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23
result(s) for
"Yoder, Karmen K."
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Effects of acute alcohol exposure and chronic alcohol use on neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging (NODDI) parameters
by
Mustafi, Sourajit M.
,
Halcomb, Meredith E.
,
Wu, Yu-Chien
in
Alcohol Drinking
,
Alcohol use
,
Alcoholic beverages
2023
Rationale
Little is known about how acute and chronic alcohol exposure may alter the in vivo membrane properties of neurons.
Objectives
We employed neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging (NODDI) to examine acute and chronic effects of alcohol exposure on neurite density.
Methods
Twenty-one healthy social drinkers (CON) and thirteen nontreatment-seeking individuals with alcohol use disorder (AUD) underwent a baseline multi-shell diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) scan. A subset (10 CON, 5 AUD) received dMRI during intravenous infusions of saline and alcohol during dMRI. NODDI parametric images included orientation dispersion (OD), isotropic volume fraction (ISOVF), and corrected intracellular volume fraction (cICVF). Diffusion tensor imaging metrics of fractional anisotropy and mean, axial, and radial diffusivity (FA, MD, AD, RD) were also computed. Average parameter values were extracted from white matter (WM) tracts defined by the Johns Hopkins University atlas.
Results
There were group differences in FA, RD, MD, OD, and cICVF, primarily in the corpus callosum. Both saline and alcohol had effects on AD and cICVF in WM tracts proximal to the striatum, cingulate, and thalamus. This is the first work to indicate that acute fluid infusions may alter WM properties, which are conventionally believed to be insensitive to acute pharmacological challenges. It also suggests that the NODDI approach may be sensitive to transient changes in WM. The next steps should include determining if the effect on neurite density differs with solute or osmolality, or both, and translational studies to assess how alcohol and osmolality affect the efficiency of neurotransmission.
Journal Article
Anterior cingulate cortex metabolites and white matter microstructure: a multimodal study of emergent alcohol use disorder
2021
Multimodal imaging is increasingly used to address neuropathology associated with alcohol use disorder (AUD). Few studies have investigated relationships between metabolite concentrations and white matter (WM) integrity; currently, there are no such data in AUD. In this preliminary study, we used complementary neuroimaging techniques, magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), and diffusion weighted imaging (DWI), to study AUD neurophysiology. We tested for relationships between metabolites in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) and adjacent WM microstructure in young adult AUD and control (CON) subjects. Sixteen AUD and fourteen CON underwent whole-brain DWI and MRS of the dACC. Outcomes were dACC metabolites, and diffusion tensor metrics of dACC-adjacent WM. Multiple linear regression terms included WM region, group, and region × group for prediction of dACC metabolites. dACC myo-inositol was positively correlated with axial diffusivity in the left anterior corona radiata (
p
< 0.0001) in CON but not AUD (group effect:
p
< 0.001; region × group:
p
< 0.001; Bonferroni-corrected). In the bilateral anterior corona radiata and right genu of the corpus callosum, glutamate was negatively related to mean diffusivity in AUD, but not CON subjects (all model terms:
p
< 0.05, uncorrected). In AUD subjects, dACC glutamate was negatively correlated with AUD symptom severity. This is likely the first integrative study of cortical metabolites and WM integrity in young individuals with AUD. Differential relationships between dACC metabolites and adjacent WM tract integrity in AUD could represent early consequences of hazardous drinking, and/or novel biomarkers of early-stage AUD. Additional studies are required to replicate these findings, and to determine the behavioral relevance of these results.
Journal Article
Resting state functional MRI in infants with prenatal opioid exposure—a pilot study
by
Wu, Yu-Chien
,
Radhakrishnan, Rupa
,
Saykin, Andrew J.
in
Amygdala
,
Amygdala - diagnostic imaging
,
Analgesics, Opioid
2021
Purpose
Exposure to prenatal opioids may adversely impact the developing brain networks. The aim of this pilot study was to evaluate alterations in amygdalar functional connectivity in human infants with prenatal opioid exposure.
