Healthcare, Vol. 11, Pages 70: Relationship between Depression and Cognitive Inhibition in Men with Heroin or Methamphetamine Use Disorder in First-Time Mandatory Detoxification

1. IntroductionThe World Drug Report 2022 shows that an estimated 284 million people (5.6% of the population) had used a drug in the past 12 months in 2020, and that relapse rates and the risk of relapse have increased in some countries during the pandemic [1]. The difficult withdrawal characteristics and high drug addiction relapse rates make drug issues a major problem for global health systems. Drug addiction is a disorder involving impulsive and compulsive factors, manifested by a marked deficit in compulsive drug-seeking and inhibitory control [2]. Inhibitory function or cognitive inhibition refers to the ability to effectively inhibit irrelevant task information or inappropriate behavior and is one of the main components of an individual’s executive function [3]. Effective cognitive inhibition protects task-relevant content in working memory from irrelevant information and prevents limited working memory capacity from being occupied by irrelevant information [4], such as reducing drug-seeking impulses. Cognitive inhibition is important for people with SUD to successfully withdraw from substances and prevent relapse after withdrawal [5].The dual-systems model of substance addiction suggests that the behavioral processes of drug-seeking and eventual addiction stem from the interaction of neurocognitive systems, i.e., impulsive (reflex/automatic/spontaneous) processes and inhibitory (reflex/slower/negotiated) processes, both of which are determinants of behavior [6]. In terms of individual behavioral responses, attractive objects (e.g., drugs) refer to items that individuals have a strong impulse to respond to. For a goal to be accomplished (e.g., withdrawal), individuals need to quickly inhibit their attentional tendency to ease withdrawal from drugs and physical and psychological (emotional) responses and subsequently remain directed and focused on the goal [7,8]. The dual-process model suggests that the impulsive system should have a greater effect on behavior under conditions where the inhibitory system is weak or impaired, while the impulse should have a lesser effect on behavior under conditions where the inhibitory system is strong or intact [6,9]. Thus, the inhibitory system is seen as a “brake” on the impulsive system [6], helping to reduce the people with SUD’s impulse to seek out drugs and successfully abstain from them. Cognitive inhibition is an important mediator of drug addiction and may be an important target for treating people with SUD by improving impaired cognitive abilities [10,11].However, previous studies have found severe impairment of inhibitory function in people with SUD [12,13,14]. For example, Farhadian et al. [15] found that drug addicts performed worse in the Stroop task. According to the stage model of addiction, the inhibitory function is involved in the behavioral process of pre-drug-seeking and eventual addiction [16]. Moreover, impairment of inhibitory function can lead to an imbalance in the addict’s impulse and inhibition systems, making it difficult for the individual to suppress strong impulses to use drugs [17], leading to the failure of the addict to quit drugs [14].In the case of drug addicts, long-term substance abuse is a major contributor to their impaired cognitive functioning [13,18,19], and the impact effect varies with the type of drug. For example, methamphetamine users have longer response times in the Stroop task compared to opioid users [20]. In addition, some researchers are focusing on the role of depression in substance use, suggesting that depression has the effect of increasing the probability of substance use (i.e., increasing the likelihood of initiating use, promoting earlier emergence, and/or influencing the amount or persistence of use) [21]. For example, research has found that depression may lead to the initiation of or increase in the frequency of cannabis use [22]. Past research has found that worsening depressive symptoms can also impair an individual’s cognitive abilities [23], including attention, working memory, and cognitive inhibition [24].Depressive symptoms have a negative role in drug withdrawal in addicts. Depressed individuals have difficulty removing negative information from working memory and exhibit negative self-information processing biases, attentional biases, and memory biases [25]. Moreover, according to a dual-process model of cognitive vulnerability to depression, highly depressed individuals engage in negative automatic processing that produces negative cognitive or emotional responses, which in turn diminishes cognitive resources and causes deficits in executive functions, such as inhibitory control [26], and as a result, the people with SUD fail to withdraw [14]. Therefore, it can be inferred that addiction with depression is associated with poorer inhibitory control than addiction without depression.In addition, according to the Narcotics Control Law of the People’s Republic of China, the compulsory isolation drug rehabilitation system applies to those whose drug addiction is so serious that they are not suitable for community drug rehabilitation or refuse to accept community drug rehabilitation, take or inject drugs again during community drug rehabilitation, seriously violate the community drug rehabilitation agreement, or take or inject drugs again after community or compulsory isolation drug rehabilitation [27]. Patients participating in mandatory drug treatment for the first time belong to the first two categories, and they have not yet returned to normal life after receiving isolation and educational measures such as drug treatment management, psychological correction, physical rehabilitation, correction, and training, not to mention relapse. The chronic and recurrent nature of drug use can deepen the severity of cognitive deficits in patients [19], so patients participating in mandatory drug treatment for the first time may have a lower degree of substance use-related cognitive impairment and may be easier to treat. Due to the initial involvement in compulsory detoxification, this patient may be affected by a stressful lifestyle [28], and their negative emotions (e.g., depression) may be more intense.

