| Literature DB >> 30487759 |
Mateusz Gola1,2, Małgorzata Draps1.
Abstract
Compulsive Sexual Behaviors (CSB) are a reason to seek treatment. Given this reality, the number of studies on CSB has increased substantially in the last decade and the World Health Organization (WHO) included CSB in its proposal for the upcoming ICD-11. Sixty percent of the neuroimaging studies on CSB published since 2014 aimed to examine similarities and differences between brain mechanisms underlying CSB, gambling disorder, and substance use disorders. One of the crucial brain circuits involved in addiction is the reward system involving the ventral striatum (including nucleus accumbens). There are two distinct theories describing ventral striatal activity in addictions: Incentive Salience Theory (IST) and Reward Deficiency Syndrome (RDS). IST describes increased ventral striatal activations during the anticipation of addiction-related reward, while RDS describes decreased ventral striatal reactivity both during the anticipation of the reward and during the reward processing. Here, we aim to investigate how the findings on ventral striatal reactivity in CSB support each of these two addiction frameworks. For this purpose, we conducted a systematic review of neuroimaging studies on CSB available in Pubmed, EBSCO, and Google Scholar between 2005 and 2018. We found nine relevant research papers. Only four of these studies directly investigated processing of erotic cues and/or rewards and reported findings related to ventral striatum activations. Three of these studies indicate increased ventral striatal reactivity for erotic stimuli, which is consistent with IST and does not support predictions based on RDS. Therefore, the current state of this data suggest that CSB is related to increased ventral striatal reactivity during the anticipation of erotic stimuli.Entities:
Keywords: compulsive sexual behaviors; hypersexuality; nucleus accumbens; problematic pornography use; ventral striatum
Year: 2018 PMID: 30487759 PMCID: PMC6246717 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00546
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Research publications on CSB or pornography use using functional resonance imaging.
| Miner et al. ( | 8 CSB and 8 controls; heterosexual males | Clinical interview using Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV, with extra section added to assess the symptoms of CSB Compulsive Sexual Behavior Inventory | Aims: investigate white matter micro-structure and behavioral inhibitory processes in men with CSB Methods: diffusion tensor imaging and Go—No Go Task | Not reported | None | This study was investigating performance in go-no go task, and there was no task related directly to cue or reward processing |
| Voon et al. ( | 19 CSB and 19 controls; heterosexual males | Clinical interview using CSB diagnostic criteria by Kafka Internet Sex Screening Test and extensive investigator-designed questionnaire | Aim: investigate neural correlates of cue reactivity comparing sexually explicit video cues with non-sexual cues in subjects with and without CSB Methods: passive viewing of video during functional magnetic resonance imaging | x = 18, y = 2, z = −2 | Video clips of explicit sexual, erotic, non-sexual exciting, money, and neutral | Exposure to sexually explicit sexual videos in CSB compared to control subjects was associated with stronger ventral striatal response. Exposure to exciting non-sexual videos in CSB compared to control subjects was associated with weaker ventral striatal response. (Contrast: CSB > Control Subjects) |
| Kühn and Gallinat ( | 64 healthy heterosexual males | No CSB populations, but authors assessed time spent on pornography use and symptoms of CSB by Internet Sex Screening Test and Sexual Addiction Screening Test | Aim: investigate neural correlates associated with frequent of pornography use in a healthy population Methods: voxel-based morphometry, resting state functional connectivity, functional magnetic resonance imaging during Cue-Reactivity Task | x = 11, y = 5, z = 3 and x = −24, y = 2, | 60 explicit sexual images and 60 non-sexual images | Negative association between reported pornography hours per week and gray matter volume in the right striatum as well as with functional activity during a sexual cue–reactivity paradigm in the left putamen. (Parametric modulation of BOLD by amount of pornography use) |