Methods
In this prospective IRB approved study, we performed resting state functional MRI (rs-fMRI) in 10 infants with prenatal opioid exposure and 12 infants without prenatal drug exposure at < 48 weeks corrected gestational age. Following standard preprocessing, we performed seed-based functional connectivity analysis with the right and left amygdala as the regions of interest after correcting for maternal depression and infant sex. We compared functional connectivity of the amygdala network between infants with and without prenatal opioid exposure.
Results
There were significant differences in connectivity of the amygdala seed regions to the several cortical regions including the medial prefrontal cortex in infants who had prenatal opioid exposure when compared with opioid naïve infants.
Conclusion
This finding of increased amygdala functional connectivity in infants with in utero opioid exposure suggests a potential role of maternal opioid exposure on infants’ altered amygdala function. This association with prenatal exposure needs to be replicated in future larger studies.
Journal Article
Greater ventral striatal functional connectivity in cigarette smokers relative to non-smokers across a spectrum of alcohol consumption
by
Hile, Karen L
,
Durazzo, Timothy C
,
Avena-Koenigsberger, Andrea
in
Alcohol use
,
Brain
,
Brain mapping
2024
Cigarette smoking is associated with elevated risk of disease and mortality and contributes to heavy healthcare-related economic burdens. The nucleus accumbens is implicated in numerous reward-related behaviors, including reinforcement learning and incentive salience. The established functional connectivity of the accumbens includes regions associated with motivation, valuation, and affective processing. Although the high comorbidity of cigarette smoking with drinking behaviors may collectively affect brain activity, there could be independent effects of smoking in alcohol use disorder that impact brain function and behavior. We hypothesized that smoking status, independent of alcohol use, would be associated with aberrations of nucleus accumbens functional connectivity to brain regions that facilitate reward processing, salience attribution, and inhibitory control. Resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging data from thirty-one nonsmokers and nineteen smoking individuals were analyzed using seed-based correlations of the bilateral accumbens with all other brain voxels. Statistical models accounted for drinks consumed per week. The smoking group demonstrated significantly higher functional connectivity between the left accumbens and the bilateral insula and anterior cingulate cortex, as well as hyperconnectivity between the right accumbens and the insula. Confirmatory analyses using the insula and cingulate clusters generated from the original analysis as seed regions reproduced the hyperconnectivity in smokers between the bilateral insular regions and the accumbens. In conclusion, smoking status had distinct effects on neural activity; hyperconnectivity between the accumbens and insula in smokers may reflect enhanced encoding of the reinforcing effects of smoking and greater orientation toward smoking-associated stimuli.
Journal Article
Beer Flavor Provokes Striatal Dopamine Release in Male Drinkers: Mediation by Family History of Alcoholism
2013
Striatal dopamine (DA) is increased by virtually all drugs of abuse, including alcohol. However, drug-associated cues are also known to provoke striatal DA transmission- a phenomenon linked to the motivated behaviors associated with addiction. To our knowledge, no one has tested if alcohol's classically conditioned flavor cues, in the absence of a significant pharmacologic effect, are capable of eliciting striatal DA release in humans. Employing positron emission tomography (PET), we hypothesized that beer's flavor alone can reduce the binding potential (BP) of [(11)C]raclopride (RAC; a reflection of striatal DA release) in the ventral striatum, relative to an appetitive flavor control. Forty-nine men, ranging from social to heavy drinking, mean age 25, with a varied family history of alcoholism underwent two [(11)C]RAC PET scans: one while tasting beer, and one while tasting Gatorade. Relative to the control flavor of Gatorade, beer flavor significantly increased self-reported desire to drink, and reduced [(11)C]RAC BP, indicating that the alcohol-associated flavor cues induced DA release. BP reductions were strongest in subjects with first-degree alcoholic relatives. These results demonstrate that alcohol-conditioned flavor cues can provoke ventral striatal DA release, absent significant pharmacologic effects, and that the response is strongest in subjects with a greater genetic risk for alcoholism. Striatal DA responses to salient alcohol cues may thus be an inherited risk factor for alcoholism.
Journal Article
Amyloid pathway-based candidate gene analysis of 11CPiB-PET in the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) cohort
by
Risacher, Shannon L.
