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Effects of HIV and Drug Abuse on Executive Brain Function: The Example of Decision-Making. Eileen Martin, PhD Department of Psychiatry University of Illinois-Chicago Supported by HHS R01 DA12828 and R01 DA13800. NeuroAIDS: General Points. HIV has an Affinity for the Brain
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Effects of HIV and Drug Abuse on Executive Brain Function: The Example of Decision-Making Eileen Martin, PhDDepartment of PsychiatryUniversity of Illinois-Chicago Supported by HHS R01 DA12828 and R01 DA13800
NeuroAIDS: General Points • HIV has an Affinity for the Brain • Spectrum of Cognitive Changes • Continued Problem Despite Treatment Advances
Neurocognitive FunctionsAffected by HIV • Driving • Employment • Treatment adherence • Risk behavior
Employment Status and Neuropsychological FunctionHIV+ and HIV- Women H HIV+ ABNL NP HIV+ NL NP * HIV- Martin et al, JINS 2000
NP Performance and Antiretroviral Therapy p < .01 HIV+ ART HIV+ NO ART HIV- Richardson et al., JINS 2002
Executive Functions • “Braking,” Control of Impulses • Actions Based on Future Goals • Examples • Saving for Retirement • Avoiding Road Rage • Avoiding Risky Sex or Drug Use
Rationale and Hypotheses for Current Studies • Prefrontal cortical circuitry is a common pathway in drug abuse and neuroAIDS • Are there additive effects of HIV and drug abuse ?
PREACH ProjectUIC – WSVA • n = 420 SDIs • 90% African-American • Age 40-45 years, 11-12 years education • 44% HCV+ • 20% female Supported by R01 DA12828
Exclusion Criteria • Neurologic AIDS-defining condition • CVA or Seizure Disorder • CHI with LOC > 1 hour • Schizophrenia • Positive Tox Screen or Breathalyzer • Current neuroleptics
Study Protocol - PREACH • Medical and Psychiatric • Substance Dependence • Comorbid Conditions • Neurocognitive Functions • Risk Behavior
Decision Making • Actions influenced by future goal, less by current payoffs or rewards (Bechara et al., 1997) • Less attractive option might be optimal • Ventromedial/Orbitofrontal Cortex
Current Choices Partying Sleeping Sex Studying Future Goal GRADUATING
High Risk Choices on Gambling TaskCrack/Heroin Users Martin et al., JINS, 2005 * * * * HIV- Drug Abuse Normal Ss Iowa Cohort HIV+ Drug Abuse S
DANCE ProjectDA R01 DA13800 • N= 350 MSMs, 25-30, HS Education • Mixed ethnicities • HIV+ or HIV- • Use or don’t use Club Drugs • Ecstasy • Crystal Meth • GHB, Ketamine
Risky Choices on Gambling Task Ecstasy and Club Drug Users Preliminary Findings * * HIV+ OR Club Drugs HIV+ AND Club Drugs HIV- No Drugs
Conclusions • New Knowledge regarding Brain Systems affected in HIV and Drug Abuse • Implications for Prevention, Adherence, Quality of Life • Targets for Intervention
Infectious Disease David Pitrak, MD Richard Novak, MD Kenneth Pursell, MD Consultants Antoine Bechara, MD, PhD Psychiatry Rodney Eiger, MD Michael Fendrich, PhD Raul Gonzalez, PhD Jasmin Vassileva, PhD Silvana Grbesic, BS Joanna Jacobus, BS Collaborators