AI Article Synopsis

  • High relapse rates post-detoxification present a major challenge in alcohol dependence, with motivational processes playing a crucial role in this issue.
  • The study assessed event-related potentials (ERPs) during a visual task involving alcohol-related cues in 39 patients (recently detoxified) and 29 controls to explore the relationship between brain responses and relapse rates.
  • Results indicated that abstainers showed reduced P3 amplitude for alcohol cues compared to relapsers, suggesting that diminished sensitivity to alcohol-related stimuli may help protect against relapse within three months post-detox.

Article Abstract

One of the major challenges in alcohol dependence is relapse prevention, as rates of relapse following detoxification are high. Drug-related motivational processes may represent key mechanisms in alcoholic relapse. In the present study, event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded during a visual oddball task administered to 29 controls (11 females) and 39 patients (9 females). Deviant stimuli were related or unrelated to alcohol. For patients, the task was administered following a 3-week detoxification course. Of these, 19 relapsed during the three months follow-up period. The P3, an ERP component associated with activation of arousal systems in the brain and motivational engagement, was examined with the aim to link the fluctuation of its amplitude in response to alcohol versus non-alcohol cues to the observed relapse rate. Results showed that compared to relapsers, abstainers presented with a decreased P3 amplitude for alcohol related compared to non-alcohol related pictures (p=.009). Microstate analysis and sLORETA topography showed that activation for both types of deviant cues in abstainers originated from the inferior and medial temporal gyrus and the uncus, regions implicated in detection of target stimuli in oddball tasks and of biologically relevant stimuli. Through hierarchical regression, it was found that the P3 amplitude difference between alcohol and non-alcohol related cues was the best predictor of relapse vulnerability (p=.013). Therefore, it seems that a devaluation of the motivational significance of stimuli related to alcohol, measurable through electrophysiology, could protect from a relapse within three months following detoxification in alcohol-dependent patients.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbr.2014.12.057DOI Listing

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