Search results for "cocaine addiction"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Motivational factors modulate left frontoparietal network during cognitive control in cocaine addiction

2020

Cocaine addiction is characterized by alterations in motivational and cognitive processes involved in goal-directed behavior. Recent studies have shown that addictive behaviors can be attributed to alterations in the activity of large functional networks. The aim of this study was to investigate how cocaine addiction affected the left frontoparietal network during goal-directed behavior in a stop-signal task (SST) with reward contingencies by correct task performance. Twenty-eight healthy controls (HC) and 30 abstinent cocaine-dependent patients (ACD) performed SST with monetary reward contingencies while undergoing a functional magnetic resonance imaging scan. The results showed that the l…

AdultMalemedia_common.quotation_subjectMedicine (miscellaneous)Cocaine dependenceTask (project management)Functional networksCocaine-Related Disorders03 medical and health sciencesCognition0302 clinical medicineRewardmotivationParietal LobeNeural PathwaysmedicineHumansControl (linguistics)media_commonPharmacologyMotivationleft frontoparietal networkmedicine.diagnostic_testFunctional NeuroimagingAddictionCognitionMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance ImagingFrontal Lobe030227 psychiatryInhibition PsychologicalPsychiatry and Mental healthCase-Control StudiesFemaleNegative correlationcocaine addictionFunctional magnetic resonance imagingPsychologyNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Childhood neglect and parental care perception in cocaine addicts: Relation with psychiatric symptoms and biological correlates

2009

Childhood neglect and poor child–parent relationships have been reported to increase substance use disorders susceptibility. Stressful environmental factors, including emotional neglect, could affect individual personality traits and mental health, possibly inducing stable changes in hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis and brain mono-amine function, in turn involved in addictive behavior vulnerability. Therefore, we decided to investigate homovanillic (HVA) and prolactin (PRL) plasma levels, as expression of possible changes in dopamine function, ACTH and cortisol plasma levels, as measures of HPA axis function, and concomitant psychiatric symptoms profile in abstinent cocaine a…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyendocrine systemAdolescentHydrocortisoneCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectPoison controlHostilityAdrenocorticotropic hormonePSYCHIATRIC SYMPTOMSNeglectPROLACTIN (PRL)Cocaine-Related DisordersYoung AdultBehavioral NeuroscienceAdrenocorticotropic HormoneSurveys and QuestionnairesElectrochemistrymedicineHumansChild AbuseChildPsychiatryChromatography High Pressure LiquidChildhood neglect parental care cocaine addictionRetrospective Studiesmedia_commonParentingMental DisordersAddictionPsychiatric assessmentHomovanillic Acidmedicine.diseaseProlactinNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyHOMOVANILLIC ACID (HVA)NEGLECTChild PreschoolRegression AnalysisFemalemedicine.symptomAddictive behaviorPsychologyCOCAINEAnxiety disorderhormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonistsPersonality
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D-TMS IN COCAINE ADDICTION: preliminary findings

2015

Cocaine-related disorders are currently among the most devastating mental disease as they leads to profound disturbances in an individual’s behaviour resulting in tremendous economic, social, and moral costs. Imaging studies in human have shown a reduction of dopamine (DA) receptors accompanied by a lesser release of endogenous DA in the ventral striatum (AVT) of cocaine subjects thereby resulting in a ‘dopamine-impoverished’ brain[1-2]. This perturbations lead to neuroadpatations in several other circuits which are related to motivation, inhibitory control, and memory which finally determ compulsive-impulsive self drug administration[3]. The lasting reduction in physiological activity of t…

TMSSettore MED/26 - Neurologiacocaine addictiondopamine
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