Decreased information processing speed and decision-making performance in alcohol use disorder: combined neurostructural evidence from VBM and TBSS.
Caterina GalandraChiara CrespiGianpaolo BassoMarina Rita ManeraInes GiorgiPaolo PoggiNicola CanessaPublished in: Brain imaging and behavior (2021)
Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) is a chronic relapsing condition characterized by excessive alcohol consumption despite its multifaceted adverse consequences, associated with impaired performance in several cognitive domains including decision-making. While choice deficits represent a core component of addictive behavior, possibly consecutive to brain changes preceding the onset of the addiction cycle, the evidence on grey-matter and white-matter damage underlying abnormal choices in AUD is still limited. To fill this gap, we assessed the neurostructural bases of decision-making performance in 22 early-abstinent alcoholic patients and 18 controls, by coupling the Cambridge Gambling Task (CGT) with quantitative magnetic resonance imaging metrics of grey-matter density and white-matter integrity. Regardless of group, voxel based morphometry highlighted an inverse relationship between deliberation time and grey-matter density, with alcoholics displaying slower choices related to grey-matter atrophy in key nodes of the motor control network. In particular, grey-matter density in the supplementary motor area, reduced in alcoholic patients, explained a significant amount of variability in their increased deliberation time. Tract-based spatial statistics revealed a significant relationship between CGT deliberation time and all white-matter indices, involving the most relevant commissural, projection and associative tracts. The lack of choice impairments other than increased deliberation time highlights reduced processing speed, mediated both by grey-matter and white-matter alterations, as a possible marker of a generalized executive impairment extending to the output stages of decision-making. These results pave the way to further studies aiming to tailor novel rehabilitation strategies and assess their functional outcomes.
Keyphrases
- white matter
- decision making
- multiple sclerosis
- alcohol use disorder
- end stage renal disease
- magnetic resonance imaging
- ejection fraction
- peritoneal dialysis
- chronic kidney disease
- alcohol consumption
- prognostic factors
- healthcare
- emergency department
- traumatic brain injury
- liver injury
- brain injury
- oxidative stress
- magnetic resonance
- squamous cell carcinoma
- rheumatoid arthritis
- computed tomography
- drug induced
- radiation therapy
- single cell
- high resolution
- patient reported
- rectal cancer
- sentinel lymph node