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Comparison of Response Inhibition Behavior Between Methadone Maintenance Patients and Active Opiate Users Publisher



Rezvanfard M1, 2 ; Noroozi A1 ; Golesorkhi M3, 4 ; Ghassemian E3 ; Eghbali AN2 ; Mokri A1 ; Ekhtiari H1, 3, 4
Authors
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Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. Neurocognitive Laboratory of Iranian National Center for Addiction Studies (INCAS), Tehran University for Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
  2. 2. Rah-e-Roshan Addiction Treatment Center, Karaj, Iran
  3. 3. Translational Neuroscience Program, Institute for Cognitive Science Studies, Tehran, Iran
  4. 4. Neuroimaging and Analysis Group, Research Center for Molecular and Cellular Imaging, Tehran University for Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran

Source: International Journal of High Risk Behaviors and Addiction Published:2017


Abstract

Background: Increasing evidence indicates that opiate users and methadone maintenance patients (MMPs) are impaired in executive control tasks and response inhibition behavior compared to healthy individuals; however, the cognitive functional difference between opiate addicts and MMPs has not been clarified. Objectives: This study employed Go/No-Go tasks to evaluate the response inhibition behavior in three groups: active opiate users, stable MMPs and healthy control subjects with negative urine analysis. Patients and Methods: In this study, 45 opiate-dependents (including opium and heroin), 50 successful methadone maintenance patients (MMPs) and 50 normal controls were recruited. These three groups were matched in terms of age, gender and education level. Each subject conducted the six variants of Go/No-Go tasks in a sequential order, after being given the instructions to respond to stimulus displayed on the screen by pressing the space bar as quickly as possible (Go stimuli) and withholding responses to other stimuli (No-Go stimuli). We used Mann-Whitney nonparametric analysis to compare the performances of opiate users, MMPs and healthy controls on Go/No-Go task scores. Results: In Go trials, opiate dependents and MMPs showed better performance than controls with lower omission errors, while in No-Go trials, opiate users and MMPs committed more errors and revealed poorer performance than the controls. No significant difference was found between opiate users and MMPs performance on Go or No-Go trials, and these groups were significantly faster than controls in response to targets on Go trials or non-targets on No-Go trials. Conclusions: Opiate users andMMPsshowed significant deficits on measures of response inhibitionwhencompared to the normal participants, while MMPs did not differ from opiate users in their ability to inhibit their response to non-targets. © 2016, Zahedan University of Medical Sciences.