Frontiers in Human Neuroscience (Sep 2013)

Abnormalities of Functional Brain Networks in Pathological Gambling: A Graph-Theoretical Approach

  • Melanie eTschernegg,
  • Julia Sophia eCrone,
  • Tina eEigenberger,
  • Philipp eSchwartenbeck,
  • Philipp eSchwartenbeck,
  • Mira eFauth-Bühler,
  • Tagrid eLeménager,
  • Karl eMann,
  • Natasha eThon,
  • Friedrich M Wurst,
  • Martin eKronbichler,
  • Martin eKronbichler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2013.00625
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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Functional neuroimaging studies of pathological gambling demonstrate alterations in frontal and subcortical regions of the mesolimbic reward system. However, most investigations were performed using tasks involving reward processing or executive functions. Little is known about brain network abnormalities during task-free resting state in pathological gambling. In the present study, graph-theoretical methods were used to investigate network properties of resting state functional MRI data in pathological gambling. We compared 19 patients with pathological gambling to 19 healthy controls using the Graph Analysis Toolbox (GAT). None of the examined global metrics differed between groups. At the nodal level, pathological gambler showed a reduced clustering coefficient in the left paracingulate cortex and the left juxtapositional lobe (SMA), reduced local efficiency in the left SMA, as well as an increased node betweenness for the left and right paracingulate cortex and the left SMA. At an uncorrected threshold level, the node betweenness in the left inferior frontal gyrus was decreased and increased in the caudate. Additionally, increased functional connectivity between fronto-striatal regions and within frontal regions has also been found for the gambling patients.These findings suggest that regions associated with the reward system demonstrate reduced segregation but enhanced integration while regions associated with executive functions demonstrate reduced integration. The present study makes evident that pathological gambling is also associated with abnormalities in the topological network structure of the brain during rest. Since alterations in pathological gambling cannot be explained by direct effects of abused substances on the brain, these findings will be of relevance for understanding functional connectivity in other addictive disorders.

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