Disrupted resting-state functional connectivity of frontal network in opium use disorder.

Appl Neuropsychol Adult

Department of Psychology, Faculty of Education Sciences and Psychology, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, Mashhad, Iran.

Published: March 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Opioid use disorder (OUD) affects how the brain's reward system works and is linked with mental health problems.
  • A study compared brain activity using EEG in 24 healthy people and 31 OUD patients, finding that OUD patients had different brain activity patterns.
  • The results showed that OUD patients had trouble with brain communication, which suggested their brain networks were not working properly like they do in healthy individuals.

Article Abstract

Opioid use disorder (OUD) as a chronic relapsing disorder is initially driven by dysfunction of brain reward networks and associated with several psychiatric disorders. Resting-state EEG was recorded in 24 healthy participants as well as 31 patients with OUD. Healthy participants do not meet OUD criteria. After pre-processing of the raw EEG, functional connectivity in the frontal network using eLORETA and all networks using graph analysis method were calculated. Patients with OUD had higher electrical neuronal activity compared to healthy participants in higher frequency bands. The statistical analysis revealed that patients with OUD had significantly decreased phase synchronization in β1 and β2 frequency bands compared with the healthy group in the frontal network. Regarding global network topology, we found a significant decrease in the characteristic path length and an increase in global efficiency, clustering coefficient, and transitivity in patients compared with the healthy group. These changes indicated that local specialization and global integration of the brain were disrupted in OUD and it suggests a tendency toward random network configuration of functional brain networks in patients with OUD. Disturbances in EEG-based brain network indices might reflect an altered cortical functional network in OUD. These findings might provide useful biomarkers to understand cortical brain pathology in opium use disorder.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23279095.2021.1938051DOI Listing

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