演題詳細
Poster
薬物依存、乱用
Drug Addiction and Abuse
開催日 | 2014/9/12 |
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時間 | 11:00 - 12:00 |
会場 | Poster / Exhibition(Event Hall B) |
病的賭博患者の報酬予測時における島皮質の脳活動と罹病期間及び中断期間との関係について
Insular activation during reward anticipation reflects duration of illness in abstinent pathological gamblers
- P2-353
- 鶴身 孝介 / Kosuke Tsurumi:1 川田 良作 / Ryosaku Kawada:1 横山 如人 / Naoto Yokoyama:1 村井 俊哉 / Toshiya Murai:1 高橋 英彦 / Hidehiko Takahashi:1
- 1:京都大学大学院 / Kyoto University Department of Psychiatry, Graduate School of Medicine
Pathological gambling (PG) is a chronic mental disorder characterized by difficulty inhibiting gambling behavior despite negative consequences. Accumulating evidence suggests that PG has many similarities with substance use disorders. Although brain abnormalities in patients with substance use disorders are facilitated by repetitive drug use and recover partly with drug abstinence, the relationship between brain activity and duration of illness or abstinence of gambling behavior in PG patients remains unclear. Here, using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we compared the brain activity of 23 PG patients recruited from a treatment facility with 27 demographically-matched healthy control subjects during reward anticipation, and examined the correlation between brain activity and duration of illness or abstinence in PG subjects. During reward anticipation, PG patients showed decreased activity compared to healthy controls in a broad range of the reward system regions, including insula and cingulate cortex. In PG patients, activation in the left insula showed a significant negative correlation with duration of illness, and showed a marginally significant positive correlation with duration of abstinence. Our findings suggest that insular activation during reward anticipation may serve as a marker of progression and recovery of PG.