Abstract

Insecure attachment, impaired personality structure and impaired emotion regulation figure prominently in substance use disorders. While negative emotions can trigger drug-use and relapse, cognitive reappraisal may reduce emotional strain by promoting changes in perspective. In the present study, we explored behavioral and neural correlates of cognitive reappraisal in poly-drug use disorder by testing individuals’ capability to generate cognitive reappraisals for aversive events (Reappraisal Inventiveness Test). 18 inpatients with poly-drug use disorder and 16 controls completed the Adult Attachment Scale, the Emotion Regulation Questionnaire, the Brief Symptom Inventory, the Wonderlic Personnel Test, and the Operationalized Psychodynamic Diagnosis Structure Questionnaire, as well as two versions of the Reappraisal Inventiveness Test (during fMRI and outside the lab). Compared to controls, polydrug inpatients reported impaired personality structure, attachment and emotion regulation abilities. In the Reappraisal Inventiveness Test, poly-drug inpatients were less flexible and fluent in generating reappraisals for anger-eliciting situations. Corresponding to previous brain imaging evidence, cognitive reappraisal efforts of both groups were reflected in activation of left frontal regions, particularly left superior and middle frontal gyri and left supplemental motor areas. However, no group differences in neural activation patterns emerged. This suggests that despite cognitive reappraisal impairments on a behavioral level, neural reflections of these deficits in poly-drug use disorder might be more complex.

Highlights

  • Impairments in the processing and regulation of emotion represent “a liability spectrum that underlies many different mental disorders” (p. 154; Kret and Ploeger 2015)

  • We explored neural correlates of cognitive reappraisal in poly-drug use disorders (PUD) and their association with individuals’ capability to generate cognitive reappraisals for aversive situations as well as other variables relevant for emotion regulation

  • Cognitive reappraisal capacity was assessed with two tasks, the original Reappraisal Inventiveness Test (RIT; Weber et al 2014) outside the scanner and a similar Reappraisal Generation Task (RGT; see Perchtold et al 2018b) during fMRI: In each task, participants were asked to empathize with anger-eliciting situations and to come up with different reappraisals to downregulate their anger

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Summary

Introduction

Impairments in the processing and regulation of emotion represent “a liability spectrum that underlies many different mental disorders” (p. 154; Kret and Ploeger 2015). Formed by early dysfunctional interactions between child and caregiver (e.g., Bowlby 1977), insecure attachment (Flores 2011) and an impaired personality structure (HieblerRagger et al 2016) are well-known characteristics of substance use disorders linked to impaired emotion regulation. Emotions and their regulation have been in the focus of attachment theory since its inception and a secure attachment is regarded as highly important for the ability to regulate emotions (neurobiologically and behaviorally) from infancy onwards (Thompson 2016). According to attachment theory, affective states cannot be completely regulated by individuals themselves as “we all are emotional regulators of each other” (p.8; Flores 2011)

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