2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2011.04.006
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Unique Brain Areas Associated with Abstinence Control Are Damaged in Multiply Detoxified Alcoholics

Abstract: BackgroundThe ability to abstain from drinking, despite incentives to imbibe, is essential to recovery from alcoholism.MethodsWe used an incentive conflict task to investigate ability to abstain from responding during presentations of incentive cues. Both alcoholic (n = 23) and healthy subjects (n = 22) were required to withhold responding during the simultaneous presentation of two visual stimuli in which the individual presentation allowed responding for monetary reward. Brain structures activated during per… Show more

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Cited by 75 publications
(63 citation statements)
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“…Alcohol withdrawal may increase glutamatergic transmission, leading to hyperexcitation, which dissipates over time, perhaps explaining the temporary nature of the learning deficits (Stephens and Duka 2008). If the vITI procedure requires a switch in strategy from the use of internal timing to predict stimulus onset under baseline conditions to one in which the timing of the response is externally cued by light onset, these observations might suggest that chronic alcohol impairs the ability to flexibly switch strategies to fit the new requirements, consistent with human data on alcoholic patients (Duka et al 2011).…”
Section: Glutamatementioning
confidence: 55%
“…Alcohol withdrawal may increase glutamatergic transmission, leading to hyperexcitation, which dissipates over time, perhaps explaining the temporary nature of the learning deficits (Stephens and Duka 2008). If the vITI procedure requires a switch in strategy from the use of internal timing to predict stimulus onset under baseline conditions to one in which the timing of the response is externally cued by light onset, these observations might suggest that chronic alcohol impairs the ability to flexibly switch strategies to fit the new requirements, consistent with human data on alcoholic patients (Duka et al 2011).…”
Section: Glutamatementioning
confidence: 55%
“…Chandler, Crews, Sullivan and Pfefferbaum in this review. In humans, chronic alcohol exposure and repeated withdrawals disrupts functioning of the VmPFC (Duka et al, 2011). The VmPFC is involved in behavioral and emotional control, regulation of visceral and behavioral responses and decision making (Bechara, 2005).…”
Section: Negative Affect Associated With Alcohol Abstinencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The SFG is particularly vulnerable to atrophy associated with chronic alcohol use (56). Indeed, abstinent alcoholics continue to show deficits in incentive conflict tasks (linked to SFG activity), with increased number of detoxifications being linked to more severe deficits (57). In relation to the present results, the decreased SFG activity associated with increased time of abstinence may reflect less conflict in decision making.…”
Section: Dorsomedial: Superior Frontal Gyrusmentioning
confidence: 69%