| Literature DB >> 32256392 |
April C May1, Robin L Aupperle2,3, Jennifer L Stewart2,3.
Abstract
Methamphetamine use is associated with substantial adverse outcomes including poor mental and physical health, financial difficulties, and societal costs. Despite deleterious long-term consequences associated with methamphetamine, many people use drugs for short-term reduction of unpleasant physical or emotional sensations. By removing these aversive states, drug use behaviors are negatively reinforced. Abstinence from methamphetamine can then result in a return to previous aversive emotional states linked to withdrawal and craving, often contributing to an increased likelihood for relapse. This negative reinforcement cycle is hypothesized to be a motivating and maintaining factor for addiction. Thus, this review highlights the current evidence for negative reinforcement mechanisms in methamphetamine use disorder by integrating studies of subjective experience, behavior, functional magnetic resonance imaging, positron emission tomography, and event-related potentials and examining the efficacy of treatments targeting aspects of negative reinforcement. Overall, the literature demonstrates that individuals who use methamphetamine have diminished cognitive control and process emotions, loss of reward, and interoceptive information differently than non-using individuals. These differences are reflected in behavioral and subjective experiments as well as brain-based experiments which report significant differences in various frontal regions, insula, anterior cingulate cortex, and striatum. Together, the results suggest methamphetamine users have an altered experience of negative outcomes, difficulties employing effective emotion regulation, and difficulty engaging in adaptive or goal-directed decision-making. Suggestions for future research to improve our understanding of how negative reinforcement contributes to methamphetamine addiction and to develop effective interventions are provided.Entities:
Keywords: anxiety; depression; emotion regulation; methamphetamine; negative reinforcement; neuroimaging; substance use disorder; treatment
Year: 2020 PMID: 32256392 PMCID: PMC7090143 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Figure 1Three-stage model of addiction.
Search terms and article selection.
| Key words | |
|---|---|
| Methamphetamine, amphetamine, stimulant, dependence, use disorder, addiction, craving, withdrawal | |
| Magnetic resonance imaging, fMRI, MRI, brain stimulation, repetitive, magnetic, event-related potential, positron emission tomography | |
| Depression, anxiety, (negative) affect, loss/es, (negative) emotion, stress, sad, angry, fearful, distress, pain, nociception, rejection | |
| Human | |
| 190 | |
| Self-report/behavioral = 21; fMRI = 10; sMRI = 1; ERP = 1; PET = 6; treatment = 25 | |
| Review papers ( |
fMRI, functional magnetic resonance imaging; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; ERP, event-related potential; PET, positron emission tomography; MUD, methamphetamine use disorder.
Subjective, behavioral, physiological, and brain-based findings of negative reinforcement in methamphetamine users.
| Author (first author, year) | Meth Group (N) | Comparison Group (N) | Abstinence Duration (Days) | Meth Chronicity [M(SD)] | Comorbid Diagnoses | Gender Examined? | Methods | NR Variables | Results ↑↓ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 73 non-treatment seeking, current users | None | N/A | 10.6(8.2) yrs | No Axis I psychiatric disorders, no dependence on drugs other than MA or nicotine | No | Self-report questionnaires | Reasons for taking drugs | 23% of respondents reported negative reinforcement reasons for substance use | |
| 40 | 40 narcotics users, 40 CTL | N/R | N/R | N/R | No | Self-report questionnaires | Self-regulation, affective control | MA< narcotics users & CTL: self-regulation and affective control | |
| 60 | 30 | 4.85(1.12) months | 33.12(24.99) months | N/R | Yes; no sig. diff. found | Startle response measured by skin conductance | Self-report emotional response, startle response, skin conductance | MA: ↑ emotional response to anger-eliciting videos, ↓ emotional response to joy-eliciting videos | |
| 12 | 12 | 5.9(1.41) months | 3.9(2.16) yrs | N/R | No | Facial affect recognition task | Ability to identify emotions | MA: ↓ facial affect recognition | |
| 28 | 27 | 19.46(7.86) days | 13.93(7.76) yrs | N/R | No | Facial affect recognition task | Ability to identify emotions | MA: ↓ facial affect recognition | |
| 54 | 58 | 44.85(20.65) days | 4.14(3.42) yrs | 75.9% of MA reported history of psychiatric symptoms | No | Baseline, 3-and 6-months abstinent | Ability to identify emotions | MA: ↓ social emotional cognition at baseline but improvement after 6-months abstinence | |
| 30 females | 30 females | 8.68(3.64) months | 35.23(22.41) months | N/R | No; females only | Cross-sectional | Startle response & self-reported arousal & valence of emotional music stimuli; | Startle, MA<CTL for fearful stimuli; Self-report arousal: MA<CTL for fearful and happy stimuli; Self-report valence: MA>CTL for fearful stimuli | |
| 203 | None | 1.6(3.6) days | N/R | 5.4% current MDD | Yes | One-time self-report assessment | Dep. & Anx. symptoms, craving | Within males only: Positive corr. b/w Dep. symptoms & craving, Positive corr. b/w Anx. symptoms and craving | |
| 222 | None | N/R | N/R | N/R | Yes | One-time self-report assessment | Motivations for MA use | Female > male: using MA to “not feel depressed” | |
| 80 | 80 | N/R | 5(6.1) yrs of dependence, years of use not reported | N/R | No; females only | Cross-sectional | Coping strategies | MA<CTL: seeking social support, cognitive evaluation, problem-solving; MA>CTL: emotion control, physical control | |
| 113 females | None | 8.7(4.8) months of detoxification | 2.0(1.4) years | Dep. & Anx. symptoms | Yes; females only | Self-reports every 3 months for 1-3 yrs while undergoing detoxification program | Mood symptoms, craving | Positive correlation between craving and 5 aspects of negative mood disturbance (fatigue, bewilderment, anxiety, depression, and hostility) | |
| 124 | None | N/R | N/R | Current psychiatric disorder in 53.2% females and 27.4% males | Yes | One-time self-report assessment | Psychiatric symptoms, perceived stress, coping strategies, | Female > male, childhood emotional and sexual trauma, psychiatric and drug problems, poorer treatment outcomes, current psychiatric disorder | |
| 10 | 12 | T1: 6.7(1.6) days T2: 27.6(.96) days | 8.89(4.2) years | Dep. symptoms | No | PET, glucose metabolism | Dep. symptoms | MA>CTL: change in global GM; Within MA: ↑ GM in parietal regions, dep. symptoms neg. corr. w/ parietal GM | |
| 17 | 23 | 173(160) days | N/R | No other substance abuse/dependence besides meth, nicotine, cannabis, alcohol | No | Cross-sectional, fMRI | Monetary loss | Loss anticipation – MA<CTL: VS, posterior caudate; MA only: loss>gains in anterior & posterior caudate | |
| 15 | None | 7.5(2.6) days | 7.80(4.89) years | No Axis I diagnoses other than MA and nicotine dependence | No | RSFMRI within MA only | Dep. & anx. symptoms, ER | Within MA: amygdala-hippocampus RSFC pos. corr. w/ childhood maltreatment, dep., anx., ER & neg. correlated with self-compassion, mindfulness | |
| 19 | 19 | 20.5(8.3) days | 13.6(7.3) years | None | No; males only | Cross-sectional, fMRI | Empathy task | MA<CTL: OFC, hippocampus, mean % correct answers on empathy task; MA>CTL: DLPFC | |
| 19 | 19 | 20.5(8.3) days | 13.6(7.3) years | None | No; males only | Cross-sectional, fMRI | Emotion-matching task | MA<CTL: DLPFC, Insula; MA>CTL: fusiform gyrus, hippocampus, parahippocampal gyrus, posterior cingulate cortex | |
