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Comparative Study
. 2003 Sep 10;71(3):255-68.
doi: 10.1016/s0376-8716(03)00138-8.

Regional cerebral blood flow in female cocaine-addicted subjects following limbic activation

Affiliations
Comparative Study

Regional cerebral blood flow in female cocaine-addicted subjects following limbic activation

Bryon Adinoff et al. Drug Alcohol Depend. .

Abstract

Background: Cocaine dependence follows a different disease course in men and women, possibly as a consequence of sex-specific neurobiologic responses to chronic cocaine use. We have previously reported that male cocaine-dependent subjects demonstrate a significantly different limbic response to the limbic-stimulus procaine, as measured by regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF), compared with male controls. In this study, we assessed the limbic rCBF response to procaine in female cocaine-addicted subjects (n=10) and female controls (n=10).

Methods: Subjects were administered 1.38 mg/kg procaine or saline intravenously in two separate sessions. Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) was used to compare the rCBF response to procaine.

Results: Female cocaine-dependent subjects demonstrate a markedly muted, and distinctly different, limbic response to procaine compared with matched healthy controls.

Conclusions: The rCBF response to procaine in female cocaine-dependent subjects suggests significant CNS differences compared with non-addicted female controls. Coupled with findings previously observed in male cocaine-dependent subjects, these biologic differences suggest that both male and female subjects experience alterations in limbic responsiveness following the chronic use of cocaine.

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