By Duke Medicine News and Communications
Video of Jed Rose explaining the regions of the brain that
control craving is available in the following formats:
RealMedia,
QuickTime.
DURHAM, N.C. -- Within the mind of every smoker trying to
quit rages a battle between the higher-order functions of the
brain wanting to break the habit and the lower-order functions
screaming for another cigarette, say researchers at Duke
University Medical Center. More often than not, that cigarette
gets lit.
Brain scans of smokers studied by the researchers revealed
three specific regions deep within the brain that appear to
control dependence on nicotine and craving for cigarettes.
These regions play important roles in some of the key
motivations for smoking: to calm down when stressed, to achieve
pleasure and to help concentration.
"If you can't calm down, can't derive pleasure and can't
control yourself or concentrate, then it will be extremely
difficult for you to break the habit," said lead study
investigator Jed E. Rose, Ph.D., director of the Duke Center for Nicotine
and Smoking Cessation Research. "These brain regions may
explain why most people try to quit several times before they
are successful."
Understanding how the brain responds to cigarette cravings
can help doctors change nicotine cessation treatments to
address all three of these components of withdrawal, Rose said.
Drugs or therapies that target these regions may help smokers
stave off the cravings that often spoil their attempts to
quit.
The team's findings are now online in the journal
Neuropsychopharmacology. The research was funded by Phillip
Morris USA.
Approximately one in five Americans smokes. Even though 70
percent of smokers report that they would like to quit, only 5
percent do so successfully.
In this study, the researchers manipulated the levels of
nicotine dependence and cigarette craving among 15 smokers and
then scanned their brains using positron emission tomography,
or PET scans, to see which areas of the brain were most
active.
Three
specific regions of the brain demonstrated changes in
activity when the smokers craved cigarettes versus when they
did not.
One region that lights up, called the thalamus, is
considered to be the key relay point for sensory information
flowing into the brain. Some of the symptoms of withdrawal
among people trying to quit stem from the inability to focus
thoughts and the feeling of being overwhelmed, and could thus
be explained by changes in this region, according to the
researchers. The researchers found that changes in this region
were most dramatic among those who said they smoked to calm
down when under stress.
Another region that lights up is a part of the pleasure
system of the brain. Changes in this region, called the
striatum, were most notable in people who smoked to satisfy
craving and for pleasurable relaxation, the researchers
said.
A third region that lights up, called the anterior cingulate
cortex, is vital to cognitive functions such as conflict, self
regulation, decision making and emotion. People whose brain
scans showed the most differences in this region also reported
that they smoked to manage their weight.
"This knowledge gives us new clues about brain mechanisms
underlying addiction to cigarettes and could allow us design
better methods to help smokers quit," Rose said.
Rose and his colleagues are now planning to perform brain
scans on smokers undergoing nicotine replacement therapy, such
as the nicotine patch, to determine how these treatments affect
the same regions of the brain.
Other researchers participating in the study were Frederique
M. Behm, Alfred N. Salley, James E. Bates, R. Edward Coleman,
Thomas C. Hawk and Timothy G. Turkington.