Abstract

BackgroundDysfunction in brain network dynamics has been found to correlate with many psychiatric disorders. However, there is limited research regarding resting electroencephalogram (EEG) brain network and its association with cognitive process for patients with methamphetamine use disorder (MUD). This study aimed at using EEG microstate analysis to determine whether brain network dynamics in patients with MUD differ from those of healthy controls (HC).MethodsA total of 55 MUD patients and 27 matched healthy controls were included for analysis. The resting brain activity was recorded by 64-channel electroencephalography. EEG microstate parameters and intracerebral current sources of each EEG microstate were compared between the two groups. Generalized linear regression model was used to explore the correlation between significant microstates with drug history and cognitive functions.ResultsMUD patients showed lower mean durations of the microstate classes A and B, and a higher global explained variance of the microstate class C. Besides, MUD patients presented with different current density power in microstates A, B, and C relative to the HC. The generalized linear model showed that MA use frequency is negatively correlated with the MMD of class A. Further, the generalized linear model showed that MA use frequency, scores of Two-back task, and the error rate of MA word are correlated with the MMD and GEV of class B, respectively.ConclusionsIntracranial current source densities of resting EEG microstates are disrupted in MUD patients, hence causing temporal changes in microstate topographies, which are correlated with attention bias and history of drug use.

Highlights

  • Dysfunction in brain network dynamics has been found to correlate with many psychiatric disorders

  • Previous studies have suggested that EEG signals and cognitive functions differ between males and females [37], so both age and gender were used as matching variables in this study

  • We investigated the intracerebral current sources of each microstate classes which best differentiated the groups in microstate-related parameters using standardized low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography [50]

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Summary

Introduction

Dysfunction in brain network dynamics has been found to correlate with many psychiatric disorders. There is limited research regarding resting electroencephalogram (EEG) brain network and its association with cognitive process for patients with methamphetamine use disorder (MUD). Methamphetamine (MA), one of the amphetamine-type stimulants, induces toxic effects on the brain, such as oxidative stress, mitochondrial toxicity, excitotoxicity and neuroinflammation [1]. Overall, these effects disrupt the structure and functioning of the brain. The typical characteristics of drug use history are closely associated with cognitive impairment and structural changes of the brain of MA dependent patients [5,6,7]

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