|
New Findings On Why it is Hard to
Quit Smoking
By Rick Nauert, Ph.D.
Just seeing someone smoke can
trigger smokers to abandon their nascent efforts to kick the habit,
according to new research conducted at Duke University Medical
Center.
|
|
Brain scans
taken during normal smoking activity and 24 hours after
quitting show there is a marked increase in a particular
kind of brain activity when quitters see photographs of
people smoking.
The study, which appears
online in Psychopharmacology, sheds important light on why
it’s so hard for people to quit smoking, and why they
relapse so quickly, explains Joseph McClernon, an associate
professor in the department of psychiatry and behavioral
sciences at Duke University Medical Center.
“Only five percent of
unaided quit attempts result in successful abstinence,” says
McClernon.
|
|
“Most smokers who try to
quit return to smoking again. We are trying to
understand how that process works in the brain, and this
research brings us one step closer.”
The Duke researchers
used a brain-imaging tool called functional MRI to
visualize changes in brain activity that occurs when
smokers quit. The smokers were scanned once before
quitting and again 24 hours after they quit. Each time
they were scanned while being shown photographs of
people smoking. |
“Quitting smoking dramatically
increased brain activity in response to seeing the smoking cues,”
says McClernon, “which seems to indicate that quitting smoking is
actually sensitizing the brain to these smoking cues.”
Even more surprising, he adds, is
the area of the brain that was activated by the cues.
“We saw activation in the dorsal
striatum, an area involved in learning habits or things we do by
rote, like riding a bike or brushing our teeth. Our research shows
us that when smokers encounter these cues after quitting, it
activates the area of the brain responsible for automatic responses.
That means quitting smoking may not be a matter of conscious
control. So, if we’re really going to help people quit, this
emphasizes the need to do more than tell people to resist
temptation. We also have to help them break that habitual response.”
New treatment options at Duke are
aiming to do just that. One area of research is focusing on the use
of a nicotine patch prior to quitting smoking.
In previously published research,
Jed Rose, Director of the Duke Center for Nicotine and Smoking
Cessation Research and co-author of this paper as well, showed that
wearing the patch and smoking a cigarette with no nicotine proved
successful at breaking the learned behavior. “The smoking behavior
is not reinforced because the act of smoking is not leading them to
get the nicotine,” Rose said.
“Doing this before people actually
quit helps them break the habit so they start smoking less. We’re
seeing people quit longer this way.” -- Courtesy
of Psychcentral.com
Click
Here To Have Your Say On This Story
Brudirect.com News
|