You are visiting us from Ohio. You are located in HHS Region 5. Your Center is Great Lakes ATTC.

Alcoholics Show Deficits in Their Ability to Perceive Dangerous Situations

published:
January 9, 2007
Author:
Jasmin B. Salloum, Vijay A. Ramchandani, Jerzy Bodurka, Robert Rawlings, Reza Momenan, David George,
Citation:

Jasmin B. Salloum, Vijay A. Ramchandani, Jerzy Bodurka, Robert Rawlings, Reza Momenan, David George, Daniel W. Hommer. Blunted rostral anterior cingulate response during a simplified decoding task of negative emotional facial expressions in alcoholic patients.  Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research (ACER).  (OnlineEarly Articles).

Return to ASME Catalog
  • Previous brain-imaging studies have suggested cognitive deficits in alcoholic patients.
  • New findings indicate that alcoholic patients show emotional processing deficits as well.
  • These deficits primarily affect processing for negative emotional expressions.

Alcoholics tend to be deficient in both cognitive and emotional processes.  Previously, most brain-imaging research focused on cognition rather than emotion.  A new study uses functional magnetic imaging (fMRI) to examine emotional processing, finding that alcoholics have stunted abilities to perceive dangerous situations.

Results are published in the September issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research.

“We knew that alcoholics show a deficit in accurate recognition of facial emotions,” said Jasmin B. Salloum, research scientist at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism and corresponding author for the study.  “This can lead to insensitivity to, and overestimation and/or misattribution of, certain facial expressions.”

“Relatives and friends of alcoholics often wonder why they continue to drink even though they intellectually know how detrimental this is for them,” added Andreas Heinz, director and chair of the department of psychiatry at Charité – University Medical Center Berlin.  “Patients often relapse when entering previous drinking situations, that is, entering a bar or a shop in which you can buy alcoholic drinks.  One reason may be that they fail to perceive dangerous situations.  This study suggests that there is a neurobiological correlate of this often-reduced ability to perceive dangerous situations.”

Study participants comprised 11 male subjects who met DSM-IV criteria for alcohol dependence, as well as 11 healthy male subjects or “controls.”  All participants were given a facial-emotion decoding task during which they were asked to determine the intensity level of a target emotion displayed via facial expressions of happy, sad, anger, disgust and fear.  Researchers used fMRI to examine the subjects’ brain-blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) responses (a BOLD signal will increase when that part of the brain is engaged in active processing of information).

Results showed that the greatest deficit among the alcohol-dependent individuals was in brain activation during decoding of negative emotional expressions, particularly in the affective division of the anterior cingulate cortex.  The anterior cingulate is part of the prefrontal brain area.

“The cingulate is involved in many higher order executive functions such as focused attention, conflict resolution and decision making,” said Salloum.  “Alcoholic patients are known to be sensation seekers and are less likely to shy away from signals that suggest danger.  Both sensation seeking and avoidance of danger are characteristic of subjects with axes II personality disorders, which many of our subjects had.  The findings in this study may shed some light on some of the problematic and psychopathological behaviors that are manifest in this patient group.  It remains to be determined if the dysfunction of the anterior cingulate precedes alcoholism or is a result of long term drinking.”

There is, however, a silver lining, added Heinz.  “Now we can begin to understand why patients have problems avoiding dangerous situations and, particularly, why they may not react to the concerns of their friends and relatives: the brain area that should help them appreciate these concerns is functioning at a reduced level.  Furthermore, the authors also observed a normal or even increased brain response to happy faces.  Our group recently made a similar observation, in that patients with strong brain responses to pleasant pictures have a reduced relapse risk.  So, relatives and friends may want to support alcoholic patients with positive messages that strengthen their self-esteem while being particularly careful, and even repetitive, in pointing out the dangers of alcohol and alcohol-associated environments.  Otherwise, the patients may miss the message.”

map-markermagnifiercrossmenuchevron-down