 Modulation of brain response to emotional images by alcohol cues in  alcohol-dependent patients
Modulation of brain response to emotional images by alcohol cues in  alcohol-dependent patientsAddiction Biology OnlineEarly Articles 27 May 2008
Alcohol is often used to modulate mood states. Alcohol drinkers  report that they use alcohol both to enhance positive affect and to reduce  dysphoria, and alcohol-dependent patients specifically state reduction of  negative affect as a primary reason for drinking.
The current study proposes  that alcohol cues may reduce negative affect in alcoholics. We used functional  magnetic resonance imaging to examine brain activation in response to  combination images that juxtaposed negative or positive International Affective  Picture System (IAPS) images with an alcohol or non-alcohol-containing beverage.
We found that in the absence of the alcohol cue, alcoholics showed more  activation to negative than to positive images and greater activation than  controls to negative images. When the IAPS images were presented with the  alcohol cue, there was a decreased difference in activation between the positive  and negative images among the alcoholics, and a decreased difference in response  to the negative images between controls and alcoholics.
Additionally, in the  neutral-beverage conditions, anxiety ratings significantly predicted activation  in the right parahippocampal gyrus but did not predict activation when the  alcohol cues were presented.
In conclusion, the alcohol cues may have modulated cortical networks involved in the processing of emotional stimuli by eliciting a conditioned response in the alcoholics, but not in the controls, which may have decreased responsiveness to the negative images.
Request Reprint E-Mail: gilmanj@mail.nih.gov
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