Experimental and Clinical Pharmacopsychology, Department of Adult Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Hospital of Psychiatry Zurich, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland; Translational Psychiatry, University Psychiatric Clinics Basel, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
3 papers in the library · 12 citations · publishing 2024-2026
Chronic methamphetamine users show diminished cognitive and emotional empathy toward positive stimuli, elevated punitive social behavior regardless of provocation, and heightened self-reported trait anger compared to non-users. Chronic MDMA users differ from controls only by displaying increased punitive behavior when provoked. Higher hair concentrations of both drugs may be linked to reduced cognitive empathy, and greater lifetime MDMA use correlates with more punitive behavior among MDMA users. The dopaminergic mechanism of methamphetamine may underlie social-cognitive deficits.
Chronic users of methamphetamine and MDMA show similar deficits in conflict control and emotional processing, rather than substance-specific differences. In an emotional face-word Stroop task with anger and happy faces, both user groups exhibited smaller behavioral effects of cognitive-emotional conflict and selective impairments in processing anger, compared to amphetamine-naïve controls. These deficits were accompanied by stronger P3 event-related potential modulations, indicating altered stimulus-response mapping and decision-making. The findings suggest that chronic use of substituted amphetamines may affect noradrenergic systems, which could underlie the observed similarities. Understanding noradrenaline's role in these processes is an important direction for future research.
Chronic users of methamphetamine (METH) and MDMA (Ecstasy) show distinct alterations in blood levels of tryptophan-related metabolites, which may help explain their different clinical effects. In a study of 36 chronic MDMA users, 33 chronic METH users, and 71 healthy controls, METH use was linked to depleted serum tryptophan and serotonin and broad activation of kynurenine pathways, whereas MDMA use was associated with selective activation of the OH-kynurenine branch. These metabolite changes correlated with the severity of depression and psychosis symptoms. The findings suggest that persistent changes in peripheral tryptophan metabolism may contribute to the substances' contrasting addiction and psychiatric profiles.