Literature DB >> 35175550

Disruption of regional homogeneity in the brains of chronic methamphetamine users.

Lili Nie1, Xiantao Wen2, Wei Luo3, Tao Ju4, Anlian Ren2, Binbin Wu4, Jing Li5, Jinsheng Hu6.   

Abstract

Previous studies have reported evidence supporting structural and functional alterations in the brains of methamphetamine (MA) users. The aim of the present study was to extend current knowledge regarding brain function(s) in MA users by examining regional homogeneity (ReHo). Chronic MA users (51 male, 46 female), who were undergoing supervised abstinence for 12 to 621 days, and 79 healthy controls (43 male, 36 female) underwent resting-state functional brain magnetic resonance imaging. Voxel-wise whole-brain scale group differences in ReHo were examined. The mean ReHo values of significant clusters were extracted, and linear regression was used to identify factors that contributed to these mean ReHo values. MA users exhibited lower ReHo values in the left orbital part of the inferior frontal gyrus extending to the left insula and left temporal pole, left amygdala, and left fusiform gyrus. MA users also exhibited greater ReHo values in the bilateral pre- and postcentral gyri and right cerebellum. Characteristics of MA use, including duration, duration of abstinence from MA, and age at onset of MA use, demonstrated no reliable contribution to ReHo of the significant clusters. Findings of the present study demonstrated that chronic MA use was associated with regional specific disruption of ReHo, which is relatively independent of structural and functional alterations and, apparently, does not recover after relatively long-term abstinence. This disruption may underlie overall neurocognitive deficits in MA users, which is difficult to recover.
© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Abstinence; Methamphetamine; Regional homogeneity; Resting-state; fMRI

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2022        PMID: 35175550     DOI: 10.1007/s11682-022-00637-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Imaging Behav        ISSN: 1931-7557            Impact factor:   3.224


  15 in total

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8.  Mood disturbances and regional cerebral metabolic abnormalities in recently abstinent methamphetamine abusers.

Authors:  Edythe D London; Sara L Simon; Steven M Berman; Mark A Mandelkern; Aaron M Lichtman; Jennifer Bramen; Ann K Shinn; Karen Miotto; Jennifer Learn; Yun Dong; John A Matochik; Varughese Kurian; Thomas Newton; Roger Woods; Richard Rawson; Walter Ling
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