Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Technische Universität Dresden, Dresden, Germany.
Addict Biol. 2011 Apr;16(2):285-95. doi: 10.1111/j.1369-1600.2010.00237.x. Epub 2010 Aug 23.
Studies in smokers suggest that nicotine might exert anxiolytic, stress-dampening and mood-enhancing effects and beneficially influences neural processing of affective information. Regarding non-smokers, results are inconsistent, and no data exist on the effect of nicotine on neural emotion processing. We applied functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to assess the influence of nicotine on brain activation during processing of emotional stimuli in 31 non-smokers with a maximum lifetime cigarette consumption of 20 cigarettes. Participants were subjected to two fMRI scans with event-related presentations of images taken from the International Affective Picture System, receiving nicotine (2 mg) and placebo gums in a double-blinded, randomized cross-over design. Furthermore, subjective affect was assessed. Nicotine increased brain activity in response to unpleasant stimuli in the amygdala, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and basal ganglia, whereas processing of pleasant stimuli was not altered. Psychophysiological interaction (PPI) analyses revealed that nicotine increased connectivity between the amygdala and the perigenual ACC (pACC) during processing of unpleasant stimuli and decreased connectivity between those structures during processing of pleasant stimuli. Participants reported higher state anxiety under nicotine than placebo. A single dose of nicotine acted as a stressor in non-smokers, leading to increased anxiety and neural activation elicited by unpleasant stimuli as well as altered connectivity within the amygdala-pACC circuit. Besides the possibility that reactions to nicotine may differ between non-smokers and smokers due to tolerance and neuroadaptive processes that occur during prolonged nicotine use, a priori differences in smokers and non-smokers might potentially explain diverse effects of nicotine on affect and emotional reactivity.
研究表明,尼古丁可能对吸烟者具有抗焦虑、减轻压力和改善情绪的作用,并对情感信息的神经处理产生有益影响。然而,关于不吸烟者,结果并不一致,目前尚无关于尼古丁对神经情绪处理影响的相关数据。我们应用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)技术,在 31 名吸烟量最大不超过 20 支香烟的非吸烟者中,评估了尼古丁对情绪刺激处理过程中大脑激活的影响。参与者接受了两次 fMRI 扫描,采用事件相关呈现的方式,呈现来自国际情感图片系统的图片。采用双盲、随机交叉设计,给予参与者尼古丁(2mg)和安慰剂咀嚼片。此外,还评估了主观情绪。结果发现,尼古丁增加了杏仁核、前扣带回皮质(ACC)和基底神经节对不愉快刺激的反应性大脑活动,而对愉快刺激的处理没有改变。心理生理交互(PPI)分析显示,尼古丁增加了不愉快刺激处理过程中杏仁核与旁扣带回(pACC)之间的连通性,而降低了处理愉快刺激时两者之间的连通性。与安慰剂相比,尼古丁组参与者报告的状态焦虑更高。单次尼古丁剂量在非吸烟者中充当应激源,导致不愉快刺激引起的焦虑和神经激活增加,以及杏仁核-ACC 回路内部的连通性改变。除了由于长期使用尼古丁引起的耐受性和神经适应性变化,非吸烟者和吸烟者对尼古丁的反应可能不同之外,吸烟者和非吸烟者之间的先验差异也可能潜在地解释了尼古丁对情感和情绪反应的不同影响。