Abstract

Although the co-occurrence of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and cocaine dependence is associated with a wide range of negative clinical outcomes, little is known about the mechanisms that underlie this association. This study investigated one potential mechanism-attentional bias to cocaine imagery following trauma cue exposure. Male and female cocaine-dependent in-patients with and without PTSD were exposed to both a neutral and personalized trauma script on separate days, followed by a visual dot-probe task. A 2 (PTSD versus non-PTSD) × 2 (neutral versus trauma script) × 2 (male versus female) design was used to examine hypotheses. Participants were recruited from a residential substance use disorder (SUD) treatment center. Participants were 60 trauma-exposed cocaine dependent in-patients, 30 with current PTSD and 30 without a history of PTSD. Attentional bias was assessed using a visual dot-probe task depicting cocaine-related imagery following both a neutral script and personalized trauma script. Following neutral script exposure, PTSD (versus non-PTSD) participants exhibited an attentional bias away from cocaine imagery. This effect was reversed following trauma script exposure, with PTSD participants exhibiting a greater attentional bias towards the location of cocaine imagery than non-PTSD participants. Severity of subjective distress following trauma script exposure predicted level of attentional bias among PTSD participants. Cocaine appears to serve an emotion-regulating function among post-traumatic stress disorder patients and may be a potential target for brief post-traumatic stress disorder-substance use disorder interventions that can facilitate residential substance use disorder treatment retention.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call