In summary, previous studies have focused only on the association between persistent drug use and impairment in inhibitory functioning, without focusing on the role of factors such as depression in first-time participants in compulsory drug treatment. Therefore, focusing on patients participating in mandatory drug treatment for the first time, this work explored the role of depression in people with SUD in their inhibitory control through two studies based on the dual-systems model of substance addiction and the susceptibility dual-processing theory of depression, thereby informing comprehensive research and potential treatment targets in the cognitive domain related to substance use disorders.

4. General Discussion

We used a cross-sectional survey to find that depression negatively predicted cognitive inhibition in patients participating in compulsory drug treatment for the first time. Then, we used the Stroop paradigm to find that cognitive inhibition was worse in high-depression patients compared to low-depression patients. Both studies provided some evidence that depression can predict decreased inhibition in SUD populations. This result suggests a special angle of discussion to address factors associated with impaired inhibitory function in drug addicts and provides new enlightenment for the current field of working memory training for substance addiction.

The effect of depression on cognitive inhibition has been demonstrated in the general population. For example, Colich et al. found that depressed individuals show abnormalities in the prefrontal cortex during inhibition tasks in response to negative stimuli compared to normal individuals, i.e., there is an impairment in inhibitory control [37]. According to cognitive theory, depressed individuals develop a negative cognitive schema based on early traumatic experiences that leads to depressive beliefs wherein they view themselves, the world around them, and their future pessimistically [38]. The schema is activated with a diminished ability to inhibit negative automatic thinking when processing subsequent information, creating a negative cognitive bias in attention, assessment, and other areas [25,39]. A meta-analysis of the Stroop mood study showed that depressed patients were subject to stronger negative stimulus interference effects compared to healthy controls [40,41] and that the interference effects were greater, with higher severity of depressive symptoms [40]. It was confirmed that it is more difficult to inhibit negative stimuli in depressed patients. This effect should also exist in the addicted population.The results of both Study 1 and Study 2 support the hypothesis that depression in people with SUD may exacerbate the degree of impairment in their inhibitory control functions. Specifically, inhibitory control scores were significantly lower in the highly depressed group than in the non-depressed group, conditional on the control age and age of first drug use. The dual-systems model suggests [42] that impulsive behaviors such as drug use arise primarily due to the activation of impulsive systems, which are several automatic emotional responses and behavioral association tendencies derived from long-term experience and learning, activated by specific social situations. This process is automated and requires little involvement of cognitive resources [43]. The inhibition system, on the other hand, functions as a primary reflection of the individual’s self-control or strength of willpower and includes deliberate evaluation and inhibition criteria [44]. This system is relatively slow due to the need for individuals to consciously employ symbol-based representational systems and operating systems. Control systems depend more on control resources and are more proactive [45,46].However, according to the depression susceptibility dual-processing theory, depressed individuals or those with high scores on depression scales engage in negative automatic processing and produce negative automatic ruminative thinking, which diminishes their cognitive resources and impairs the resources allocated to other tasks [26]. Substance use by addicted individuals can alleviate or eliminate states of discomfort or aversion within the body, a behavior that may be reinforced through negative reinforcement processes [47]. Individuals continue to use drugs to alleviate uncomfortable states such as those associated with negative emotional states, tension, arousal, craving, or withdrawal, and these states persist throughout the individual’s withdrawal period [48]. These uncomfortable states also serve as sensitive cues which the addict preferentially processes in response. Processing of these cues also diminishes their cognitive resources and, in turn, impairs resources allocated to other tasks. Thus, in the Stroop task, individuals need to mobilize brain resources to cope with inconsistent information. Insufficient cognitive resources at this point can limit the operation of the control system and make it difficult for individuals to inhibit dominant responses [48]. Thus, subjects in this category show a slower response to color stimuli when the word meaning is inconsistent with the color.

