Abstract
A large body of evidence indicates the importance of dopamine (DA) activation for ethanol reinforcement, and animal models of alcoholism have implied the involvement of DA D 1 receptors in this context. We studied cortical DA D 1 receptors in nine type 1 alcoholics (late-onset, binge-drinker), eight type 2 alcoholics (early-onset, antisocial) and 10 controls by using [ 3H]SCH23390 as a radioligand in postmortem human whole hemisphere autoradiography. We also evaluated correlations of DA D 1 receptors between the cortical and subcortical areas and between cortical DA transporters and DA D 2 and D 3 receptors by comparing the present results to our earlier studies. On the average, type 2 alcoholics were younger and had more violent causes of death than type 1 alcoholics and controls. There were no statistically significant differences between the groups, suggesting that cortical DA D 1 receptors do not play a major role in alcoholism. However, among type 2 alcoholics, the binding was consistently lower (8.6%–22.3%) than among controls, and the effect sizes showed a large effect in the anterior cingulate (0.90) and frontal (0.87) cortices. Interestingly, among type 2 alcoholics, the correlation of DA D 1 receptors between two ventral midbrain structures (substantia nigra and amygdala) and anterior cingulate cortex was significantly negative, whereas in the type 1 alcoholics and controls, the correlations were significantly positive.
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