Abstract

Environmental stimuli repeatedly paired with drugs of abuse can elicit conditioned responses that are thought to promote future drug seeking. We recently showed that healthy volunteers acquired conditioned responses to auditory and visual stimuli after just two pairings with methamphetamine (MA, 20 mg, oral). This study extended these findings by systematically varying the number of drug-stimuli pairings. We expected that more pairings would result in stronger conditioning. Three groups of healthy adults were randomly assigned to receive 1, 2 or 4 pairings (Groups P1, P2 and P4, Ns = 13, 16, 16, respectively) of an auditory-visual stimulus with MA, and another stimulus with placebo (PBO). Drug-cue pairings were administered in an alternating, counterbalanced order, under double-blind conditions, during 4 hr sessions. MA produced prototypic subjective effects (mood, ratings of drug effects) and alterations in physiology (heart rate, blood pressure). Although subjects did not exhibit increased behavioral preference for, or emotional reactivity to, the MA-paired cue after conditioning, they did exhibit an increase in attentional bias (initial gaze) toward the drug-paired stimulus. Further, subjects who had four pairings reported “liking” the MA-paired cue more than the PBO cue after conditioning. Thus, the number of drug-stimulus pairings, varying from one to four, had only modest effects on the strength of conditioned responses. Further studies investigating the parameters under which drug conditioning occurs will help to identify risk factors for developing drug abuse, and provide new treatment strategies.

Highlights

  • Environmental cues that are repeatedly paired with drugs acquire the ability to produce conditioned responses through the process of associative learning ([1,2,3], see [4,5,6,7] for reviews)

  • In the previous study [41], conditioned responses were detected on all measures except cue “liking.” In the present study, we examined the effect of varying the number of drug-cue pairings (1, 2, and 4 pairings) in three groups of participants (P1, P2, and P4, respectively)

  • The groups did not differ in these effects except on HR, where the P1 group exhibited a later increase than groups P2 and P4

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Summary

Introduction

Environmental cues that are repeatedly paired with drugs acquire the ability to produce conditioned responses through the process of associative learning ([1,2,3], see [4,5,6,7] for reviews). Drug-associated cues can elicit a multitude of responses thought to be important for the development and persistence of addiction, such as drug craving [8,9,10], physiological arousal [11], emotional reactivity [12, 13], and attentional bias [14, 15]. These cue-elicited responses are believed to facilitate drug seeking behavior in drug-dependent populations

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