| 17 | 18 | 4-7 days | 10.1(1.3) years | Dep. symptoms | No | PET, glucose metabolism | Dep. & anx. symptoms | MA>CTL: Dep. & anx. symptoms, GM in OFC, posterior cingulate, amygdala, ventral striatum, cerebellum; MA<CTL: GM in ACC, insula; Within MA only: Dep. symptoms pos. corr. w/ GM in amygdala & anterior cingulate gyrus, State/trait anx. neg. corr. w/GM in ACC & Insula | |
| 94 (27 PET) | 102 (20 PET) | Among PET: 4.0(2.59) days | N/R | N/R | No | PET, dopamine | Emotion Regulation | MA>CTL: DERS total score; Across groups: DERS total score pos. corr. w/ amygdala D2-type receptor availability; MA only: DERS + corr. w/addiction severity | |
| 23 | 17 | ≥7.2(3.11) days | 10.4(7.33) years | N/R | No | PET, dopamine | Alexithymia | MA>CTL: alexithymia; Within CTL: alexithymia; pos. corr. w/ D2-type receptor availability in ACC, Insula | |
| 25 | 23 | 9.91(4.57) days | 11.4(7.8) | N/R | No | Cross-sectional, fMRI | Affect processing | MA<CTL: IFG during affect matching, Affect labeling – no group diff. | |
| 12 | 12 | 8.6(3.5) days | N/R | N/R | No | Cross-sectional, fMRI | Affect matching task | MA<CTL: VLPFC, fusiform gyrus; MA>CTL: dACC; Contrast: emotion match>shape match | |
| 53 | 47 | N/R | 11.0(7.7) | None | No | Cross-sectional, fMRI | Emotional faces viewing task | MA<CTL: VLPFC, DLPFC; MA>CTL: self-reported aggression | |
| 11 | 9 | 7 days-1.5 years | 1 month-15 years | Anxiety, depression, hallucinations | No, males only | PET, dopamine | Psychiatric symptoms | MA<CTL: DTD in nACC, PFC, caudate; MA only: severity of psych. symptoms pos. corr. w/duration of use, ↓DTD in caudate/nACC, neg. corr. w/ duration of MA use | |
| 11 | 9 | 7 days-1.5 years | 1 month-15 years | Anxiety, depression, hallucinations | No, males only | PET, dopamine | Psychiatric symptoms | MA<CTL: DTD in OFC, DLPFC, amygdala; Within MA: DTD in OFC, DLPFC neg. corr. w/ duration meth use & severity of psych symptoms | |
| 20 | 22 | 45.47(19.76) | N/R | Comorbid alcohol (n=8), cocaine (n=2), cannabis (n=2), opiate (n=2) use disorders | No | Cross-sectional, fMRI | Loss and aversive interoceptive stimuli | MA>CTL: trait anxiety; MA<CTL; AI, IFG across trials, PI, ACC during aversive stimuli, ACC to punishment/loss & aversive stimuli | |
| 18 relapsed MA | 42 abstinent MA | 33.9 ± 20.1 days | Relapsed: 13.3(8.9): Abstinent: 13.7(10.0) | Comorbid alcohol, cocaine, marijuana, nicotine use | No | Cross-sectional fMRI & longitudinal SU data | Loss | Relapsed<Abstinent – across win, loss, tie: insula, striatum, thalamus, posterior cingulate, precuneus; across loss and tie: AI | |
| 21 | 19 MA-associated psychosis, 19 CTL | Median = 21 days, range 1-240 days | 5.6(2.3) years | No other lifetime or current dx of psychiatric disorder | Yes; within MA insula cortical thickness M>F | Cross-sectional, structural MRI | ER self-report | MA>CTL: entorhinal cortex, insula cortical thickness; MA<CTL: overall ER skills | |
| 21 | 22 | 9.71(8.19) months | 27.14(13.79) months | N/R | No, females only | ERP | Monetary loss | MA>CTL: FRN for loss vs. gain | |
| 26 | 26 | ≥ 24 h | Median=2.8 yrs | N/R | No | Cross-sectional, fMRI | Emotional faces vs. MA cue viewing task | MA cue images – MA>CTL: ACC; Emotional faces – MA<CTL: frontal lobe | |
ACC, anterior cingulate cortex; AI, anterior insula; CTL, control; dACC, dorsal anterior cingulate cortex; DERS, Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale; DLPFC, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; DTD, dopamine transporter density; ER, emotion regulation; FRN, feedback-related negativity; F, female; fMRI, functional magnetic resonance imaging; f/u, follow-up; GM, glucose metabolism; IFG, inferior frontal gyrus; M, male; MA, methamphetamine; MDD, major depressive disorder; nACC, nucleus accumbens; N/R, not reported; OFC, orbitofrontal cortex; PET, positron emission tomography; PFC, prefrontal cortex; PI, posterior insula; RSFC, resting state functional connectivity; SU, substance; T1, time 1; T2, time 2; VLPFC, ventral lateral prefrontal cortex; VS, ventral striatum.
