Functional MRI and Response Inhibition in Children Exposed to Cocaine in utero

This study investigated the potential long-term effects of cocaine exposure on brain functioning using fMRI in school-aged children. The sample included 12 children with prenatal cocaine exposure and 12 non-exposed children (8–9 years old). Groups did not differ on IQ, socioeconomic status, or perin...

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Veröffentlicht in:Developmental neuroscience 2009-04, Vol.31 (1-2), p.159-166
Hauptverfasser: Sheinkopf, Stephen J., Lester, Barry M., Sanes, Jerome N., Eliassen, James C., Hutchison, Emmette R., Seifer, Ronald, LaGasse, Linda L., Durston, Sarah, Casey, B.J.
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container_end_page 166
container_issue 1-2
container_start_page 159
container_title Developmental neuroscience
container_volume 31
creator Sheinkopf, Stephen J.
Lester, Barry M.
Sanes, Jerome N.
Eliassen, James C.
Hutchison, Emmette R.
Seifer, Ronald
LaGasse, Linda L.
Durston, Sarah
Casey, B.J.
description This study investigated the potential long-term effects of cocaine exposure on brain functioning using fMRI in school-aged children. The sample included 12 children with prenatal cocaine exposure and 12 non-exposed children (8–9 years old). Groups did not differ on IQ, socioeconomic status, or perinatal risk factors. A response inhibition task was administered during an fMRI scan using a 1.5-T MRI system. Task performance did not differentiate groups, but groups were differentiated by patterns of task-related brain activity. Cocaine-exposed children showed greater activation in the right inferior frontal cortex and caudate during response inhibition, whereas non-exposed children showed greater activations in temporal and occipital regions. These preliminary findings suggest that prenatal cocaine may affect the development of brain systems involved in the regulation of attention and response inhibition.
doi_str_mv 10.1159/000207503
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source Karger电子期刊和电子书数据库; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Original Paper
title Functional MRI and Response Inhibition in Children Exposed to Cocaine in utero
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