Furthermore, the present study examined the role of the type of substance use (methamphetamine and heroin) in the relationship between depression and cognitive inhibition, and no significant interaction was found. This result shows, to some extent, that the different pharmacological effects of the two types of addiction sources do not affect the relationship between depression and cognitive inhibition.

Once severe drug addictive behaviors have developed, there is no definitive treatment available, except for some that can be treated with drug substitution. However, high relapse rates can occur after a drug addict is released from mandatory isolation. For this reason, various disciplines have explored treatment modalities from different perspectives. Neurobiological and psychological studies of drug addiction find that people with SUD are susceptible to impairments in inhibition function [49], which is relevant to the treatment outcome of substance use disorders [50]. Most current research suggests that working memory or executive function training can improve cognitive performance in addicts, but the effects of training and the transfer it produces are inconsistent. Many researchers have attributed this to the site and extent of brain damage and the resulting different cognitive deficits caused by different types of drugs in addicts [51,52], and some have also focused on the differences between pathological states that can be caused by individuals of different genders [53]. However, less attention has been paid to the impact of comorbidities associated with substance addiction, yet people with SUD often suffer from other disorders, creating a state of comorbidity [54]. This study found a strong association between impaired cognitive inhibition and depressive symptoms in people with SUD, suggesting that the impact of patients’ psychiatric comorbidities should be attended to during working memory training treatment for substance addicts. Additionally, this result has important implications for standard screening in the early stages of substance addiction treatment to define the treatment process and treat patients with comorbidities such as addiction and depression.

Although we provided a credible predictive result through larger samples and two methods, we still cannot explain causality. In the future, animal experiments can be used to further clarify the causal relationship between depression and the impairment of inhibition function in addicts. We compared the effect of drug type on cognitive depression in Study 2, but the small number of people in the heroin group relative to the methamphetamine group due to sampling limitations makes this result potentially less credible. The number of people in the heroin group could be increased in the future to obtain more reliable results. Since cognitive suppression may depend on the time of discontinuation, we did not consider the time of discontinuation of participants and could focus on this variable in the future. The present study also only discussed the difference in cognitive inhibition between addiction in depressed patients and non-depressed patients and did not discuss the underlying mechanism of depression-induced cognitive inhibition impairment, which needs to be further discussed by incorporating physiological and brain imaging data in the future. Nevertheless, our work contributed to the literature on discovering the negative relationship between depression and cognitive inhibition among addicts. It enlightened the researchers to select more proper solutions for helping the addicts to overcome their mental health problems. Considering that depression would induce impairment of cognitive inhibition, the cognitive and behavioral therapies that need cognitive inhibition might not be the way to go for people with comorbidity of addiction and depression. Other therapies might be more useful, such as motivational interviewing or contingency management.

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