Brain responsivity to emotional faces differs in men and women with and without a history of alcohol use disorder

Inclusion of women in research on Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) has shown that gender differences contribute to unique profiles of cognitive, emotional, and neuropsychological dysfunction. We employed functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of abstinent individuals with a history of AUD (21 women...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2021-06, Vol.16 (6), p.e0248831-e0248831
Hauptverfasser: Oscar-Berman, Marlene, Ruiz, Susan Mosher, Marinkovic, Ksenija, Valmas, Mary M, Harris, Gordon J, Sawyer, Kayle S
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creator Oscar-Berman, Marlene
Ruiz, Susan Mosher
Marinkovic, Ksenija
Valmas, Mary M
Harris, Gordon J
Sawyer, Kayle S
description Inclusion of women in research on Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) has shown that gender differences contribute to unique profiles of cognitive, emotional, and neuropsychological dysfunction. We employed functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of abstinent individuals with a history of AUD (21 women [AUDw], 21 men [AUDm]) and demographically similar non-AUD control (NC) participants without AUD (21 women [NCw], 21 men [NCm]) to explore how gender and AUD interact to influence brain responses during emotional processing and memory. Participants completed a delayed match-to-sample emotional face memory fMRI task, and brain activation contrasts between a fixation stimulus and pictures of emotional face elicited a similar overall pattern of activation for all four groups. Significant Group by Gender interactions revealed two activation clusters. A cluster in an anterior portion of the middle and superior temporal gyrus, elicited lower activation to the fixation stimulus than to faces for the AUDw as compared to the NCw; that abnormality was more pronounced than the one observed for men. Another cluster in the medial portion of the superior frontal cortex elicited higher activation to the faces by AUDm than NCm, a difference that was more evident than the one observed for women. Together, these findings have added new evidence of AUD-related gender differences in neural responses to facial expressions of emotion.
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subjects Alcohol use
Alcoholic beverages
Alcoholism
Alcohols
Analysis
Anatomy
Biology and Life Sciences
Brain stimulation
Care and treatment
Comparative analysis
Computer programs
Data analysis
Dementia disorders
Demographic aspects
Diagnosis
Drafting software
Drinking behavior
Drinking of alcoholic beverages
Drug abuse
Editing
Emotions
Epilepsy
Ethanol
Facial expression
Funding
Gender differences
Health aspects
Health care
HIV
Human immunodeficiency virus
Liver diseases
Magnetic resonance imaging
Medicine
Medicine and Health Sciences
Mental disorders
Nervous system
Physical Sciences
Physiological aspects
Psychology
Radiology
Research and Analysis Methods
Reviews
Schizophrenia
Signs and symptoms
Social Sciences
Software
Trauma
Visualization
title Brain responsivity to emotional faces differs in men and women with and without a history of alcohol use disorder
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