| Literature DB >> 29034263 |
Suchismita Ray1, Bharat B Biswal2, Ashley Aya1, Suril Gohel3, Aradhana Srinagesh1, Catherine Hanson4, Stephen J Hanson4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: While effective connectivity (EC, causal interaction) between brain areas has been investigated in chronic users of cocaine as they view cocaine pictures cues, no study has examined EC while they take part in a resting-state scan. This resting-state fMRI study aims to investigate the causal interaction among brain areas in the mesocorticolimbic system (MCLS), which is involved in reward and motivation, in cocaine users (vs. controls).Entities:
Keywords: Cocaine; Effective connectivity; Mesocorticolimbic system; Resting-state
Year: 2017 PMID: 29034263 PMCID: PMC5635998 DOI: 10.4172/2329-6488.1000279
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Alcohol Drug Depend ISSN: 2329-6488
Figure 1Comparison of the causal interaction between brain regions within the mesocorticolimbic system in cocaine users to healthy controls during resting-state. In Figure 1, the direction of arrows represents a direct causal influence of one region of interest (ROI) on another. The numbers on the arrows are regression coefficients and they denote the strength of causal influence of one ROI on another. The red arrows represent that in cocaine users, but not in controls, ventral tegmental area connected to limbic (hippocampus), midbrain (ventral striatum), and frontal areas in a feed-forward manner during resting-state (ventral tegmental area → hippocampus → ventral striatum → orbital frontal cortex, medial frontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex). Note: HIPP = hippocampus, VenStri = ventral striatum, ACC = anterior cingulate cortex, MFC = medial frontal cortex, DLPFC = dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, OFC = orbital frontal cortex, VTA = ventral tegmental area.