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Research Article

Recovery of cortical functioning in abstinent alcohol-dependent patients: Prefrontal brain oxygenation during verbal fluency at different phases during withdrawal

, , , , , , & show all
Pages 135-145 | Received 23 Sep 2010, Accepted 14 Feb 2011, Published online: 12 Apr 2011
 

Abstract

Objectives. Neurotoxic effects of alcohol consumption are well-known. There is plenty of literature on frontal lobe impairment on the behavioural and structural brain imaging level. However, only few functional imaging studies investigated altered neural patterns and even less abstinence-related neural recovery. Methods. In a cross-sectional design three patient groups (acute withdrawal, detoxified, abstinent) and healthy controls (each n = 20) performed a phonological and semantic verbal fluency task (VFT) while brain activity was measured with near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS). Results. First, for the phonological condition withdrawal patients and detoxified patients showed less fluency-related frontal lobe activation compared to controls despite equal performance. Second, significant linear trend effects from withdrawal patients over detoxified and abstinent patients up to healthy controls indicated more normal activation patterns in the abstinent group that did not differ significantly from the controls. In the detoxified group brain activation increased with time since detoxification. Conclusions. Our results are compatible with an increase in frontal brain activity from alcohol dependence over abstinence up to normal functioning. However, as cross-sectional designs do not allow to assess causal relations, results have to be considered preliminary and longitudinal studies are needed to further elucidate recovery processes in alcohol dependence.

Acknowledgments

We gratefully acknowledge Hitachi Medical Corporation for the ETG-4000 equipment and technical support. The study was partly supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, KFO 125-1 and the SFB-TRR 58 C4. The authors report no conflict of interests.

Statement of Interest

None to declare

Notes

1This term was used as this is the output name in the correction routine provided by Cui et al. (Citation2010)

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