Hughes John R, Budney Alan J, Muellers Sharon R, Lee Dustin C, Callas Peter W, Sigmon Stacey C, Fingar James R, Priest Jeff
Departments of Psychiatry and Psychological Sciences, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT.
Department of Psychiatry, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Lebanon, NH.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2017 Jun 1;19(6):677-685. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntw204.
Animal studies report abstinence from nicotine makes rewards less rewarding; however, the results of human tests of the effects of cessation on reward sensitivity are mixed. The current study tested reward sensitivity in abstinent smokers using more rigorous methods than most prior studies.
A human laboratory study compared outcomes for 1 week prior to quitting to those during 4 weeks postquit. The study used smokers trying to quit, objective and subjective measures, multiple measures during smoking and abstinence, and monetary rewards to increase the prevalence of abstinence. Current daily smokers (n = 211) who were trying to quit completed an operant measure of reward sensitivity and a survey of pleasure from various rewards as well as self-reports of anhedonia, delay discounting, positive affect, and tobacco withdrawal twice each week. A comparison group of long-term former smokers (n = 67) also completed the tasks weekly for 4 weeks. Primary analyses were based on the 61 current smokers who abstained for all 4 weeks.
Stopping smoking decreased self-reported pleasure from rewards but did not decrease reward sensitivity on the operant task. Abstinence also decreased self-reported reward frequency and increased the two anhedonia measures. However, the changes with abstinence were small for all outcomes (6%-14%) and most lasted less than a week.
Abstinence from tobacco decreased most self-report measures of reward sensitivity; however, it did not change the objective measure. The self-report effects were small.
Animal research suggests that nicotine withdrawal decreases reward sensitivity. Replication tests of this in humans have produced inconsistent results. We report what we believe is a more rigorous test. We found smoking abstinence slightly decreases self-reports of reward sensitivity but does not do so for a behavioral measure of reward sensitivity.
动物研究表明,戒除尼古丁会使奖励的吸引力降低;然而,关于戒烟对奖励敏感性影响的人体测试结果却参差不齐。本研究采用了比以往大多数研究更为严格的方法,对戒烟者的奖励敏感性进行了测试。
一项人体实验室研究比较了戒烟前1周与戒烟后4周的结果。该研究选取了试图戒烟的吸烟者,采用客观和主观测量方法,在吸烟和戒烟期间进行多项测量,并使用金钱奖励来提高戒烟率。当前每日吸烟且试图戒烟的吸烟者(n = 211)每周完成两次奖励敏感性的操作性测量、各种奖励带来的愉悦感调查以及快感缺失、延迟折扣、积极情绪和烟草戒断的自我报告。一组长期戒烟者(n = 67)作为对照组,同样在4周内每周完成这些任务。主要分析基于4周内全部戒烟的61名当前吸烟者。
戒烟后,自我报告的奖励愉悦感降低,但在操作性任务中奖励敏感性并未降低。戒烟还减少了自我报告的奖励频率,并增加了两种快感缺失测量指标。然而,所有结果的戒烟相关变化都很小(6%-14%),且大多数持续时间不到一周。
戒烟降低了大多数奖励敏感性的自我报告指标;然而,它并未改变客观测量指标。自我报告的影响较小。
动物研究表明,尼古丁戒断会降低奖励敏感性。在人体中的重复测试结果并不一致。我们报告了我们认为更严格的测试。我们发现戒烟略微降低了奖励敏感性的自我报告,但对奖励敏感性的行为测量指标没有影响。