Ashare Rebecca L, Lerman Caryn, Cao Wen, Falcone Mary, Bernardo Leah, Ruparel Kosha, Hopson Ryan, Gur Ruben, Pruessner Jens C, Loughead James
Center for Interdisciplinary Research on Nicotine Addiction, Department of Psychiatry, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, 3535 Market St., Suite 4100, Philadelphia, PA, 19104, USA.
Brain Behavior Laboratory, Neuropsychiatry Department, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2016 Jul;233(13):2459-67. doi: 10.1007/s00213-016-4299-5. Epub 2016 Apr 18.
Psychosocial stress is considered to be an important mechanism underlying smoking behavior and relapse. Thus, understanding the effects of acute nicotine withdrawal on responses to stress is important to intervene to prevent stress-induced relapse. The current study investigated the neural correlates of psychosocial stress during acute nicotine withdrawal in chronic smokers.
Thirty-nine treatment-seeking smokers were randomized to one of two conditions (abstinent 24 h (n = 21) or smoking as usual (n = 18)). They were then exposed to the Montreal Imaging Stress Task (MIST), a psychosocial stress task consisting of difficult mental arithmetic problems while receiving negative performance feedback while undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).
Subjective measures of stress increased following the MIST, compared to baseline. Whole brain between-group analysis identified significant activation clusters in four regions for the stress induction minus control contrast: inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), anterior/para cingulate cortex (ACC), precuneus, and supramarginal gyrus (SMG). In all regions, the deprived group showed significantly greater activation compared to the non-deprived group. No significant correlations were found between subjective stress and BOLD signal activation (ps > 0.07).
This study provides new evidence that brain regions previously shown to be predictive of relapse, such as the precuneus and IFG, display heightened neural responses to stress during nicotine deprivation. These data identify the brain regions that may be associated with withdrawal-related stress responses. Increased stress-related activation during nicotine withdrawal may identify those most vulnerable to relapse and represent a target for novel pharmacological intervention.
心理社会压力被认为是吸烟行为及复吸背后的重要机制。因此,了解急性尼古丁戒断对应激反应的影响对于干预以预防应激诱导的复吸很重要。本研究调查了慢性吸烟者急性尼古丁戒断期间心理社会压力的神经关联。
39名寻求治疗的吸烟者被随机分为两种情况之一(戒断24小时(n = 21)或照常吸烟(n = 18))。然后他们接受蒙特利尔成像应激任务(MIST),这是一项心理社会应激任务,包括在接受负面表现反馈的同时进行困难的心算问题,同时接受功能磁共振成像(fMRI)。
与基线相比,MIST后应激的主观测量值增加。全脑组间分析确定了应激诱导减去对照对比在四个区域的显著激活簇:额下回(IFG)、前/扣带回旁皮质(ACC)、楔前叶和缘上回(SMG)。在所有区域,戒断组的激活明显高于非戒断组。主观应激与BOLD信号激活之间未发现显著相关性(p>0.07)。
本研究提供了新的证据,即先前显示可预测复吸的脑区,如楔前叶和额下回,在尼古丁戒断期间对应激的神经反应增强。这些数据确定了可能与戒断相关应激反应相关的脑区。尼古丁戒断期间与应激相关的激活增加可能识别出最易复吸的人群,并代表新型药物干预的靶点。