Journal
COGNITIVE AND BEHAVIORAL NEUROLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages 47-53Publisher
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/00146965-200303000-00006
Keywords
Cerebral dysfunction; Impulse control disorder; Pathologic gambling
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Funding
- Swiss National Science Foundation [32.40682.94]
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Background: Gambling is a form of nonsubstance addiction classified as an impulse control disorder. Pathologic gamblers are considered healthy with respect to their cognitive status. Lesions of the frontolimbic systems, mostly of the right hemisphere, are associated with addictive behavior. Because gamblers are not regarded as brain-lesioned and gambling is nontoxic, gambling is a model to test whether addicted healthy people are relatively impaired in frontolimbic neuropsychological functions. Methods: Twenty-one nonsubstance dependent gamblers and nineteen healthy subjects underwent a behavioral neurologic interview centered on incidence, origin, and symptoms of possible brain damage, a neuropsychological examination, and an electroencephalogram. Results: Seventeen gamblers (81%) had a positive medical history for brain damage (mainly traumatic head injury, pre- or perinatal complications). The gamblers, compared with the controls, were significantly more impaired in concentration, memory, and executive functions, and evidenced a higher prevalence of non-right-handedness (43%) and, non-left-hemisphere language dominance (52%). Electroencephalogram (EEG) revealed dysfunctional activity in 65% of the gamblers, compared with 26% of controls. Conclusions: This study shows that the healthy gamblers are indeed brain-damaged. Compared with a matched control population, pathologic gamblers evidenced more brain injuries, more fronto-temporo-limbic neuropsychological dysfunctions and more EEG abnormalities. The authors thus conjecture that addictive gambling may be a consequence of brain damage, especially of the frontolimbic systems, a finding that may well have medicolegal consequences.
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