Intracranial subsecond dopamine measurements during a "sure bet or gamble" decision-making task in patients with alcohol use disorder suggest diminished dopaminergic signals about relief.

Brittany Liebenow, Angela Jiang, Emily DiMarco, Thomas Wilson, Mustafa S Siddiqui, Ihtsham Ul Haq, Adrian W Laxton, Stephen B Tatter, Kenneth T Kishida
Author Information
  1. Brittany Liebenow: 1Neuroscience Graduate Program.
  2. Angela Jiang: 2Department of Physiology and Pharmacology.
  3. Emily DiMarco: 1Neuroscience Graduate Program.
  4. Thomas Wilson: 3Department of Neurosurgery, and.
  5. Mustafa S Siddiqui: 3Department of Neurosurgery, and.
  6. Ihtsham Ul Haq: 5Department of Neurology, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, Florida.
  7. Adrian W Laxton: 3Department of Neurosurgery, and.
  8. Stephen B Tatter: 3Department of Neurosurgery, and.
  9. Kenneth T Kishida: 1Neuroscience Graduate Program.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To the authors' knowledge, no data have been reported on dopamine fluctuations on subsecond timescales in humans with alcohol use disorder (AUD). In this study, dopamine release was monitored in 2 patients with and 2 without a history of AUD during a "sure bet or gamble" (SBORG) decision-making task to begin to characterize how subsecond dopamine responses to counterfactual information, related to psychological notions of regret and relief, in AUD may be altered.
METHODS: Measurements of extracellular dopamine levels were made once every 100 msec using human voltammetric methods. Measurements were made in the caudate during deep brain stimulation electrode implantation surgeries (for treatment of movement disorders) in patients who did (AUD, n = 2) or did not (non-AUD, n = 2) have a history of AUD. Participants performed an SBORG decision-making task in which they made choices between sure bets and 50%-chance monetary gamble outcomes.
RESULTS: Fast changes were found in dopamine levels that appear to be modulated by "what could have been" and by patients' AUD status. Positive counterfactual prediction errors (related to relief) differentiated patients with versus without a history of AUD.
CONCLUSIONS: Dopaminergic encoding of counterfactual information appears to differ between patients with and without AUD. The current study has a major limitation of a limited sample size, but these data provide a rare insight into dopaminergic physiology during real-time decision-making in humans with an addiction disorder. The authors hope future work will expand the sample size and determine the generalizability of the current results.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. P50 AA026117/NIAAA NIH HHS
  2. R01 MH124115/NIMH NIH HHS
  3. KL2 TR001421/NCATS NIH HHS
  4. F30 DA053176/NIDA NIH HHS
  5. P50 DA006634/NIDA NIH HHS
  6. R01 DA048096/NIDA NIH HHS
  7. R01 NS092701/NINDS NIH HHS
  8. R01 MH121099/NIMH NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Humans
Alcoholism
Dopamine
Emotions

Chemicals

Dopamine

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0AUDdopaminepatientsdisorder2decision-makingcounterfactualsubsecondalcoholusewithouthistorytaskreliefmadedatahumansstudy"surebetgamble"SBORGinformationrelatedMeasurementslevelsdeepbrainstimulationn=predictioncurrentsamplesizedopaminergicOBJECTIVE:authors'knowledgereportedfluctuationstimescalesreleasemonitoredbegincharacterizeresponsespsychologicalnotionsregretmayalteredMETHODS:extracellularevery100msecusinghumanvoltammetricmethodscaudateelectrodeimplantationsurgeriestreatmentmovementdisordersnon-AUDParticipantsperformedchoicessurebets50%-chancemonetarygambleoutcomesRESULTS:Fastchangesfoundappearmodulated"whatbeen"patients'statusPositiveerrorsdifferentiatedversusCONCLUSIONS:Dopaminergicencodingappearsdiffermajorlimitationlimitedproviderareinsightphysiologyreal-timeaddictionauthorshopefutureworkwillexpanddeterminegeneralizabilityresultsIntracranialmeasurementssuggestdiminishedsignalserror

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