Abstract

BackgroundIn the past twenty years, codeine-containing cough syrups (CCS) was recognized as a new type of addictive drugs. However, the exact neurobiologic mechanisms underlying CCS-dependence are still ill-defined. The aims of this study are to identify CCS-related modulations of neural activity during the resting-state in CCS-dependent individuals and to investigate whether these changes of neural activity can be related to duration of CCS use, the first age of CCS use and impulse control deficits in CCS-dependent individuals. We also want to observe the impact of gray matter deficits on these functional results.Methodology/Principal FindingsThirty CCS-dependent individuals and 30 control subjects participated. Resting-state functional MRI was performed by using gradient-echo echo-planar imaging sequence. Regional homogeneity (ReHo) was calculated by using REST software. Voxel-based analysis of the ReHo maps between controls and CCS-dependent groups was performed using two-sample t tests (p<0.05, corrected for multiple comparisons). The Barratt Impulsiveness Scale 11 (BIS.11) was surveyed to assess participants' impulsivity trait soon after MR examination. Abnormal clusters revealed by group comparison were extracted and correlated with impulsivity, duration of CCS use, and age of first CCS use. ReHo was diminished in the bilateral medial orbitofrontal cortex (mOFC) and left dorsal striatum in CCS-dependent individuals. There were negative correlations between mean ReHo in the bilateral medial OFC, left dorsal striatum and duration of CCS use, BIS.11 total scores, and the subscale of attentional impulsivity in CCS-dependent individuals. There was a significantly positive correlation between mean ReHo in the left dorsal striatum and age of first CCS use in CCS-dependent individuals. Importantly, these results still remain significant after statistically controlling for the regional gray matter deficits.ConclusionResting-state abnormalities in CCS-dependent individuals revealed in the present study may further improve our understanding about the neural substrates of impulse control dysfunction in CCS-dependent individuals.

Highlights

  • In the past twenty years, codeine-containing cough syrups (CCS) was recognized as a new type of addictive drugs

  • Resting-state abnormalities in CCS-dependent individuals revealed in the present study may further improve our understanding about the neural substrates of impulse control dysfunction in CCS-dependent individuals

  • Only one neuroimaging study existed pertaining to CCS-dependent, by employing single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), Hou et al demonstrated the dopamine transporter (DAT) availability of striatum as well as volume, weight, and 99mTc-TRODAT-1 uptake ratio of corpus striatum/the whole brain were significantly reduced in CCS-dependent individuals compared with controls [6]

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Summary

Introduction

In the past twenty years, codeine-containing cough syrups (CCS) was recognized as a new type of addictive drugs. Previous studies had revealed the behavior, personality and mental were abnormal in CCS-dependent individuals [3,4], which were similar to other illicit substance dependent. By investigating 224 CCS-dependent individuals, Wang et al showed the CCS had a mainly negative impact on their mental health, with impulsivity, compulsion, depression and anxiety sharing the most prominent factors [5]. The exact neurobiological mechanisms underlying these psychological alterations are still ill-defined. The exact neurobiologic mechanisms underlying CCS-dependence are still ill-defined. The aims of this study are to identify CCS-related modulations of neural activity during the resting-state in CCS-dependent individuals and to investigate whether these changes of neural activity can be related to duration of CCS use, the first age of CCS use and impulse control deficits in CCS-dependent individuals. We want to observe the impact of gray matter deficits on these functional results

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