,
Nho, Kwangsik
,
Foroud, Tatiana
in
Aged
,
Aged, 80 and over
,
Alzheimer Disease - diagnostic imaging
2012
Amyloid imaging with [
11
C]Pittsburgh Compound-B (PiB) provides
in vivo
data on plaque deposition in those with, or at risk for, Alzheimer’s disease (AD). We performed a gene-based association analysis of 15 quality-controlled amyloid-pathway associated candidate genes in 103 Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative participants. The mean normalized PiB uptake value across four brain regions known to have amyloid deposition in AD was used as a quantitative phenotype. The minor allele of an intronic SNP within
DHCR24
was identified and associated with a lower average PiB uptake. Further investigation at whole-brain voxel-wise level indicated that non-carriers of the minor allele had higher PiB uptake in frontal regions compared to carriers.
DHCR24
has been previously shown to confer resistance against beta-amyloid and oxidative stress-induced apoptosis, thus our findings support a neuroprotective role. Pathway-based genetic analysis of targeted molecular imaging phenotypes appears promising to help elucidate disease pathophysiology and identify potential therapeutic targets.
Journal Article
Beer self-administration provokes lateralized nucleus accumbens dopamine release in male heavy drinkers
by
Kareken, David A.
,
Oberlin, Brandon G.
,
Tran, Stella M.
in
Adult
,
Alcohol use
,
Alcoholic Intoxication - diagnostic imaging
2015
Rationale
Although striatal dopamine (DA) is important in alcohol abuse, the nature of DA release during actual alcohol drinking is unclear, since drinking includes self-administration of both conditioned flavor stimuli (CS) of the alcoholic beverage and subsequent intoxication, the unconditioned stimulus (US).
Objectives
Here, we used a novel self-administration analog to distinguish nucleus accumbens (NAcc) DA responses specific to the CS and US.
Methods
Right-handed male heavy drinkers (
n
= 26) received three positron emission tomography (PET) scans with the D
2
/D
3
radioligand [
11
C]raclopride (RAC) and performed a pseudo self-administration task that separately administered a flavor CS of either a habitually consumed beer or the appetitive control Gatorade®, concomitant with the US of ethanol intoxication (0.06 g/dL intravenous (IV) administration) or IV saline. Scan conditions were Gatorade flavor + saline (Gat&Sal), Gatorade flavor + ethanol (Gat&Eth), and beer flavor + ethanol (Beer&Eth).
Results
Ethanol (US) reduced RAC binding (inferring DA release) in the left (L) NAcc [Gat&Sal > Gat&Eth]. Beer flavor (CS) increased DA in the right (R) NAcc [Gat&Eth > Beer&Eth]. The combination of beer flavor and ethanol (CS + US), [Gat&Sal > Beer&Eth], induced DA release in bilateral NAcc. Self-reported intoxication during scanning correlated with L NAcc DA release. Relative to saline, infusion of ethanol increased alcoholic drink wanting.
Conclusions
Our findings suggest lateralized DA function in the NAcc, with L NAcc DA release most reflecting intoxication, R NAcc DA release most reflecting the flavor CS, and the conjoint CS + US producing a bilateral NAcc response.
Journal Article
Differential dopamine function in fibromyalgia
by
Kareken, David A.
,
Hutchins, Gary D.
,
Albrecht, Daniel S.
