The neuropsychiatry of impulsivity
The neuropsychiatry of impulsivity
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Impulsive symptoms occur across neuropsychiatric disorders, with important ramifications for everyday functioning and quality of life. This article considers recent developments in the neuropsychological assessment of impulsivity with a focus on the ability to suppress motor responses (response inhibition).
RECENT FINDINGS: Using objective tests, response inhibition deficits were identified in several neuropsychiatric conditions associated with impulsivity, namely attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, trichotillomania, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and chronic substance abuse. Deficits were also found in unaffected first-degree relatives of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder patients. Evidence from patients with focal brain lesions and from healthy volunteers using functional MRI and transcranial stimulation implicated the right inferior frontal gyrus in response inhibition. Pharmacological manipulations of the serotonin system had no detectable behavioural effects on response inhibition, whereas manipulations of the noradrenaline system did.
SUMMARY: Neuropsychological assessment shows great promise in the investigation of impulsivity and its brain substrates. These results support a key role for response inhibition, a function linked to the right inferior frontal gyrus, in the manifestation of impulsivity. Measures of response inhibition will contribute to the search for psychiatric endophenotypes, novel treatments, and more optimal diagnostic classification systems for neuropsychiatric disorders.
Impulse, Inhibition, Noradrenaline, Serotonin, Spectrum
255-261
Chamberlain, Samuel R.
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Sahakian, Barbara J.
e689cd5c-b84f-4503-86ca-7526cf340121
May 2007
Chamberlain, Samuel R.
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Sahakian, Barbara J.
e689cd5c-b84f-4503-86ca-7526cf340121
Chamberlain, Samuel R. and Sahakian, Barbara J.
(2007)
The neuropsychiatry of impulsivity.
Current Opinion in Psychiatry, 20 (3), .
(doi:10.1097/YCO.0b013e3280ba4989).
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Impulsive symptoms occur across neuropsychiatric disorders, with important ramifications for everyday functioning and quality of life. This article considers recent developments in the neuropsychological assessment of impulsivity with a focus on the ability to suppress motor responses (response inhibition).
RECENT FINDINGS: Using objective tests, response inhibition deficits were identified in several neuropsychiatric conditions associated with impulsivity, namely attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, trichotillomania, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and chronic substance abuse. Deficits were also found in unaffected first-degree relatives of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder patients. Evidence from patients with focal brain lesions and from healthy volunteers using functional MRI and transcranial stimulation implicated the right inferior frontal gyrus in response inhibition. Pharmacological manipulations of the serotonin system had no detectable behavioural effects on response inhibition, whereas manipulations of the noradrenaline system did.
SUMMARY: Neuropsychological assessment shows great promise in the investigation of impulsivity and its brain substrates. These results support a key role for response inhibition, a function linked to the right inferior frontal gyrus, in the manifestation of impulsivity. Measures of response inhibition will contribute to the search for psychiatric endophenotypes, novel treatments, and more optimal diagnostic classification systems for neuropsychiatric disorders.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: May 2007
Keywords:
Impulse, Inhibition, Noradrenaline, Serotonin, Spectrum
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 492997
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492997
ISSN: 0951-7367
PURE UUID: 60db989e-e6d7-48e7-9f79-b9f3f085766a
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 21 Aug 2024 17:12
Last modified: 22 Aug 2024 02:01
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Samuel R. Chamberlain
Author:
Barbara J. Sahakian
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics