AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic heroin use leads to impairments in response inhibition, making it difficult for users to control their drug use, especially when exposed to drug-related cues.
  • The study involved analyzing brain responses in 16 long-term heroin abstainers compared to 16 healthy controls while they were shown neutral and drug-related images.
  • Results indicated that heroin abstainers exhibited significant deficits in response inhibition specifically triggered by drug cues, suggesting lasting effects on their ability to resist temptation, which could help assess relapse risk and inform treatment strategies.

Article Abstract

Rationale: Chronic heroin use can cause deficits in response inhibition, leading to a loss of control over drug use, particularly in the context of drug-related cues. Unfortunately, heightened incentive salience and motivational bias in response to drug-related cues may exist following abstinence from heroin use.

Objectives: The present study aimed to examine the effect of drug-related cues on response inhibition in long-term heroin abstainers.

Methods: Sixteen long-term (8-24 months) male heroin abstainers and 16 male healthy controls completed a modified two-choice oddball paradigm, in which a neutral "chair" picture served as frequent standard stimuli; the neutral and drug-related pictures served as infrequent deviant stimuli of different conditions respectively. Event-related potentials were compared across groups and conditions.

Results: Our results showed that heroin abstainers exhibited smaller N2d amplitude (deviant minus standard) in the drug cue condition compared to the neutral condition, due to smaller drug-cue deviant-N2 amplitude compared to neutral deviant-N2. Moreover, heroin abstainers had smaller N2d amplitude compared with the healthy controls in the drug cue condition, due to the heroin abstainers having reduced deviant-N2 amplitude compared to standard-N2 in the drug cue condition, which reversed in the healthy controls.

Conclusions: Our findings suggested that heroin addicts still show response inhibition deficits specifically for drug-related cues after longer-term abstinence. The inhibition-related N2 modulation for drug-related could be used as a novel electrophysiological index with clinical implications for assessing the risk of relapse and treatment outcome for heroin users.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00213-017-4707-5DOI Listing

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