Treatment studies involving negative reinforcement processes in methamphetamine users.
| Author | Meth Group | Comparison Group | Meth Chronicity [ | Comorbid Diagnoses | Gender Examined? | Study Design | Intervention | NR Variables | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 55 HIV+ MSM randomly assigned to positive affect intervention | 55 HIV+ MSM randomly assigned to attention-control | N/R | N/R | N/A | Pre- and post-intervention, 3-month f/u | Positive affect intervention vs. attention control delivered during CM | Negative and positive affect | PA intervention ↑ positive affect, mindfulness, ↓ craving, stimulant use | |
| 526 | None | N/R | Depression | No | Longitudinal, 3 yr f/u | 16-week Matrix Model: CBT, family edu. groups, support groups, individual sessions | Depression symptoms | Dep. severity ↓ treatment adherence Dep. at f/u | |
| 526 | None | N/R | Anxiety | No | Longitudinal, 3 yr f/u | 16-week Matrix Model: CBT, family edu. groups, support groups, individual sessions | Anxiety symptoms | Anx. ↓ treatment adherence, ↑ family, medical, drug, psychiatric problems | |
| 526 | None | N/R | 34% with current dx of mood, anxiety, or antisocial personality disorders | Yes | Longitudinal, 3 yr f/u | 16-week Matrix Model: CBT, family edu groups, support groups, individual sessions | Depression & anxiety symptoms | Anx. ↓ substance use outcomes, ↑ utilization of health services, ↑ psychiatric symptoms 3-years post-treatment | |
| 9 stimulant users assigned to MBRP intervention | 13 stimulant users assigned to health education | N/R | N/R | No | Longitudinal, baseline and treatment end | 8-week MBRP | Salivary cortisol stress response, subjective stress, anxiety, craving | MBRP ↓ salivary cortisol, subjective stress, anxiety, & craving in response to post-tx stress-test | |
| 94 tx completers | 21 d/c tx | N/R | 21% Dep., 17% phobias, 16% PTSD, 20% Borderline PD, 28% ASPD | No | Longitudinal, 30-180 days | Group therapy focused on functional analysis and relapse prevention + NA/AA techniques | Emotion regulation, negative emotionality | ↑ ability to regulate negative emotions ↑ tx persistence -↓ negative emotionality ↑ tx outcomes | |
| 135 MA + comorbid depression | 52 MA without depression | N/R | N/A | No | Baseline, 5 weeks, 6 months | Self-help book vs. 2 sessions CBT/MI vs. 4 sessions CBT/MI | Depression symptoms | DEP+>DEP: severity of MA use, change in MA use from baseline to 5 weeks DEP+ only: ↓ dep. at 5 weeks w/ 3-4 sessions | |
| 162 gay and bisexual men | None | 8.34(5.9) years | 73.2% mild or higher severity depression | N/A | 16-week randomized clinical trial, 26- and 52-week f/u | Random assignment to: CBT, CM, CBT+CM, Gay-specific CBT | Depression symptoms | All participants reported ↓ MA use and dep. symptoms up to 1-yr post-tx, MA use in past 5 days predicted Dep. symptoms, Dep. symptoms did not predict MA use | |
| 111 | 106 | N/R | N/R | No | Baseline, 2-, 4-, 6-month follow-up | 9-session Intensive MI vs. 1-session standard MI + 8 nutrition edu. sessions | Psychiatric problems and problem severity | Intensive MI only: psych. prob. ↓ days, ↓ psych. prob. Severity from baseline to 2-month | |
| 111 | 106 | N/R | N/R | No | Baseline, 2-, 4-, 6-month follow-up | 9-session Intensive MI vs. 1-session standard MI + 8 nutrition edu. sessions | Depression symptoms | Across interventions: ↓ psych. prob. severity from BL to 2-month predicted ↓ use prob. severity | |
| 69 | 66 | N/R | N/R | No | Pre- and post-intervention | 8-week structured exercise program vs. health education sessions | Depression & anxiety symptoms | Exercise intervention: ↓ Dep. & Anx. symptoms overall; Dose effect: ↑exercise sessions ↓ Dep. & Anx. symptoms | |
