Reward processing is crucial to our health and wellbeing and
dysfunctional brain reward signaling is a component of a number of psychiatric
disorders, including major depression and drug addiction. Rewarding behaviors
like eating, parenting, nursing, social play, and sexual activity are
powerfully preserved in evolution and are essential for survival. All of them
gratifying, they represent enjoyable experiences with high reward values and
activate the same brain circuits that mediate the positive reinforcing effects
of drugs of abuse. In line with preclinical findings and clinical observations,
recent imaging studies confirmed that natural (sex, food) and non-natural
(drugs of abuse) rewards differently activate male and female brains (Haase et
al., 2011; Wetherill et
al., 2014) and also that
men and women differ in the ability to resist reward-related impulses (Diekhof
et al., 2012). The study of
sexual morphological differences in human brain has provided evidence of
critical effects of gender on brain architecture and morphometry (Giedd et al., 2012; Feis et al., 2013). Male-female
differences in human brain anatomy have stimulated research on the difference
in onset, prevalence, and symptomatology of many neuropsychiatric illnesses
between women and men, including drug addiction (Rando et al., 2013; Tanabe et al., 2013; Ide et al., 2014). Following the
official recognition by International Institutions and Funding Research Agencies
on the importance of taking into account potential differences between men and
women in all of the relevant aspects of health-related research, gender is
receiving increasing attention by medical and scientific communities. As a
consequence, evaluation of sex and gender (i.e.,
biological characteristics and socio-political-cultural influences associated
with the terms “male” and “female,” respectively) differences in reward
processing in general, and in drug addiction in particular, is increasingly being
studied.
Numerous human behaviors are driven by evolved
instincts and urges. We have evolved the capacity to experience considerable
pleasure and happiness from several behaviors, among which are eating,
drinking, mating, creating protective shelter, and reproducing, all activating
an anatomical and neurochemically defined brain circuit commonly referred to as
the “pleasure circuit” or “brain reward system.” In both animals and humans,
males and females display diverse attitudes and expectancies, process
information differently, perceive experience and emotions in different ways and
are behaviorally determined by different needs and drives. Reward processing
may also differ between male and female population with sexual hormones playing
an important, although not exclusive, role. When looking at the most common
behavioral features known to favor the development of drug dependence, such as
poor impulse control, risk-taking behavior, a heightened reactivity to stress
and psychiatric comorbidity, all reveal important differences between men and
women. Here I will illustrate the most recent evidence showing sex/gender
differences in these and other behavioral traits linked to reward processing
and enhancing the vulnerability to drug addiction...
Full article
at: http://goo.gl/2PzQaV
By: Liana Fattore*
CNR Institute of Neuroscience-Cagliari, National Research Council-Italy, and Centre of Excellence “Neurobiology of Dependence,” Cittadella Universitaria di Monserrato, University of Cagliari, Cagliari, Italy
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