Amphetamine-induced dopamine release in
human ventral striatum correlates
with euphoria
by
Drevets WC, Gautier C, Price JC, Kupfer DJ,
Kinahan PE, Grace AA, Price JL,
Mathis CA
Department of Psychiatry,
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine,
(WCD,
CG, DJK, AAG),
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Biol Psychiatry 2001 Jan 15; 49(2):81-96
ABSTRACT
Background: Studies in experimental animals have implicated the mesolimbic
dopaminergic projections into the ventral striatum in the neural processes
underlying behavioral reinforcement and motivated behavior; however,
understanding the relationship between subjective emotional experience and
ventral striatal dopamine (DA) release has awaited human studies. Using
positron emission tomography (PET), we correlated the change in endogenous
dopamine concentrations following dextroamphetamine (AMPH) administration
with the associated hedonic response in human subjects and compared the
strength of this correlation across striatal subregions.Methods: We obtained
PET measures of [(11)C]raclopride specific binding to DA D2/D3 receptors
before and after AMPH injection (0.3 mg/kg IV) in seven healthy subjects. The
change in [(11)C]raclopride binding potential (DeltaBP) induced by AMPH
pretreatment and the correlation between DeltaBP and the euphoric response to
AMPH were compared between the anteroventral striatum (AVS; comprised of
accumbens area, ventromedial caudate, and anteroventral putamen) and the
dorsal caudate (DCA) using an MRI-based region of interest analysis of the
PET data.Results: The mean DeltaBP was greater in the AVS than in the DCA (p
<.05). The AMPH-induced changes in euphoria analog scale scores correlated
inversely with DeltaBP in the AVS (r = -.95; p <.001), but not in the DCA (r
=.30, ns). Post hoc assessments showed that changes in tension-anxiety
ratings correlated positively with DeltaBP in the AVS (r =.80; p
[uncorrected] <.05) and that similar relationships may exist between DeltaBP
and emotion ratings in the ventral putamen (as were found in the
AVS).Conclusions: The preferential sensitivity of the ventral striatum to the
DA releasing effects of AMPH previously demonstrated in experimental animals
extends to humans. The magnitude of ventral striatal DA release correlates
positively with the hedonic response to AMPH.
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