TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
9Total items
7ePosters
2Seminars

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

Apathy and Anhedonia in Adult and Adolescent Cannabis Users and Controls Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic Lockdown

Martine Skumlien
University of Cambridge
Feb 23, 2022

COVID-19 lockdown measures have caused severe disruptions to work and education and prevented people from engaging in many rewarding activities. Cannabis users may be especially vulnerable, having been previously shown to have higher levels of apathy and anhedonia than non-users. In this survey study, we measured apathy and anhedonia, before and after lockdown measures were implemented, in n = 256 adult and n = 200 adolescent cannabis users and n = 170 adult and n = 172 adolescent controls. Scores on the Apathy Evaluation Scale (AES) and Snaith-Hamilton Pleasure Scale (SHAPS) were investigated with mixed-measures ANCOVA, with factors user group, age group, and time, controlling for depression, anxiety, and other drug use. Adolescent cannabis users had significantly higher SHAPS scores before lockdown, indicative of greater anhedonia, compared with adolescent controls (P = .03, η p2 = .013). Contrastingly, adult users had significantly lower scores on both the SHAPS (P < .001, η p2 = .030) and AES (P < .001, η p2 = .048) after lockdown compared with adult controls. Scores on both scales increased during lockdown across groups, and this increase was significantly smaller for cannabis users (AES: P = .001, η p2 = .014; SHAPS: P = .01, η p2 = .008). Exploratory analyses revealed that dependent cannabis users had significantly higher scores overall (AES: P < .001, η p2 = .037; SHAPS: P < .001, η p2 = .029) and a larger increase in scores (AES: P = .04, η p2 =.010; SHAPS: P = .04, η p2 = .010), compared with non-dependent users. Our results suggest that adolescents and adults have differential associations between cannabis use as well as apathy and anhedonia. Within users, dependence may be associated with higher levels of apathy and anhedonia regardless of age and a greater increase in levels during the COVID-19 lockdown.

SeminarNeuroscience

Neurotoxicity is a major health problem in Africa: focus on Parkinson's / Parkinsonism

Nouria Lakhdar-Ghazal
Mohammed V University, Morocco
Oct 22, 2020

Parkinson's disease (PD) is the second most present neurodegenerative disease in the world after Alzheimer's. It is due to the progressive and irreversible loss of dopaminergic neurons of the substantia nigra Pars Compacta. Alpha synuclein deposits and the appearance of Lewi bodies are systematically associated with it. PD is characterized by four cardinal motor symptoms: bradykinesia / akinesia, rigidity, postural instability and tremors at rest. These symptoms appear when 80% of the dopaminergic endings disappear in the striatum. According to Braak's theory, non-motor symptoms appear much earlier and this is particularly the case with anxiety, depression, anhedonia, and sleep disturbances. In 90 to 95% of cases, the causes of the appearance of the disease remain unknown, but polluting toxic molecules are incriminated more and more. In Africa, neurodegenerative diseases of the Parkinson's type are increasingly present and a parallel seems to exist between the increase in cases and the presence of toxic and polluting products such as metals. My Web conference will focus on this aspect, i.e. present experimental arguments which reinforce the hypothesis of the incrimination of these pollutants in the incidence of Parkinson's disease and / or Parkinsonism. Among the lines of research that we have developed in my laboratory in Rabat, Morocco, I have chosen this one knowing that many of our PhD students and IBRO Alumni are working or trying to develop scientific research on neurotoxicity in correlation with pathologies of the brain.

ePosterNeuroscience

Oxidative balance alterations in the rat ventral hippocampus are associated to the vulnerability and resilience to stress-induced anhedonia

Vittoria Spero, Sabrina D'Amelio, Eleonora Buscemi, Mariusz Papp, Raffaella Molteni
ePosterNeuroscience

Modulation of gut microbiota by antibiotics did not affect anhedonia in a high-fat diet-induced model of depression in male mice

Magali Monnoye, Pauline Flauss, Catherine Philippe, Nathalie Castanon, Sylvie Rabot, Sylvie Vancassel, Laurent Naudon
ePosterNeuroscience

A primate subcallosal cingulate area 25 network fractionates anhedonia, anxiety and rapid antidepressant response

Christian M. Wood, Laith Alexander, Johan Alsiö, Andrea M. Santangelo, Lauren Mciver, Gemma Cockcroft, Angela C. Roberts
ePosterNeuroscience

Reduced anhedonia following internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy for depression is mediated by enhanced reward circuit activation

Shir Hanuka, Elizabeth A. Olson, Roee Admon, Christian A. Webb, William D. Killgore, Scott L. Rauch, Isabelle M. Rosso, Diego A. Pizzagalli
ePosterNeuroscience

Social anhedonia as a Disrupted-in-Schizophrenia 1-dependent phenotype

Mohammad Seidisarouei, Sandra Schäble, Marijn V. Wingerden, Svenja V Trossbach, Carsten Korth, Tobias Kalenscher
ePosterNeuroscience

Dopamine deficient mice show anergia but not anhedonia on tests of vigor-based choice

Andrea Martinez Verdu, Adrian Sanz-Magro, Noelia Granado, Régulo Olivares-García, Paula Matas-Navarro, Nicolás Pons-Villanueva, John D. Salamone, Rosario Moratalla, Mercè Correa

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Prodromal gut dysbiosis, anhedonia and depression-like behavior in the A53T mouse model of Parkinson’s disease – the impact of social microenvironment

Olga Dubljević, Dušanka Popović, Željko Pavković, Milica Potrebić, Srbovan Maja, Emilija Brdarić, Vesna Pešić

FENS Forum 2024

anhedonia coverage

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Seminar2

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