Ventral Striatal Reactivity in Compulsive Sexual Behaviors

Compulsive Sexual Behaviors (CSB) are a reason to seek treatment. Given this reality, the number of studies on CSB has increased substantially in the last decade and the World Health Organization (WHO) included CSB in its proposal for the upcoming ICD-11. Sixty percent of the neuroimaging studies on...

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Main Authors: Mateusz Gola, Małgorzata Draps
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00546/full
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spelling doaj-3d47e26c59ae406b93658617c1becf282020-11-25T00:45:31ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychiatry1664-06402018-11-01910.3389/fpsyt.2018.00546385973Ventral Striatal Reactivity in Compulsive Sexual BehaviorsMateusz Gola0Mateusz Gola1Małgorzata Draps2Institute of Psychology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, PolandSwartz Center for Computational Neuroscience, Institute for Neural Computations, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA, United StatesInstitute of Psychology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, PolandCompulsive Sexual Behaviors (CSB) are a reason to seek treatment. Given this reality, the number of studies on CSB has increased substantially in the last decade and the World Health Organization (WHO) included CSB in its proposal for the upcoming ICD-11. Sixty percent of the neuroimaging studies on CSB published since 2014 aimed to examine similarities and differences between brain mechanisms underlying CSB, gambling disorder, and substance use disorders. One of the crucial brain circuits involved in addiction is the reward system involving the ventral striatum (including nucleus accumbens). There are two distinct theories describing ventral striatal activity in addictions: Incentive Salience Theory (IST) and Reward Deficiency Syndrome (RDS). IST describes increased ventral striatal activations during the anticipation of addiction-related reward, while RDS describes decreased ventral striatal reactivity both during the anticipation of the reward and during the reward processing. Here, we aim to investigate how the findings on ventral striatal reactivity in CSB support each of these two addiction frameworks. For this purpose, we conducted a systematic review of neuroimaging studies on CSB available in Pubmed, EBSCO, and Google Scholar between 2005 and 2018. We found nine relevant research papers. Only four of these studies directly investigated processing of erotic cues and/or rewards and reported findings related to ventral striatum activations. Three of these studies indicate increased ventral striatal reactivity for erotic stimuli, which is consistent with IST and does not support predictions based on RDS. Therefore, the current state of this data suggest that CSB is related to increased ventral striatal reactivity during the anticipation of erotic stimuli.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00546/fullcompulsive sexual behaviorsproblematic pornography usehypersexualityventral striatumnucleus accumbens
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mateusz Gola
Mateusz Gola
Małgorzata Draps
spellingShingle Mateusz Gola
Mateusz Gola
Małgorzata Draps
Ventral Striatal Reactivity in Compulsive Sexual Behaviors
Frontiers in Psychiatry
compulsive sexual behaviors
problematic pornography use
hypersexuality
ventral striatum
nucleus accumbens
author_facet Mateusz Gola
Mateusz Gola
Małgorzata Draps
author_sort Mateusz Gola
title Ventral Striatal Reactivity in Compulsive Sexual Behaviors
title_short Ventral Striatal Reactivity in Compulsive Sexual Behaviors
title_full Ventral Striatal Reactivity in Compulsive Sexual Behaviors
title_fullStr Ventral Striatal Reactivity in Compulsive Sexual Behaviors
title_full_unstemmed Ventral Striatal Reactivity in Compulsive Sexual Behaviors
title_sort ventral striatal reactivity in compulsive sexual behaviors
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychiatry
issn 1664-0640
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Compulsive Sexual Behaviors (CSB) are a reason to seek treatment. Given this reality, the number of studies on CSB has increased substantially in the last decade and the World Health Organization (WHO) included CSB in its proposal for the upcoming ICD-11. Sixty percent of the neuroimaging studies on CSB published since 2014 aimed to examine similarities and differences between brain mechanisms underlying CSB, gambling disorder, and substance use disorders. One of the crucial brain circuits involved in addiction is the reward system involving the ventral striatum (including nucleus accumbens). There are two distinct theories describing ventral striatal activity in addictions: Incentive Salience Theory (IST) and Reward Deficiency Syndrome (RDS). IST describes increased ventral striatal activations during the anticipation of addiction-related reward, while RDS describes decreased ventral striatal reactivity both during the anticipation of the reward and during the reward processing. Here, we aim to investigate how the findings on ventral striatal reactivity in CSB support each of these two addiction frameworks. For this purpose, we conducted a systematic review of neuroimaging studies on CSB available in Pubmed, EBSCO, and Google Scholar between 2005 and 2018. We found nine relevant research papers. Only four of these studies directly investigated processing of erotic cues and/or rewards and reported findings related to ventral striatum activations. Three of these studies indicate increased ventral striatal reactivity for erotic stimuli, which is consistent with IST and does not support predictions based on RDS. Therefore, the current state of this data suggest that CSB is related to increased ventral striatal reactivity during the anticipation of erotic stimuli.
topic compulsive sexual behaviors
problematic pornography use
hypersexuality
ventral striatum
nucleus accumbens
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00546/full
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AT małgorzatadraps ventralstriatalreactivityincompulsivesexualbehaviors
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