.79 | ― | ||
| Range (months) | 12–126 | ― | ||
| Times of using ketamine/day | 1.85 | ― | ||
| Range (times) | 1–4 | ― | ||
| Quantity of using ketamine/time (g) | 0.74 ±0.52 | ― | ||
| Range (g) | 0.1–2.5 | ― | ||
| Smokers (>100 cigarette lifetime) | 44 | 44 | ||
| Age of first smoking, years, mean±SD | 15.2±3.09 | 17.9±4.29 | P = 0.001 | |
| Range (years) | 10–30 | 11–30 | ||
| Duration, years, mean±SD | 11.6±4.72 | 10.4±5.67 | P = 0.286 | |
| Range (years) | 1.5–21 | 1.5–21 | ||
| Smoked cigarette/day,mean±SD | 16.6±7.71 | 10.1±11.54 | P<0.001 | |
| Range (cigarettes) | 8–40 | 10–40 | ||
| Other Drugs and alcohol use | ||||
| Alcohol | 30 | 48 | ||
| Ecstasy | 28 | ― | ||
| Ma Gu (amphetaminecaffeine) | 27 | ― | ||
| Methamphetamine(ice) | 23 | ― | ||
| Marijuana | 8 | ― | ||
| Benzodiazepine (only diazepam) | 6 | ― | ||
| Heroin | ― | ― | ||
| Cocaine | ― | ― | ||
| Ketamine craving (cm) | 6.3±2.72 | ― | ||
| Smoking craving (cm) | 5.4±2.18 | 6.5±1.25 | P = 0.016 | |
| Digit Symbol Test (number of symbols) | 64.5±15.83 (n = 40) | 76.43±16.54 (n = 88) | P<0.001 | |
| Trail Making Test A (seconds) | 39.7±11.80 (n = 39) | 39.3±12.57 (n = 88) | P = 0.883 | |
| The Stroop Word Test (seconds) | 66.7±15.78 (n = 37) | 57.5±12.72 (n = 88) | P = 0.001 | |
| The Stroop Color Test (seconds) | 174.5±53.81 (n = 32) | 138.5±39.74 (n = 85) | P<0.001 |
aEach person could have tried more than one drug; drugs have been included even only tried once in the lifetime.
bFour participants reported drinking more than once/week among ketaminesubjects, and three control subjects reported drinking more than once/week.
Differences in thalamocortical connectivity between these two groups (ketamine dependent subjects and drug-free control subjects).
| Seed Region of Interest, Contrast, and Brain regions | Montreal neurological Coordinates (x,y,z) | Peak t value | Cluster size (mm3) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Healthy controls > ketamine dependent subjects | |||
| Left medial dorsal nucleus | -3, -18, 9 | 3.72 | 270 |
| Healthy controls > ketamine dependent subjects | |||
| Left ventral posterior lateral nucleus | -12, -18, 6 | 3.41 | 459 |
| Right ventral lateral nucleus | 12, -15, 3 | 3.34 | 135 |
| Healthy controls > ketamine dependent subjects | |||
| Right pulvinar | 9, -27, 6 | 3.72 | 243 |
| Left pulvinar | -18, -33, 6 | 2.76 | 108 |
| Left pulvinar | -18, -27, 12 | 3.87 | 378 |
| Left medial dorsal nucleus | -3, -9, 3 | 4.32 | 108 |
| Right ventral lateral nucleus | 12, -3, 6 | 3.20 | 162 |
| Right lateral dorsal nucleus | 12, -18, 15 | 3.53 | 405 |
The ketamine dependent subjects group demonstrated significantly less connectivity between the thalamus and the cortical regions-of-interest, including the prefrontal cortex, the motor cortex /supplementary motor area, and the posterior parietal cortex. No increased thalamic connectivity was observed for the ketamine dependent subjects in comparison with the control subjects.