Anti-saccade as a Tool to Evaluate Neurocognitive Impairment in Alcohol Use Disorder

Front Psychiatry. 2022 Apr 27:13:823848. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2022.823848. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

It has been widely shown that chronic alcohol use leads to cognitive dysfunctions, especially inhibitory control. In an extension of the traditional approach, this research field has benefited from the emergence of innovative measures, among which is an anti-saccade, allowing direct and sensitive measure of the eye movements indexing attention bias to alcohol-related cues and the capability of inhibiting the reflexive saccades to the cues. During the past decade, there are numerous reports showing that drinkers make more unwanted reflexive saccades and longer latency in the anti-saccade task. These increased errors are usually explained by the deficits in inhibitory control. It has been demonstrated that inhibitory control on eye movement may be one of the earliest biomarkers of the onset of alcohol-related cognitive impairments. This review summarizes how an anti-saccade task can be used as a tool to investigate and assess the cognitive dysfunctions and the early detection of relapsing risk of alcohol dependence.

Keywords: alcohol use disorder; anti-saccade; attention bias; cognitive impairment; inhibitory control.

Publication types

  • Review