Background: Previous animal and neuroimaging studies have demonstrated that brain function in heroin addicted users is impaired. However, the posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) has not received much attention. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether chronic heroin use is associated with craving-related changes in the functional connectivity of the PCC of heroin addicted users.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCraving is an important factor in relapse to drug abuse, and cue-induced craving is an especially powerful form of this construct. Neuroimaging methods have been utilized to study drug cue-induced craving and neural correlates in the human brain. However, very few studies have focused on characterizing craving and the neural responses to heroin-related cues in short-term abstinent heroin-dependent patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethadone maintenance treatment (MMT) might cause the impairments of neuropsychological and neurotransmitter function in opioid addicts. Whether long-term MMT could lead to the impairment of white matter (WM) in heroin addiction brain is unclear. This study compared the WM integrity in the bilateral frontal lobe, temporal lobe, splenium and genu of corpus collasum (CC) between MMT patients (n=13), former heroin addicts (n=11) in prolonged abstinence (PA), and healthy control subjects (n=15) using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Drug Alcohol Abuse
March 2011
Objective: To investigate the subjective craving and brain response to heroin-related cues in former heroin addicts on long-term methadone maintenance treatment.
Methods: Fourteen participants completed an event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging task including heroin-related and nonheroin-related (neutral) cues. Craving self-reports were collected before and after the task.
Although previous studies reported addiction-related alteration in resting-state brain connectivity, it is unclear whether these resting-state connectivity alterations were associated with chronic heroin use. In the current study, graph theory analysis (GTA) was applied to detect abnormal topological properties in heroin-dependent individuals. Several statistical parameters, such as degree (D), clustering coefficient (C) and shortest absolute path length (L), were included to test whether or not there was significant correlation between these parameters and the duration of heroin use.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMajority of previous heroin fMRI studies focused on abnormal brain function in heroin-dependent individuals. However, few fMRI studies focused on the resting-state abnormalities in heroin-dependent individuals and assessed the relationship between the resting-state functional connectivity changes and duration of heroin use. In the present study, discrete cosine transform (DCT) was employed to explore spatial distribution of low frequency BOLD oscillations in heroin-dependent individuals and healthy subjects during resting-state; meanwhile resting-state functional connectivity analysis was used to investigate the temporal signatures of overlapping brain regions obtained in DCT analysis among these two groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim Of The Study: To investigate the effect of sodium tanshinone IIA sulphonate (STS), a water-soluble derivative of tanshinone II A, on hypoxic pulmonary hypertension (HPH) in rats and its underlying mechanisms.
Materials And Methods: Rats were exposed to hypoxia for two or three weeks, pretreated with or without STS. We detected mean pulmonary arterial pressure (mPAP), the ratio of right ventricle weight to left ventricle with septum weight [RV/(LV+S)], wall thickness and voltage-activated potassium channel (Kv) 2.