Newswise, April 21, 2016– Smoking addiction in schizophrenia
can be explained by significantly increased activation of the ventro-medial
prefrontal cortex (vmPFC), a region involved in the brain reward system.
These new data, the result of a study by researchers at the
Institut universitaire en santé mentale de Montréal (CIUSSS EST, Montreal) and
the University of Montreal confirms the tendency to smoke and low smoking
cessation rates of people with schizophrenia.
“Smoking is a real problem for people with schizophrenia,”
said Stéphane Potvin, a researcher at the Institut universitaire en santé
mentale de Montréal and lead author of the study.
"Their health and life expectancy are often undermined by
this addiction, whose brain mechanisms were until now largely unknown,"
said the associate professor at the University of Montreal’s Faculty of
Medicine.
Essentially, the research team observed greater neuronal activation
of a specific region of the brain (vmPFC) in schizophrenia smokers compared
with healthy subjects when presented with appetitive cigarette images.
At the behavioural level, the researchers also found that
schizophrenia smokers had more depressive symptoms than did participants in the
control group.
“These observations suggest that smoking has a greater
rewarding effect in schizophrenia smokers. This corroborates the hypothesis
already formulated of their increased vulnerability to this addiction but also
demonstrates the great difficulty for them when it comes to quitting
smoking," said Potvin.
The prevalence of smoking in people with schizophrenia is
high, and cessation rates are low. Schizophrenia smokers are twelve more times
likely to die from heart disease related to smoking than are those who do not
smoke.
“It is necessary to explore avenues that will help people in
their efforts to free themselves from smoking,” said Potvin. “
That is why we
want to continue our research into whether this activation of the ventro-medial
prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) is caused by the disease itself or by the effects of
antipsychotics,” concluded the researcher.
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