Prefrontal grey-matter changes in short-term and long-term abstinent methamphetamine abusers

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Authors explored grey-matter density in 29 methamphetamine abusers and 20 healthy comparison Subjects using voxel-based morphometry. Grey-matter density changes and performances on the Wisconsin Card Sorting test (WCST) were also compared between 11 short-term(< 6 months)and 18 longterm (>= 6 months) abstinent methamphetamine abusers. Methaniphetamine abusers had lower greymatter density in the right middle frontal cortex (corrected p < 0.05) and more total errors in the WCST (p < 0.01)relative to healthy comparison subjects. Grey-matter density decrease in the right middle frontal cortex correlated with total errors in the WCST in methamphetamine abusers (r = -0.45). Long-tern) abstinent abusers had significantly less right middle frontal grey-matter density decrease (p < 0.01) and total errors in the WCST (p < 0.01) than short-term abstinent abusers, but more than the healthy comparison subjects. We report that methamphetamine abusers have prefrontal grey-matter deficit, which may, in part, recover with long-term abstinence.
Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Issue Date
2006-04
Language
English
Article Type
Article; Proceedings Paper
Citation

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, v.9, no.2, pp.221 - 228

ISSN
1461-1457
DOI
10.1017/S1461145705005699
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/304158
Appears in Collection
BiS-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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