Negative Mood Induction Increases Choice of Heroin Versus Food Pictures in Opiate-Dependent Individuals: Correlation With Self-Medication Coping Motives and Subjective Reactivity

Acute growth in negative affect is thought to play a major role in triggering relapse in opiate-dependent individuals. Consistent with this view, three lab studies have demonstrated that negative mood induction increases opiate craving in opiate-dependent individuals. The current study sought to con...

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Main Authors: Lee Hogarth, Lorna Hardy, Alexandra Bakou, Justin Mahlberg, Gabrielle Weidemann, Sharon Cashel, Ahmed A. Moustafa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00274/full
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spelling doaj-fc28edd1f1d448b0b9df6bb3bd611c842020-11-25T00:34:52ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychiatry1664-06402019-05-011010.3389/fpsyt.2019.00274430262Negative Mood Induction Increases Choice of Heroin Versus Food Pictures in Opiate-Dependent Individuals: Correlation With Self-Medication Coping Motives and Subjective ReactivityLee Hogarth0Lorna Hardy1Alexandra Bakou2Justin Mahlberg3Gabrielle Weidemann4Gabrielle Weidemann5Sharon Cashel6Ahmed A. Moustafa7Ahmed A. Moustafa8School of Psychology, University of Exeter, Exeter, United KingdomSchool of Psychology, University of Exeter, Exeter, United KingdomSchool of Psychology, University of Exeter, Exeter, United KingdomSchool of Social Sciences and Psychology, Western Sydney University, Sydney, NSW, AustraliaSchool of Social Sciences and Psychology, Western Sydney University, Sydney, NSW, AustraliaMARCS Institute for Brain, Behaviour and Development, Western Sydney University, Sydney, NSW, AustraliaSchool of Social Sciences and Psychology, Western Sydney University, Sydney, NSW, AustraliaSchool of Social Sciences and Psychology, Western Sydney University, Sydney, NSW, AustraliaMARCS Institute for Brain, Behaviour and Development, Western Sydney University, Sydney, NSW, AustraliaAcute growth in negative affect is thought to play a major role in triggering relapse in opiate-dependent individuals. Consistent with this view, three lab studies have demonstrated that negative mood induction increases opiate craving in opiate-dependent individuals. The current study sought to confirm these effects with a behavioral measure of heroin seeking, and test whether the effect is associated with self-reported opiate use to cope with negative affect and subjective reactivity to mood induction. Participants were heroin-dependent individuals engaged with treatment services (n = 47) and control participants (n = 25). Heroin users completed a questionnaire assessing reasons for using heroin: negative affect, social pressure, and cued craving. Baseline heroin choice was measured by preference to enlarge heroin versus food thumbnail pictures in two-alternative forced-choice trials. Negative mood was then induced by depressive statements and music before heroin choice was tested again. Subjective reactivity was indexed by negative and positive mood reported at the pre-induction to post-test timepoints. Heroin users chose heroin images more frequently than controls overall ( p = .001) and showed a negative mood-induced increase in heroin choice compared to control participants (interaction p < .05). Mood-induced heroin choice was associated with self-reported heroin use to cope with negative affect ( p < .05), but not social pressure ( p = .39) or cued craving ( p = .52), and with subjective mood reactivity ( p = .007). These data suggest that acute negative mood is a trigger for heroin seeking in heroin-dependent individuals, and this effect is pronounced in those who report using heroin to cope with negative affect, and those who show greater subjective reactivity to negative triggers. Interventions should seek to target negative coping motives to build resilience to affective triggers for relapse.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00274/fullnegative mood inductioncoping motivesheroin-seeking behavioropiate dependencevulnerability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lee Hogarth
Lorna Hardy
Alexandra Bakou
Justin Mahlberg
Gabrielle Weidemann
Gabrielle Weidemann
Sharon Cashel
Ahmed A. Moustafa
Ahmed A. Moustafa
spellingShingle Lee Hogarth
Lorna Hardy
Alexandra Bakou
Justin Mahlberg
Gabrielle Weidemann
Gabrielle Weidemann
Sharon Cashel
Ahmed A. Moustafa
Ahmed A. Moustafa
Negative Mood Induction Increases Choice of Heroin Versus Food Pictures in Opiate-Dependent Individuals: Correlation With Self-Medication Coping Motives and Subjective Reactivity
Frontiers in Psychiatry
negative mood induction
coping motives
heroin-seeking behavior
opiate dependence
vulnerability
author_facet Lee Hogarth
Lorna Hardy
Alexandra Bakou
Justin Mahlberg
Gabrielle Weidemann
Gabrielle Weidemann
Sharon Cashel
Ahmed A. Moustafa
Ahmed A. Moustafa
author_sort Lee Hogarth
title Negative Mood Induction Increases Choice of Heroin Versus Food Pictures in Opiate-Dependent Individuals: Correlation With Self-Medication Coping Motives and Subjective Reactivity
title_short Negative Mood Induction Increases Choice of Heroin Versus Food Pictures in Opiate-Dependent Individuals: Correlation With Self-Medication Coping Motives and Subjective Reactivity
title_full Negative Mood Induction Increases Choice of Heroin Versus Food Pictures in Opiate-Dependent Individuals: Correlation With Self-Medication Coping Motives and Subjective Reactivity
title_fullStr Negative Mood Induction Increases Choice of Heroin Versus Food Pictures in Opiate-Dependent Individuals: Correlation With Self-Medication Coping Motives and Subjective Reactivity
title_full_unstemmed Negative Mood Induction Increases Choice of Heroin Versus Food Pictures in Opiate-Dependent Individuals: Correlation With Self-Medication Coping Motives and Subjective Reactivity
title_sort negative mood induction increases choice of heroin versus food pictures in opiate-dependent individuals: correlation with self-medication coping motives and subjective reactivity
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychiatry
issn 1664-0640
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Acute growth in negative affect is thought to play a major role in triggering relapse in opiate-dependent individuals. Consistent with this view, three lab studies have demonstrated that negative mood induction increases opiate craving in opiate-dependent individuals. The current study sought to confirm these effects with a behavioral measure of heroin seeking, and test whether the effect is associated with self-reported opiate use to cope with negative affect and subjective reactivity to mood induction. Participants were heroin-dependent individuals engaged with treatment services (n = 47) and control participants (n = 25). Heroin users completed a questionnaire assessing reasons for using heroin: negative affect, social pressure, and cued craving. Baseline heroin choice was measured by preference to enlarge heroin versus food thumbnail pictures in two-alternative forced-choice trials. Negative mood was then induced by depressive statements and music before heroin choice was tested again. Subjective reactivity was indexed by negative and positive mood reported at the pre-induction to post-test timepoints. Heroin users chose heroin images more frequently than controls overall ( p = .001) and showed a negative mood-induced increase in heroin choice compared to control participants (interaction p < .05). Mood-induced heroin choice was associated with self-reported heroin use to cope with negative affect ( p < .05), but not social pressure ( p = .39) or cued craving ( p = .52), and with subjective mood reactivity ( p = .007). These data suggest that acute negative mood is a trigger for heroin seeking in heroin-dependent individuals, and this effect is pronounced in those who report using heroin to cope with negative affect, and those who show greater subjective reactivity to negative triggers. Interventions should seek to target negative coping motives to build resilience to affective triggers for relapse.
topic negative mood induction
coping motives
heroin-seeking behavior
opiate dependence
vulnerability
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00274/full
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