# Altered integrated and segregated states in cocaine use disorder

**Authors:** Yi Zheng, Yaqian Yang, Yi Zhen, Xin Wang, Longzhao Liu, Hongwei Zheng, Shaoting Tang

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2025.1572463 · 2025-04-09

## TL;DR

This study explores how cocaine use disorder affects brain connectivity patterns, revealing changes in both integrated and segregated brain states.

## Contribution

The study identifies novel alterations in brain network dynamics and receptor-related connectivity patterns in cocaine use disorder.

## Key findings

- CUD disrupts connectivity in the default mode network, frontoparietal network, and subcortical structures.
- Integrated states show sensorimotor connectivity changes, while segregated states show frontoparietal–subcortical changes.
- CUD alters receptor-connectivity couplings and reduces modularity and betweenness centrality in critical subnetworks.

## Abstract

Cocaine use disorder (CUD) is a chronic brain condition that severely impairs cognitive function and behavioral control. The neural mechanisms underlying CUD, particularly its impact on brain integration–segregation dynamics, remain unclear.

In this study, we integrate dynamic functional connectivity and graph theory to compare the brain state properties of healthy controls and CUD patients.

We find that CUD influences both integrated and segregated states, leading to distinct alterations in connectivity patterns and network properties. CUD disrupts connectivity involving the default mode network, frontoparietal network, and subcortical structures. In addition, integrated states show distinct sensorimotor connectivity alterations, while segregated states exhibit significant alterations in frontoparietal–subcortical connectivity. Regional connectivity alterations among both states are significantly associated with MOR and H3 receptor distributions, with integrated states showing more receptor-connectivity couplings. Furthermore, CUD alters the positive-negative correlation balance, increases functional complexity at threshold 0, and reduces mean betweenness centrality and modularity in the critical subnetworks. Segregated states in CUD exhibit lower normalized clustering coefficients and functional complexity at a threshold of 0.3. We also identify network properties in integrated states that are reliably correlated with cocaine consumption patterns.

Our findings reveal temporal effects of CUD on brain integration and segregation, providing novel insights into the dynamic neural mechanisms underlying cocaine addiction.

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** OPRM1 (opioid receptor mu 1) [NCBI Gene 4988] {aka LMOR, M-OR-1, MOP, MOR, MOR1, OPRM}
- **Diseases:** brain condition (MESH:D001927), cocaine addiction (MESH:D019970)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12014740/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12014740