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Some Are Addicted After First
Cigarette
By Rick Nauert, Ph.D.
Man SmokingNew research reveals how
the brain processes the ‘rewarding’ and addictive properties of
nicotine, providing a better understanding of why some people
seemingly become hooked with their first smoke.
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The research,
led by Steven Laviolette of The University of Western
Ontario, could lead to new therapies to prevent nicotine
dependence and to treat nicotine withdrawal when smokers try
to quit. The paper is published in the Journal of
Neuroscience.
“Nicotine interacts with a
variety of neurochemical pathways within the brain to
produce its rewarding and addictive effects,” explains
Laviolette.
“However, during the early
phase of tobacco exposure, many individuals find nicotine
highly unpleasant and aversive, whereas others may become
rapidly dependent on nicotine and find it |
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highly rewarding. We
wanted to explore that difference.”
The researchers found
one brain pathway in particular uses the
neurotransmitter ‘dopamine’ to transmit signals related
to nicotine’s rewarding properties. This pathway is
called the ‘mesolimbic’ dopamine system and is involved
in the addictive properties of many drugs of abuse,
including cocaine, alcohol and nicotine. |
“While much progress has been made
in understanding how the brain processes the rewarding effects of
nicotine after the dependence is established, very little is known
about how the mesolimbic dopamine system may control the initial
vulnerability to nicotine; that is, why do some individuals become
quickly addicted to nicotine while others do not, and in some cases,
even find nicotine to be highly aversive.”
The scientists identified which
specific dopamine receptor subtype controlled the brain’s initial
sensitivity to nicotine’s rewarding and addictive properties and
were able to manipulate these receptors to control whether the
nicotine is processed as rewarding or aversive.
“Importantly, our findings may
explain an individual’s vulnerability to nicotine addiction, and may
point to new pharmacological treatments for the prevention of it,
and the treatment of nicotine withdrawal,” says Laviolette.
The research was funded by the
Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the Canadian Psychiatric
Research Foundation. -- Courtesy
of Psychcentral.com
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