in
Adult
,
Attention - physiology
,
Benzamides
2016
Approximately 30 % of Americans suffer from chronic pain disorders, such as fibromyalgia (FM), which can cause debilitating pain. Many pain-killing drugs prescribed for chronic pain disorders are highly addictive, have limited clinical efficacy, and do not treat the cognitive symptoms reported by many patients. The neurobiological substrates of chronic pain are largely unknown, but evidence points to altered dopaminergic transmission in aberrant pain perception. We sought to characterize the dopamine (DA) system in individuals with FM. Positron emission tomography (PET) with [
18
F]fallypride (FAL) was used to assess changes in DA during a working memory challenge relative to a baseline task, and to test for associations between baseline D
2
/D
3
availability and experimental pain measures. Twelve female subjects with FM and 11 female controls completed study procedures. Subjects received one FAL PET scan while performing a “2-back” task, and one while performing a “0-back” (attentional control, “baseline”) task. FM subjects had lower baseline FAL binding potential (BP) in several cortical regions relative to controls, including anterior cingulate cortex. In FM subjects, self-reported spontaneous pain negatively correlated with FAL BP in the left orbitofrontal cortex and parahippocampal gyrus. Baseline BP was significantly negatively correlated with experimental pain sensitivity and tolerance in both FM and CON subjects, although spatial patterns of these associations differed between groups. The data suggest that abnormal DA function may be associated with differential processing of pain perception in FM. Further studies are needed to explore the functional significance of DA in nociception and cognitive processing in chronic pain.
Journal Article
Monetary discounting and ventral striatal dopamine receptor availability in nontreatment-seeking alcoholics and social drinkers
by
Kareken, David A.
,
Albrecht, Daniel S.
,
Herring, Christine M.
in
Adult
,
Alcohol Drinking - metabolism
,
Alcohol Drinking - psychology
2015
Rationale
Dopamine (DA) in the ventral striatum (VST) has long been implicated in addiction pathologies, yet its role in temporal decision-making is not well-understood.
Objectives
To determine if VST DA D
2
receptor availability corresponds with greater impulsive choice in both nontreatment-seeking alcoholics (NTS) and social drinkers (SD).
Methods
NTS subjects (
n
= 10) and SD (
n
= 13) received PET scans at baseline with the D
2
/D
3
radioligand [
11
C]raclopride (RAC). Outside the scanner, subjects performed a delay discounting procedure with monetary rewards. RAC binding potential (BP
ND
) was estimated voxelwise, and correlations were performed to test for relationships between VST BP
ND
and delay discounting performance. Self-reported impulsivity was also tested for correlations with BP
ND
.
Results
Across all subjects, greater impulsive choice for $20 correlated with lower BP
ND
in the right VST. NTS showed greater impulsive choice than SD and were more impulsive by self-report. Across all subjects, the capacity of larger rewards to reduce impulsive choice (the magnitude effect) correlated negatively (
p
= 0.028) with problematic alcohol use (AUDIT) scores. Self-reported impulsivity did not correlate with BP
ND
in VST.
Conclusions
Preference for immediate reinforcement may reflect greater endogenous striatal DA or lower D
2
number, or both. Alcoholic status did not mediate significant effects on VST BP
ND
, suggesting minimal effects from alcohol exposure. The apparent lack of BP
ND
correlation with self-reported impulsivity highlights the need for objective behavioral assays in the study of the neurochemical substrates of behavior. Finally, our results suggest that the magnitude effect may be more sensitive to alcohol-induced problems than single discounting measures.
Journal Article
Olfactory identification in subjective cognitive decline and mild cognitive impairment: Association with tau but not amyloid positron emission tomography
by
Risacher, Shannon L.
,
West, John D.
,
Hutchins, Gary D.
in
[18F]Flortaucipir (AV-1451)
,
Alzheimer's disease
,
Neurodegeneration
2017
We investigated the association between olfactory identification and Alzheimer's disease biomarkers, including amyloid, tau, and neurodegeneration.
Thirty-four older adults, including 19 cognitively normal (CN), 10 subjective cognitive decline (SCD), and 5 mild cognitive impairment, underwent amyloid positron emission tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, and the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test (UPSIT). Twenty-six also underwent tau positron emission tomography. Associations between the UPSIT and regionally sampled amyloid, tau, and temporal atrophy were evaluated. Voxel-wise regression models were also utilized. Analyses were conducted with the full sample and only CN/SCD.
Lower UPSIT scores were associated with increased temporal and parietal tau burden in regional and voxel-wise analyses in the full sample and in CN and SCD only. Temporal lobe atrophy was associated with lower UPSIT score. Amyloid was not associated with the UPSIT.
Impairment on the UPSIT may be a good marker for tau and neurodegeneration in preclinical or prodromal Alzheimer's disease.
Journal Article