Electrophysiological activity in the human nucleus accumbens during risk-taking and reward learning

2007 ◽  
pp. 251-252
Author(s):  
F Chaudhary ◽  
A Hirsch ◽  
W MacPherson ◽  
J Nayati

Background: Lisdexamfetamine has not heretofore been reported to cause pathological gambling. Such a case is presented. Methods: A middle-aged woman, without past interest in gambling, gaming, or risk taking behavior, with childhood history of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder presented with difficulty focusing and concentrating. Lisdexamfetamine was started at 20 mg daily and gradually escalated due to lack of efficacy. At 70 mg daily, she began binging on sweets and gambling all day, every day at nearby riverboats, which she had never frequented previously. Upon reduction to 60 mg daily, the gambling resolved. Ritalin 20 mg every morning and 50 mg every afternoon was used without gambling reoccurrence. Results: Mental Status Examination: Alert, cooperative and oriented x 3 with good eye contact. Euthymic, without mania, thoughts logical and goal directed. Conclusions: Enhanced dopamine in the nucleus accumbens may induce hedonic activities including gambling, binging on sweets, or sexual activity (Moore et al. 2014). Lisdexamfetamine has been described to induce mania, and pathological gambling may have been an isolated manifestation of early mania. In those who have recently begun lisdexamfetamine, query should be made regarding change in gambling behavior and in those who are pathologically gambling, investigation should be entertained as to whether they are taking lisdexamfetamine.


2007 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 148-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeremy J. Day ◽  
Regina M. Carelli

Neuroreport ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 15 (13) ◽  
pp. 2123-2127 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott C. Matthews ◽  
Alan N. Simmons ◽  
Scott D. Lane ◽  
Martin P. Paulus

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Loreen Tisdall ◽  
Renato Frey ◽  
Andreas Horn ◽  
Dirk Ostwald ◽  
Lilla Horvath ◽  
...  

Maladaptive risk taking can have severe individual and societal consequences, thus individual differences are prominent targets for intervention and prevention. How to capture individual differences in risk taking, however, presents a major challenge because convergence between measures is mostly low. Considering that functional brain markers are being examined for their potential to account for various risk-taking related outcomes, we urgently need to establish the role of risk-taking measures for establishing reliable brain-outcome associations. To address this issue, we analyzed within-participant neuroimaging data for two widely used risk-taking measures collected from the imaging subsample of the Basel–Berlin Risk Study (N = 116 young human adults), and computed brain-outcome associations within/out-of-measure as well as within/out-of-session. Although we observed a regionally-specific convergence of group-level activation differences for the two imaging measures in the nucleus accumbens, one of the core brain regions associated with risk taking, results from our individual differences analyses suggest that (1) individual differences in brain activation are not preserved between measures, and (2) the success of brain-outcome associations for risk taking is highly dependent on the measures used to capture neural and behavioral individual differences. Our results help to better filter risk- taking measures for their potential to establish brain markers for intervention or prevention purposes.


Neuroreport ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 19 (5) ◽  
pp. 509-513 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian Knutson ◽  
G. Elliott Wimmer ◽  
Camelia M. Kuhnen ◽  
Piotr Winkielman

2010 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 1426-1434 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. R. Samanez-Larkin ◽  
C. M. Kuhnen ◽  
D. J. Yoo ◽  
B. Knutson

2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 345
Author(s):  
Inês M. Amaral ◽  
Cristina Lemos ◽  
Isabella Cera ◽  
Georg Dechant ◽  
Alex Hofer ◽  
...  

Evidence suggests that PKA activity in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) plays an essential role in reward-related learning. In this study, we investigated whether PKA is differentially involved in the expression of learning produced by either natural reinforcers or psychostimulants. For that purpose, we inhibited PKA through a bilateral infusion of Rp-cAMPS, a specific PKA inhibitor, directly into the NAc. The effects of PKA inhibition in the NAc on the expression of concurrent conditioned place preference (CPP) for cocaine (drug) and social interaction (natural reward) in rats were evaluated. We found that PKA inhibition increased the expression of cocaine preference. This effect was not due to altered stress levels or decreased social reward. PKA inhibition did not affect the expression of natural reward as intra-NAc Rp-cAMPS infusion did not affect expression of social preference. When rats were trained to express cocaine or social interaction CPP and tested for eventual persisting preference 7 and 14 days after CPP expression, cocaine preference was persistent, but social preference was abolished after the first test. These results suggest that PKA in the NAc is involved in drug reward learning that might lead to addiction and that only drug, but not natural, reward is persistent.


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