The authors explore the possible role of basal ganglia/limbic striatal and thalamocortical circuits in craving and loss of control in alcohol abuse and dependence. Alcoholics may suffer from a defect in the neuronal systems within basal ganglia/limbic striatal and thalamocortical neuronal circuits, especially within the striatoaccumbal-ventral pallidal portion of this circuit or its dopaminergic nigrotegmental modulation. Alcoholic craving may result from a neurophysiologically driven obsession resulting from overactivity within the fronto-thalamic neuronal loop, and loss of control of alcohol consumption may be a neurophysiologically driven compulsion resulting from further impairment of the basal ganglia/limbic striatal portion of this circuit caused by the acute dopaminergic effects of intoxication.
The authors report a case in which pathological lying is associated with right hemithalamic dysfunction as shown by [99mTc]HMPAO SPECT brain scanning. This association has not been demonstrated previously and is noteworthy because it supports the hypothesized roles of the thalamus and associated brain regions in the modulation of behavior and cognition.
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