Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

This study examines the selective attention to emotional- and alcohol- associated cues in alcohol- dependant and healthy participants.


Clinical Trial Description

The planned study will investigate the selective attention to emotional and alcohol-related stimuli in alcohol-dependent patients and healthy volunteers. background Attitudinal shifts in the implicit cognitive processing of alcohol-associated stimuli play a major role in the maintenance of addictive disorders, in the development of alcohol cravings, and ultimately in relapse. There are several experimental methods to study the selective attention to image stimuli. For preliminary studies as well as for the planned study, we opted for the so-called Dotprobe task , in which image pairs (alcohol versus neutral stimulus) are presented. The selective attention can be measured by means of reaction time differences. In addition to alcohol-related stimuli, photos of fearful and happy faces that act as emotional stimuli are also used. In a preliminary study, the investigators were able to show that not only alcoholics, but also healthy light social drinkers, showed an initial orientation towards alcohol stimuli. The presence of such a shift in attention to alcoholic stimuli, even in healthy individuals, could be a consequence of the processing of alcoholic stimuli as emotional stimuli of increased salience compared to affectively neutral stimuli. There are still no studies that collectively examine selective attention to both emotional and alcohol-associated stimuli. While some studies have shown selective attention to fear stimuli compared to neutral stimuli only in populations with clinically relevant increased anxiety, there are also studies who were able to show that there is selective attention to evolutionarily relevant anxiety even in healthy individuals. In these non-clinical populations, this selective attention appears to be particularly prevalent in subjects with increased anxiety. Studies using affective positive stimuli such as happy faces showed selective attention to these positive valent stimuli in healthy people compared to neutral stimuli, which was also associated with the current mood . Thus, the selective attention to cheerful faces, for example, in a positive mood was also increased. Emotional processing is relevant in the development and maintenance of addictive diseases as well as in so-called "prolonged withdrawal". Thus, during abstinence among alcoholics, increased anxiety, irritability and dysphoria, the so-called "negative emotional state of withdrawal", appear. In a functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) study, it was shown that when anxious faces were seen, acute alcohol abuse had anxiolytic effects. In a separate study with disgusting images on cigarette packs as an aversive fear stimuli, we found that smokers showed a shift in attention to these disgusting images was associated with relief craving and was also associated with increased anxiety, especially in heavy smokers. Objective: The study will compare the selective attention to emotional and alcohol-related stimuli between alcoholics and healthy people. Furthermore, their association with positive and negative mood as well as anxiety should be considered. The aim is to investigate whether alcoholic stimuli are processed the same way in healthy people, such as appetitive, emotional stimuli and whether patients' alcohol stimuli are processed like aversive, emotional stimuli. This question is interesting both methodically and clinically. On the one hand, it would be methodologically important to interpret whether healthy alcohol-associated stimuli are appetitive or similar to affectively positive stimuli for the interpretation of studies on selective attention to alcohol stimuli and alcohol-stimulant reactivity. Clinically significant would be the identification of patients with increased selective attention to alcohol and anxiety stimuli, for whom the risk of relapse could be increased by confronting these stimuli. From these findings, therapeutic options could be derived, such as the application of exposure therapies. Hypotheses: 1. Alcohol-dependent patients as well as healthy volunteers have a selective shift of attention to alcohol-associated versus neutral stimuli. 2. The selective attention to happy faces is associated with positive mood. 3. The selective attention to anxious faces is associated with the degree of anxiety. 4. The selective attention to anxious faces is increased in alcoholics compared to healthy controls. 5. The selective attention to happy faces is lowered in alcoholics in comparison to healthy controls. 6. Selective attention to alcohol-associated stimuli in healthy controls is associated with positive mood. 7. Selective attention to alcohol-related stimuli is associated with negative mood in alcohol-dependent patients. Target population: The study will examine 40 alcohol-dependent patients and 40 healthy volunteers. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03816527
Study type Observational
Source Central Institute of Mental Health, Mannheim
Contact Sabine Vollstädt-Klein
Phone 0621 / 17033912
Email sabine.vollstaedt-klein@zi-mannheim.de
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date January 1, 2019
Completion date December 31, 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT04788004 - Long-term Recovery: Longitudinal Study of Neuro-behavioral Markers of Recovery and Precipitants of Relapse
Recruiting NCT05684094 - Mechanisms of Risky Alcohol Use in Young Adults: Linking Sleep to Reward- and Stress-Related Brain Function N/A
Completed NCT03406039 - Testing the Efficacy of an Online Integrated Treatment for Comorbid Alcohol Misuse and Emotional Problems N/A
Completed NCT03573167 - Mobile Phone-Based Motivational Interviewing in Kenya N/A
Completed NCT04817410 - ED Initiated Oral Naltrexone for AUD Phase 1
Active, not recruiting NCT04267692 - Harm Reduction Talking Circles for American Indians and Alaska Natives With Alcohol Use Disorders N/A
Completed NCT03872128 - The Role of Neuroactive Steroids in Stress, Alcohol Craving and Alcohol Use in Alcohol Use Disorders Phase 1
Recruiting NCT06030154 - Amplification of Positivity for Alcohol Use N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05419128 - Family-focused vs. Drinker-focused Smartphone Interventions to Reduce Drinking-related Consequences of COVID-19 N/A
Completed NCT04564807 - Testing an Online Insomnia Intervention N/A
Completed NCT04284813 - Families With Substance Use and Psychosis: A Pilot Study N/A
Completed NCT04203966 - Mental Health and Well-being of People Who Seek Help From Their Member of Parliament
Recruiting NCT05861843 - Craving Assessment in Patients With Alcohol Use Disorder Using Virtual Reality Exposure
Terminated NCT04404712 - FAAH Availability in Psychiatric Disorders: A PET Study Early Phase 1
Enrolling by invitation NCT04128761 - Decreasing the Temporal Window in Individuals With Alcohol Use Disorder N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06337721 - Preventing Alcohol Use Disorders and Alcohol-Related Harms in Pacific Islander Young Adults N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT02544581 - Preliminary Analysis of the Soberlink Alcohol Breath Analyzer System's (SABA) Clinical Utility During Aftercare N/A
Completed NCT02511886 - A Dose-Escalation Study to Determine the Maximum Tolerated Dose of Arbaclofen Placarbil in Subjects With Alcohol Use Disorder Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT02185131 - Double-blind Pilot Trial of Mirtazapine for the Treatment of Co-occurring AD/MDD. Phase 2
Completed NCT01916941 - Neural Mechanisms of Change During the Treatment of Alcohol Use Disorders With Prazosin N/A