Conflict monitoring and emotional processing in 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) and methamphetamine users – A comparative neurophysiological study

•We compared the effects of chronic MDMA and methamphetamine use on conflict control.•Users showed reduced cognitive-emotional conflict processing (compared to non-users).•Users also showed selective deficits in emotional processing of anger content.•Stronger P3 modulations suggest altered S-R mappi...

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Veröffentlicht in:NeuroImage clinical 2024-01, Vol.41, p.103579-103579, Article 103579
Hauptverfasser: Opitz, Antje, Zimmermann, Josua, Cole, David M., Coray, Rebecca C., Zachäi, Anna, Baumgartner, Markus R., Steuer, Andrea E., Pilhatsch, Maximilian, Quednow, Boris B., Beste, Christian, Stock, Ann-Kathrin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•We compared the effects of chronic MDMA and methamphetamine use on conflict control.•Users showed reduced cognitive-emotional conflict processing (compared to non-users).•Users also showed selective deficits in emotional processing of anger content.•Stronger P3 modulations suggest altered S-R mapping and decision-making in users. In stimulant use and addiction, conflict control processes are crucial for regulating substance use and sustaining abstinence, which can be particularly challenging in social-affective situations. Users of methamphetamine (METH, “Ice”) and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, “Ecstasy”) both experience impulse control deficits, but display different social-affective and addictive profiles. We thus aimed to compare the effects of chronic use of the substituted amphetamines METH and MDMA on conflict control processes in different social-affective contexts (i.e., anger and happiness) and investigate their underlying neurophysiological mechanisms. For this purpose, chronic but recently abstinent users of METH (n = 38) and MDMA (n = 42), as well as amphetamine-naïve healthy controls (n = 83) performed an emotional face-word Stroop paradigm, while event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded. Instead of substance-specific differences, both MDMA and METH users showed smaller behavioral effects of cognitive-emotional conflict processing (independently of emotional valence) and selective deficits in emotional processing of anger content. Both effects were underpinned by stronger P3 ERP modulations suggesting that users of substituted amphetamines employ altered stimulus–response mapping and decision-making. Given that these processes are modulated by noradrenaline and that both MDMA and METH use may be associated with noradrenergic dysfunctions, the noradrenaline system may underlie the observed substance-related similarities. Better understanding the functional relevance of this currently still under-researched neurotransmitter and its functional changes in chronic users of substituted amphetamines is thus an important avenue for future research.
ISSN:2213-1582
2213-1582
DOI:10.1016/j.nicl.2024.103579