与情感相关的大脑活动与青少年药物使用:系统回顾。

IF 2.1 Q3 NEUROSCIENCES Current Behavioral Neuroscience Reports Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Epub Date: 2022-01-20 DOI:10.1007/s40473-021-00241-w
Stefanie F Gonçalves, Mary Ryan, Claire E Niehaus, Tara M Chaplin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

综述目的:本综述旨在总结情感处理(即奖赏、负面情绪刺激、失落)过程中的大脑活动与青少年药物使用(SU)的相关研究:大多数研究揭示了丘脑岛中部、额顶叶和其他网络区域神经活动的改变与青少年药物滥用之间的联系。中脑丘脑-岛叶区域(尤其是纹状体)对积极情绪刺激(如金钱奖励)的招募增加往往与药物的开始使用和低水平使用有关,而这些区域的招募减少往往与药物滥用和高风险药物滥用有关。关于负面情绪刺激,大多数研究表明,中脑-脑岛网络区域的招募增加。还有证据表明,这些关联可能具有性别特异性:小结:未来的研究应采用纵向设计,评估与情感相关的大脑活动在 SU 开始和升级之前和之后的情况。此外,将性别作为调节变量进行研究可能有助于澄清情感神经风险因素是否具有性别特异性。
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Affect-Related Brain Activity and Adolescent Substance Use: A Systematic Review.

Purpose of review: This review aims to summarize the research on brain activity during affective processing (i.e., reward, negative emotional stimuli, loss) and adolescent substance use (SU).

Recent findings: Most research revealed links between altered neural activity in midcingulo-insular, frontoparietal and other network regions and adolescent SU. Increased recruitment of midcingulo-insular regions-particularly the striatum-to positive affective stimuli (e.g., monetary reward) was most often associated with initiation and low-level use of substances, whereas decreased recruitment of these regions was most often associated with SUD and higher risk SU. In regards to negative affective stimuli, most research demonstrated increased recruitment of midcingulo-insular network regions. There is also evidence that these associations may be sex-specific.

Summary: Future research should employ longitudinal designs that assess affect-related brain activity prior to and following SU initiation and escalation. Moreover, examining sex as as moderating variable may help clarify if affective neural risk factors are sex-specific.

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来源期刊
Current Behavioral Neuroscience Reports
Current Behavioral Neuroscience Reports Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
期刊介绍: Under the leadership of Emil Coccaro, Current Behavioral Neuroscience Reports will provide an in-depth review of topics covering personality and impulse control disorders, psychosis, mood and anxiety disorders, genetics and neuroscience, geropsychiatry and cognitive disorders of late life, child and developmental psychiatry, addictions, and neuromodulation.We accomplish this aim by inviting international authorities to contribute review articles that emphasize new developments and recently published papers of major importance, highlighted by annotated reference lists.  By providing clear, insightful balanced contributions, the journal intends to serve those involved in the field of behavioral neuroscience.
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