| 24 | N/A | 83.92(56.04) months | N/R | No | counterbalanced | Acute exercise session vs. active reading session | Craving | Acute exercise session ↓ craving | |
| 25 | 25 | Exer.: 83.32(53.71) months Att. CTL: 83.92 (58.32) | N/R | No | Baseline, 6-week, post-tx | 12-week RCT of aerobic exercise vs. attentional control | Craving | Exercise intervention ↓ craving | |
| 13 | 18 | N/R | Elevated Dep. & Anx. Symptoms but specifics N/R | No | 2 week randomized placebo-controlled, double-blind, trial of mirtazapine | Narrative therapy counseling + mirtazapine or placebo | Depression & anxiety symptoms, stress | No sig. group diff. for any symptom measure | |
| 79 | 72 | Bupropion: 10.42(7.59) yrs Placebo: 9.97(6.10) | Dep. symptoms on HAM-D Bupropion: 19% Placebo: 21% | Yes | Randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial of bupropion | Bupropion + group CBT vs. placebo + group CBT | Depression symptoms | No group differences in dep. symptoms or craving | |
| Baclofen: 25, Gabapentin: 26 | Placebo: 37 | Baclofen: 8.8(7.43) yrs Gabapentin: 10.12(6.28) yrs Placebo: 9.59(5.92) yrs | Dep. symptoms on BDI | No | 16-week, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial of two GABAergic medications: baclofen & gabapentin | Relapse prevention groups + baclofen, gabapentin, or placebo | Depression symptoms | No sig. group diff. in craving, retention, or depression | |
| Sertraline + CM: 61, Sertraline only: 59 | Placebo + CM: 54, Placebo only: 55 | Sertraline + CM: 10.1(6.0) yrs sertraline only: 9.9(6.1) yrs placebo + CM: 8.7(5.4) yrs placebo only: 8.5(4.8) yrs | Depression symptoms on BDI | No | Randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial | 12-weeks: sertraline+CM vs. sertraline only vs. placebo+CM vs. placebo only | Depression symptoms, craving | No sig. effects of sertraline; sertraline contraindicated for MA dependence; CM: higher proportion of 3-weeks abstinence | |
| 36 | 37 | Buproprion: 11(9.6) yrs Placebo: 8.3(5.8) yrs | Depression symptoms on BDI | No | 12-weeks longitudinal | Buproprion vs. placebo, in addition to CM+CBT | Depression symptoms, craving | No sig. diff. between bupropion and placebo on reducing dep. symptoms or craving | |
| 24 rTMS | 24 sham rTMS | Real: 6.5(4.4) Sham: 8.5(4.2) days | Real: 4.6(3.0) Sham: 5.6(3.3) yrs | No, males only | 10-sessions randomized, double-blind, controlled trial | 10 Hz rTMS to left DLPFC | Depression & anxiety symptoms | Real rTMS: ↓ Dep. & Anx. symptoms, craving; Both groups: ↓ withdrawal symptoms → ↓ craving and ↓ anx. but not dep. | |
| 40 rTMS | 40 sham rTMS, 25 waitlist/no treatment | Real: 197.10(16.87); Sham: 189.23(14.31); Wait-list: 190.08(15.17) days | Real: 8.30(.81); Sham: 7.15(.73); Wait-list: 8.92(1.22) yrs | No, males only | 5 sessions/week for 6-weeks, randomized, double-blind, controlled trial | 10 Hz rTMS to left DLPFC | Depression & anxiety symptoms | Real rTMS: ↓ dep. & anx. symptoms; Sham & CTL: ↑ dep. symptoms | |
| 15 rTMS | 15 sham rTMS | Real: 3.00(1.56); Sham: 2.80(1.70) months | Real: 40.33(32.04); Sham: 60.80(41.40) months | No, males only | 5-session, randomized, double-blind, controlled trial | 10 Hz rTMS to left DLPFC | Depression & anxiety symptoms | Real TMS: ↓ craving; Both groups: ↓ dep. symptoms, no change in anx. symptoms | |
ASPD, antisocial personality disorder; BDI, Beck depression inventory; CBT, cognitive behavior therapy; CM, contingency management; DLPFC, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; f/u, follow-up; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; MA, methamphetamine; MBRP, mindfulness-based relapse prevention; MI, Motivational interviewing; MSM, men who have sex with men; N/R, Not reported; PA, positive affect; PD, personality disorder; PTSD, posttraumatic stress disorder; rTMS, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation.