Impact of intranasal oxytocin on interoceptive accuracy in alcohol users: an attentional mechanism?
Impact of intranasal oxytocin on interoceptive accuracy in alcohol users: an attentional mechanism?
Interoception, i.e. the perception and appraisal of internal bodily signals, is related to the phenomenon of craving, and is reportedly disrupted in alcohol use disorders. The hormone oxytocin influences afferent transmission of bodily signals and, through its potential modulation of craving, is proposed as a possible treatment for alcohol use disorders. However, oxytocin's impact on interoception in alcohol users remains unknown. Healthy alcohol users (n = 32) attended two laboratory sessions to perform tests of interoceptive ability (heartbeat tracking: attending to internal signals and, heartbeat discrimination: integrating internal and external signals) after intranasal administration of oxytocin or placebo. Effects of interoceptive accuracy, oxytocin administration and alcohol intake, were tested using mixed-effects models. On the tracking task, oxytocin reduced interoceptive accuracy, but did not interact with alcohol consumption. On the discrimination task, we found an interaction between oxytocin administration and alcohol intake: Oxytocin, compared with placebo, increased interoceptive accuracy in heavy drinkers, but not in light social drinkers. Our study does not suggest a pure interoceptive impairment in alcohol users but instead potentially highlights reduced flexibility of internal and external attentional resource allocation. Importantly, this impairment seems to be mitigated by oxytocin. This attentional hypothesis needs to be explicitly tested in future research.
440-448
Betka, Sophie
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Gould Van Praag, Cassandra
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Paloyelis, Yannis
eed584eb-5264-4cde-8952-b7dd0b31fbd0
Bond, Rod
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Pfeifer, Gaby
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Sequeira, Henrique
17e870bf-51f0-4b29-87d3-34ce43bd0dfa
Duka, Theodora
c6623a44-c48c-4385-922c-b2ba3fb9210d
Critchley, Hugo
801271dd-43f8-4aba-bf08-6b82e28526d6
1 April 2018
Betka, Sophie
aa66b53b-e8de-4e42-8d64-bc43952fd01c
Gould Van Praag, Cassandra
1830f17b-43b7-4cfb-857f-f560e4bca85d
Paloyelis, Yannis
eed584eb-5264-4cde-8952-b7dd0b31fbd0
Bond, Rod
09032cd6-5c31-468f-b37c-a851befd999b
Pfeifer, Gaby
5ad2b108-e9c1-4a06-b41e-ad056977d54d
Sequeira, Henrique
17e870bf-51f0-4b29-87d3-34ce43bd0dfa
Duka, Theodora
c6623a44-c48c-4385-922c-b2ba3fb9210d
Critchley, Hugo
801271dd-43f8-4aba-bf08-6b82e28526d6
Betka, Sophie, Gould Van Praag, Cassandra, Paloyelis, Yannis and Pfeifer, Gaby
,
et al.
(2018)
Impact of intranasal oxytocin on interoceptive accuracy in alcohol users: an attentional mechanism?
Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 13 (4), .
(doi:10.1093/scan/nsy027).
Abstract
Interoception, i.e. the perception and appraisal of internal bodily signals, is related to the phenomenon of craving, and is reportedly disrupted in alcohol use disorders. The hormone oxytocin influences afferent transmission of bodily signals and, through its potential modulation of craving, is proposed as a possible treatment for alcohol use disorders. However, oxytocin's impact on interoception in alcohol users remains unknown. Healthy alcohol users (n = 32) attended two laboratory sessions to perform tests of interoceptive ability (heartbeat tracking: attending to internal signals and, heartbeat discrimination: integrating internal and external signals) after intranasal administration of oxytocin or placebo. Effects of interoceptive accuracy, oxytocin administration and alcohol intake, were tested using mixed-effects models. On the tracking task, oxytocin reduced interoceptive accuracy, but did not interact with alcohol consumption. On the discrimination task, we found an interaction between oxytocin administration and alcohol intake: Oxytocin, compared with placebo, increased interoceptive accuracy in heavy drinkers, but not in light social drinkers. Our study does not suggest a pure interoceptive impairment in alcohol users but instead potentially highlights reduced flexibility of internal and external attentional resource allocation. Importantly, this impairment seems to be mitigated by oxytocin. This attentional hypothesis needs to be explicitly tested in future research.
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Accepted/In Press date: 19 March 2018
Published date: 1 April 2018
Additional Information:
© The Author(s) (2018). Published by Oxford University Press.
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Local EPrints ID: 475509
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/475509
ISSN: 1749-5016
PURE UUID: 6d8a2bfb-4c4b-4625-a3d6-7eea6e2906c6
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Date deposited: 21 Mar 2023 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:15
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Contributors
Author:
Sophie Betka
Author:
Cassandra Gould Van Praag
Author:
Yannis Paloyelis
Author:
Rod Bond
Author:
Gaby Pfeifer
Author:
Henrique Sequeira
Author:
Theodora Duka
Author:
Hugo Critchley
Corporate Author: et al.
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