Litcius/Paper detail

Shared orbitofrontal dynamics to a drug-themed movie track craving and recovery in heroin addiction

Greg Kronberg, Ahmet O. Ceceli, Yuefeng Huang, Pierre‐Olivier Gaudreault, Sarah G. King, Natalie McClain, Nelly Alia‐Klein, Rita Z. Goldstein

2024Brain13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Movies captivate groups of individuals (the audience), especially if they contain themes of common motivational interest to the group. In drug addiction, a key mechanism is maladaptive motivational salience attribution whereby drug cues outcompete other reinforcers within the same environment or context. We predicted that while watching a drug-themed movie, where cues for drugs and other stimuli share a continuous narrative context, functional MRI responses in individuals with heroin use disorder (iHUD) will preferentially synchronize during drug scenes. Thirty inpatient iHUD (24 male) and 25 healthy controls (16 male) watched a drug-themed movie at baseline and at follow-up after 15 weeks. Results revealed such drug-biased synchronization in the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), ventromedial and ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, and insula. After 15 weeks during ongoing inpatient treatment, there was a significant reduction in this drug-biased shared response in the OFC, which correlated with a concomitant reduction in dynamically-measured craving, suggesting synchronized OFC responses to a drug-themed movie as a neural marker of craving and recovery in iHUD.

Topics & Concepts

Orbitofrontal cortexPsychologyVentromedial prefrontal cortexHeroinCravingSalience (neuroscience)AddictionContext (archaeology)Prefrontal cortexNeuroscienceDrugPsychiatryCognitionPaleontologyBiologyFunctional Brain Connectivity StudiesNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesNeurotransmitter Receptor Influence on Behavior