There is no surprise that
smoking cigarette for many years can modify the method the mind develops
nicotine, making a well-worn prototype of longing and pleasure that’s hard to
break.
But when does this phase
get started? And does nicotine in fact alter structures in the brain to make
dependence more likely?
In the latest research,
published in the journal Neuropsychopharmacology, Edythe London, a
professor of psychiatry and pharmacology at University of California Los
Angeles, and her team found that young smokers did have differences in a
specific brain region compared with non smokers. Even more concerning, these
differences emerged with a relatively light smoking habit of one pack or less
of cigarettes a day.
London and her colleagues
focused on a brain region called the insula, since previous studies in animal
and adults showed that its size and volume were affected by smoking. Of the
regions in the cortical, or memory, awareness and language parts of the brain,
the insula contains the most receptors for nicotine. The region is responsible
for decision-making and helping to establish a person’s conscious awareness of
his internal state. In studies of stroke patients, smokers who lost function of
the right insula in the stroke quit smoking, and reported feeling no cravings
for nicotine. And in earlier studies London’s team conducted, they found a
strong relationship between how much smokers who watched videos of people
smoking experienced cravings for cigarettes and the activity of the insula,
which lit up on PET scans.
When London’s team looked
at the brains of the 18 smoking teens and 24 non-smoking adolescents, aged 16
to 21 years, using structural MRI, they found no differences overall in the
insula region. But a closer examination revealed that the right insula of the
smokers was thinner than those of the nonsmokers.
“The brain is still undergoing development
when someone is in their late teens,” she says. “It’s possible that smoking
during this period could have effects that could alter tobacco dependence later
in life, and that the insult could alter the trajectory of brain development.”
While the study doesn’t
establish whether the differences in the insula can lead to smoking, or is the
result of smoking, London says it highlights the role that the brain region may
play in how people respond to nicotine and cigarettes. “I think this is very
exciting because it points to a vulnerability, a potential vulnerability factor
either to become nicotine dependent or for the effects of smoking to ultimately
alter the trajectory of brain development,” she says. That trajectory could affect
not only smoking behavior but decision-making in general, since the insula is
important in such assessments.
No comments:
Post a Comment