| Seok and Sohn ( | 23 CSB and 22 controls; heterosexual males | Clinical interview using CSB diagnostic criteria by Kafka Sexual Addiction Screening Test-R and Hypersexual Behavior Inventory | Aims: investigate sexual desire in men with CSB and identify neural correlates of enhanced desire Methods: passive viewing of images during functional magnetic resonance imaging | x = −38, y = −32, z = 2 | 34 images depicting naked women and sexual activity, and 20 non-sexual images | Higher activation of left caudate nucleus for erotic pictures in CSB group when compared to controls. Lower activation for neutral pictures in left caudate nucleus in CSB group when compared to controls. (Contrast: CSB > Control Subjects) |
| Banca et al. ( | 23 CSB and 40 controls; heterosexual males | Clinical interview using CSB diagnostic criteria by Kafka Internet Sex Screening Test and extensive investigator-designed questionnaire | Aims: investigate novelty-seeking and cue-conditioning in individuals with CSB, investigate neural correlates of cue-conditioning in men with CSB Methods: conditioning imaging task and habituation during functional magnetic resonance imaging | x = 2, y = 8, z = −10 | Colored patterns as a cue and sexual, monetary, and neutral image as a reward | Decreased ventral striatal activations among CSB subjects (when compared to control) as a response for lack of erotic or monetary reward. (contrast: CSB > Control Subjects) |
| Brand et al. ( | 19 healthy heterosexual males | Internet Addiction Test modified for cybersex, Hypersexual Behavioral Inventory | Aim: investigate neural responses to pornographic material that is consistent with subjects' sexual preferences compared to pornographic material Methods: picture valuation task and picture choice task during functional magnetic resonance imaging | x = 14, y = 8, z = −8 and x = −8, y = 6, z = −10 | Explicit sexual images in 3 categories: interactions between a man and a woman, between 2 men, and between 2 women | Increased ventral striatal activation in response to preferred vs. non-preferred erotic pictures. Positive correlations between ventral striatal activation (during presentation of erotic pictures) and score in Internet Addiction Test (s-IAT) ( |
| Klucken et al. ( | 20 CSB and 20 control heterosexual males | Clinical interview using CSB diagnostic criteria by Kafka | Aim: investigate differences in neural activity associated with appetitive conditioning and connectivity in men with and without CSB Methods: appetitive conditioning paradigm during a functional magnetic resonance imaging | x = −15, y = −1, z = −2 | 2 colored squares as a cue and 21 erotic pictures as a reward | This study explores group differences in neural activity associated with appetitive conditioning and shows decreased coupling between the ventral striatum and prefrontal cortex in the CSB vs. control group. (Contrast: CSB > Control Subjects) |
| Gola et al. ( | 28 CSB and 24 control heterosexual males | Clinical interview using CSB diagnostic criteria by Kafka Sexual Addiction Screening Test-R and extensive investigator-designed questionnaire | Aim: investigate neural correlates of sexual and non-sexual incentives in men with and without CSB Methods: incentive delay task during functional magnetic resonance imaging | x = −12, y = 10 z = −6 and x = 12, y = 10, z = −4 | Erotic, monetary, and control symbols as cues, erotic images and money as a reward | This study use incentive delay task with 2 types of rewards—erotic and monetary. Men with and without CSB differed in their striatal responses to cues predicting erotic pictures but not in their responses to erotic pictures or monetary rewards. CSB subjects when compared with control subjects showed increased activation of ventral striatum specifically for cues predicting erotic pictures but not for cues predicting monetary gains. (Contrast: CSB > Control Subjects) |
| Seok and Sohn ( | 17 CSB and 19 control heterosexual males | Clinical interview using CSB diagnostic criteria by Kafka Sexual Addiction Screening Test-R and Hypersexual Behavior Inventory | Aim: investigate gray matter deficits and resting- state abnormalities in individuals with CSB Methods: voxel-based morphometry, resting state functional connectivity | Not reported | None | This study was investigating gray matter deficits and resting-state connectivity in CSB |