By Duke Medicine News and Communications
Durham, N.C. -- Not all smokers are alike when it comes to
cravings, and a new study conducted by researchers at Duke
University Medical Center suggests the difference may lie in
their brains' sensitivity to drug cues. The researchers found
that smokers who report a greater urge to smoke after a period
of abstinence also exhibit stronger brain activity after
viewing smoking-related images, such as others smoking or a
pack of cigarettes.
Smokers who noted fewer cravings showed stable brain
responses to the same drug cues, despite hours of
deprivation.
The findings suggest important differences among smokers in
brain responses that underlie the smoking habit, the
researchers said. What's more, they added, such brain scans may
yield diagnostic tests for predicting which smokers will
benefit most from particular quitting methods.
The team reported its results in an article in the journal
Neuropsychopharmacology
that is now online and which will be published in print in a
forthcoming issue. The research was supported by the National
Institute on Drug Abuse.
"Our results suggest that not all smokers are the same; they
don't all respond to drug cues in the same way," said Joe
McClernon, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist at the Duke Center for Nicotine
and Smoking Cessation Research and lead author of the
study. "Furthermore, how they respond depends on the degree to
which deprivation leads them to crave cigarettes.
"Smokers' responses to drug cues are important in
maintaining the smoking habit and also serve as strong triggers
to return to smoking for those who have quit," McClernon added.
"As we begin to understand the underlying brain processes, we
may discover new methods for manipulating those responses to
better help smokers quit."
While scientists have thought that nicotine is the primary
agent responsible for cigarette addiction, recent evidence
suggests that conditioned responses to sensory cues also play
an important role, McClernon said. Brain imaging studies of
smokers have found increases in brain activity in response to
smoking-related images in areas associated with attention,
motivation and reward. However, those studies examined smokers
only after a period of overnight deprivation from smoking.
To further explore this phenomenon, the researchers examined
smokers' brain responses in attention, motivation and reward
regions after a period of overnight abstinence from smoking and
after smoking as usual. While their brains were scanned,
smokers saw smoking-related pictures and pictures of everyday
people and objects, such as a stapler or door knob. The
researchers also asked participants to rate the intensity of
their craving for cigarettes. The researchers scanned the
subjects' brains using functional magnetic resonance imaging,
in which harmless magnetic fields and radio waves are used to
produce images depicting blood flow in brain regions. That
blood flow reflects brain activity in those regions.
As a group, smokers' brain responses to drug cues remained
stable regardless of the duration of time since their last
cigarette, found the researchers. However, further analysis
revealed that those smokers who reported more intense cravings
after deprivation also exhibited heightened sensitivity to
smoking-related images compared to those who craved cigarettes
less.
"These findings are exciting because we are beginning to
find out which brain regions may be involved in cigarette
craving," said Jed Rose, Ph.D., director of the Duke Center for
Nicotine and Smoking Cessation Research.
Smokers who exhibit greater sensitivity to environmental
cues might have particular difficulty quitting smoking and may
also be particularly prone to relapse, McClernon said. While
experts advise that all people attempting to quit avoid
situations or objects that remind them of smoking, the new
results suggest that such measures may be particularly
important for some smokers, he said.
The Duke team is now examining methods that may help break
the connection between cigarette cues and brain activity as a
means of boosting quitting success rates. For example, methods
in which people switch to nicotine-free cigarettes prior to
smoking cessation may help extinguish the connection between
smoking and the rewarding affects of nicotine, thereby easing
the brain's sensitivity to drug cues.
Collaborators on the study included F. Berry Hiott and Scott
Huettel, both of Duke.